A geography of case semantics : the Czech dative and the Russian instrumental / Laura A. Janda.
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Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Berlin ; New York :
Mouton de Gruyter,
1993.
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Series: | Cognitive linguistics research ;
4. |
Subjects: | |
Genre/Form: | Electronic books |
Table of Contents:
- Acknowledgements
- Preface
- Part I � Theory
- 0. Introduction
- 1. What Cognitive Semantics Is
- 1.1 Support For Cognitive Semantics From Other Disciplines
- 1.2. Case As A Semantic Entity
- 1.3. What A Cognitive Description Of Case Should Look Like
- 2. Cognitive Semantics Compared With Other Descriptions Of Case
- 2.1. Case Semantics In Previous Traditions
- 2.2. How The Cognitive Model Has Been Implied By Various Authors
- 2.3. Advantages Of The Cognitive Approach
- 2.4. An Ideal Description Of Case: Skalicka�S Challenge
- Part Ii � Analysis 3. Why The Czech Dative And The Russian Instrumental?
- 3.1. Schema 1 � Indirect Object
- 3.2. Schema 2 And Variants � Free Dative
- 3.3. Dative Network Bound By Syntagmatic Variants Of The Schemas
- 3.4. Reflexive Uses Of The Dative
- 3.5. Semantic Extension Via Mapping � Pragmatic Uses Of The Dative
- 4. Comparison Of Cognitive Networks � The Russian Dative
- 4.1. Schema 1 � Indirect Object
- 4.2. Schema 2 And Variants � Free Dative
- 4.3. Dative Reflexives
- 5. Analysis Of The Russian Instrumental
- 5.1. Conduit Instrumental � Schema 1 And Syntagmatic Variants 5.2. Schema 2 � Instrumental Of Setting
- 5.3. Attributive Instrumental
- 5.4. Instrumental Used With A Preposition
- 5.5. Instrumental Network Bound By Paradigm Of Peripherality And By Alliance
- 6. The Czech Instrumental
- 6.1. Conduit Instrumental
- 6.2. Instrumental Of Setting
- 6.3. Attributive Instrumental
- 6.4. Instrumental With A Preposition
- 7. Concluding Remarks And Possible Universals
- Notes
- References