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Tabus sind Ausdruck des kulturellen Entwicklungsstandes und Selbstverständnisses einer Gesellschaft und reflektieren somit deren Mentalität und Wahrnehmung der Realität. Speziell sprachliche Tabus sind über Euphemismen greifbar, die eine optimale Grundlage für entsprechende Interpretationen darstellen. Auf diesem Hintergrund gilt der Band französischen und italienischen Euphemismen, wie sie entsprechend dem Sprachverständnis der Lexikographen zweier maßgebender Wörterbücher als solche ausgewiesen sind und sich bei umsichtiger Auswertung besonders gut für kulturvergleichende Betrachtungen eignen. Ausgehend von einer quantitativen und qualitativen Klassifizierung in Bezug auf formale und semantische Gemeinsamkeiten und Unterschiede werden die Euphemismen in ihrer Raison d'être kultur- und mentalitätshistorisch erklärt und motivgeschichtlich in Bereichen verankert, die vom Magisch-Religiösen über das Ethisch-Ästhetische und Politisch-Korrekte bis hin zur "Ethik ohne Moral" reichen. Dabei wird das Phänomen des Euphemismus in seinen Ursachen, Motiven und Funktionen getrennt betrachtet und einer Gesamtinterpretation zugeführt.
French language --- Italian language --- Euphemism. --- Euphemism --- Lexicology. Semantics --- Français (Langue) --- Euphémismes --- Langue d'oïl --- Romance languages --- French language - Euphemism --- Italian language - Euphemism --- History of Mentalities. --- Lexicography. --- Taboo.
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Hedging is an essential part of everyday communication. It is a discourse strategy which is used to reduce commitment to the force or truth of an utterance to achieve an appropriate pragmatic effect. In recent years hedges have therefore attracted increased attention in Pragmatics and Applied Linguistics, with studies approaching the concept of hedging from various perspectives, such as speech act - and politeness theory, genre-specific investigations, interactional pragmatics, and studies of vague language. The present volume provides an up-to-date overview of current research on the topic by bringing together studies from a variety of fields. The contributions span a range of different languages, investigate the use of hedges in different communicative settings and text types, and consider all levels of linguistic analysis from prosody to morphology, syntax and semantics. What unites the different studies in this volume is a corpus-based approach, in which various theoretical concepts and categories are applied to, and tested against, actual language data. This allows for patterns of use to be uncovered which have previously gone unnoticed and provides valuable insights for the adjustment and fine-tuning of existing categories. The usage-based approach of the investigations therefore offers new theoretical and descriptive perspectives on the context-dependent nature and multifunctionality of hedges.
Hedge (Linguistics) --- Euphemism --- Pragmatics --- Euphemism. --- Pragmatics. --- Pragmalinguistics --- Hedging (Linguistics) --- General semantics --- Language and languages --- Logic, Symbolic and mathematical --- Semantics (Philosophy) --- Figures of speech --- Semantics --- Linguistics --- Philosophy --- E-books --- Hedge (Linguistics) - Congresses --- Euphemism - Congresses --- Pragmatics - Congresses
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Many words and expressions are viewed as 'taboo', such as those used to describe sex, our bodies and their functions, and those used to insult other people. This 2006 book provides a fascinating insight into taboo language and its role in everyday life. It looks at the ways we use language to be polite or impolite, politically correct or offensive, depending on whether we are 'sweet-talking', 'straight-talking' or being deliberately rude. Using a range of colourful examples, it shows how we use language playfully and figuratively in order to swear, to insult, and also to be politically correct, and what our motivations are for doing so. It goes on to examine the differences between institutionalized censorship and the ways individuals censor their own language. Lively and revealing, Forbidden Words will fascinate anyone who is interested in how and why we use and avoid taboos in daily conversation.
Taboo, Linguistic --- Politeness (Linguistics) --- Jargon (Terminology) --- Swearing --- Euphemism --- 800.862 --- Slang. Vulgair taalgebruik --- Euphemism. --- Swearing. --- Taboo, Linguistic. --- Politieke correctheid (linguïstiek) --- Taal en censuur --- Taboe --- Vloeken (linguïstiek) --- eufemismen --- Politieke correctheid (linguïstiek). --- Taal en censuur. --- Vloeken (linguïstiek). --- eufemismen. --- slang. --- linguïstiek. --- Jargon (Terminology). --- Politeness (Linguistics). --- Censorship --- Political correctness --- Linguistic taboo --- Ineffable, The --- Taboo --- Profanity --- Cant --- Correctness, Political --- PC (Political correctness) --- P.C. (Political correctness) --- Ideology --- Courtesy (Linguistics) --- Linguistics --- Buzzwords --- Gobbledygook --- Slang --- Terms and phrases --- Figures of speech --- Semantics --- Book censorship --- Books --- Literature --- Literature and morals --- Anticensorship activists --- Challenged books --- Expurgated books --- Intellectual freedom --- Prohibited books --- Law and legislation --- Lexicology. Semantics --- Sociolinguistics --- Pragmatics --- Censorship. --- Political correctness. --- Etiquette. --- Taal en talen --- Arts and Humanities --- Language & Linguistics --- Eufemismen. --- Slang. --- Linguïstiek.
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The articles in this volume present contemporary and original research on linguistic meaning, concept formation and conceptual analysis. A central theme across the articles is the question of how concepts are structured, how they are represented in the mind, and how they are expressed in language. Two introductory papers on concept types and frames set out the crucial role of attributes and frames for the representation of concepts. The topics of the contributions range from the interrelation between determination and reference of nominal expressions, the verbal and adjectival expression of attributes, and the analysis of metonymy to the frame-based representation of action-related concepts and the classification of mental disorders in psychiatry. The collection of articles provided by this volume will be of interest to researchers and advanced students in the fields of semantics, pragmatics, philosophy of mind, and the cognitive sciences.
LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / General. --- Action-Frames. --- Alexander Tokar. --- Alexander Ziem. --- Associative Anaphora. --- Barsalou Frames. --- Brigitte Schwarze. --- Christian Horn. --- Cognitive Frames. --- Cognitive Linguistic. --- Concept Frames. --- Concept Types. --- Concept of FEAR. --- Definiteness Effect. --- Determination. --- Diachrony. --- Experimental Method. --- Frame Theory. --- FrameNet. --- French. --- Functional Concepts. --- Functional Frames. --- Gerhard Schurz. --- Gottfried Vosgerau. --- Hana Filip. --- Hans Geisler. --- Heinrich-Heine-Universität Düsseldorf. --- Irem Girgin. --- Irene Russo. --- Italian Nouns. --- Julia Weiland. --- Jürgen Zielasek. --- Karin Fauerbach. --- Laura Kallmeyer. --- Liane Ströbel. --- Linguistic Realizations. --- Manner Adjectives. --- Metonymic Euphemism. --- Michael T. Stuart. --- New Classification. --- Nominal Concept Types. --- Non-Intersectivity. --- Nouns across Languages. --- Peter Indefrey. --- Possessive Constructions. --- Psychiatric Classification. --- Representation of Concepts. --- Representation of Frames. --- Robert D. van Valin. --- Ryo Oda. --- SFB 991. --- Sarah Jungbluth. --- Sascha Alexeyenko. --- Sebastian Löbner. --- Stative Dimensional Verbs. --- The definite article. --- Tim Seuchter. --- Tommaso Caselli. --- Wolfgang Gaebel. --- Yoshiki Mori. --- Yuko Kobukata.
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