Search results for "HOMER"

showing 10 items of 65 documents

Towards a Reconstruction of Indo-European Culture: Semantic Functions of IE *men-

2003

The aim of this paper is to recover the semantic values involved in IE *men- in order to reconstruct some cognitive process modalities in regard to "Indo-European ideology" (Campanile 1992). After focusing on the apparent semantic split noticeable between Homeric Greek and Vedic in the uses derived from *men-, I argue for the presence of striking parallel paths using the methods of textual comparison. Then, the role of lexical nucleus' polysemy in originating the linguistic change is highlighted, without disregarding an Indo-European typological perspective within the realm of the so-called "basic lexicon" to which the root at issue belongs.

Indo-European culturepolysemyVedic Sanskrit.Homeric GreekSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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From Thinking to Raging: Reflexes of Indo-European *men- Polysemy in Homer

2020

This paper aims at investigating the semantic value of the verb μαίνομαι “to rage, to be furious” in Homeric Greek, in order to clarify the striking semantic relationship between the common ‘irrational’ meaning of the verb and the original ‘rational’ meaning of the Indo-European root *men- “to think”, to which the verb traces back. The corresponding words for μαίνομαι in other Indo-European languages (e.g. OInd. mányatē; Av. mainyeite; OIr. (do)moiniur; OCS mъnjo; Lit. miniu) can be translated as “to think”, thus showing an opposite meaning. From a textual analysis of all the occurrences of μαίνομαι in the Iliad and the Odyssey, the study aims at finding semantic traces of the original mean…

Indo-European Homeric Greek SemanticsRoot (linguistics)Original meaningIrrational numberVerbMeaning (existential)PolysemyValue (semiotics)Association (psychology)PsychologyLinguisticsSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Lucian, a new Odysseus? : role and issue of a Homeric character in the work of Lucian of Samosata

2015

The aim of our thesis, which comes within the scope of considering the process of rewriting classic texts in the time period of the second sophistic, is to study the unique importance of Odysseus in the writings of Lucian of Samosata. At first, Odysseus is distinguished from Achilles, a character more monolithic who, even in Homer’s works is constructed in contrast to Odysseus. Moreover, from an isolated quote to intricate references, scattered to create echoes between works seemingly very different, the context in which Odysseus appears is more elaborate and subtler than that of Achilles. Hence, studying and comparing references to both heroes is sufficient to imply Odysseus’ primacy, asso…

InvestigationTravelRewritingUlysseLecteurAchillesLiesVoyageLucienOdysseusRéécritureReader[SHS.LITT] Humanities and Social Sciences/LiteratureHomerFictionAchilleExplorationHomèreMensonge
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STRATEGIE DI CODIFICA LINGUISTICA DEGLI EVENTI DI MOVIMENTO NEL GRECO OMERICO

Lexical TypologyTelicitàMotion verbTelicityGrammaticalizzazioneGrammaticalizationEventi di motoHomeric GreekGreco omericoMotion eventVerbi di movimentoTipologia lessicaleSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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INHERENT TELICITY AND PROTO- INDO-EUROPEAN VERBAL PARADIGMS

2016

In recent aspectual classi}cations telicity is described as a compositional syntactic property, and verbs are analyzed as complex structures made up of completely neutral roots. However, semantic changes due to both derivational processes and di‰erent syntactic contexts could have obscured the relationship between root lexical aspect and verb morphological paradigms. The purpose of this paper is to show that telicity can be considered as an inherent lexical property: the co-occurrence in a sentence with arguments, adverbials or speci}c pragmatic contexts which can (de)telicize the event described by a verb has consequences at syntactic level, whereas the prototypical aspect of the root is p…

Lexical telicityVerbal ParadigmMorphological DiagnosticVedic SanskritHomeric GreekSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Binge drinking upregulates accumbens mGluR5-Homer2-PI3K signaling: functional implications for alcoholism.

2009

The glutamate receptor-associated protein Homer2 regulates alcohol-induced neuroplasticity within the nucleus accumbens (NAC), but the precise intracellular signaling cascades involved are not known. This study examined the role for NAC metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR)-Homer2-phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling in regulating excessive alcohol consumption within the context of the scheduled high alcohol consumption (SHAC) model of binge alcohol drinking. Repeated bouts of binge drinking ( approximately 1.5 g/kg per 30 min) elevated NAC Homer2a/b expression and increased PI3K activity in this region. Virus-mediated knockdown of NAC Homer2b expression attenuated alcohol intak…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyReceptor Metabotropic Glutamate 5Binge drinkingContext (language use)Mice TransgenicNucleus accumbensReceptors Metabotropic GlutamateNucleus AccumbensArticleWortmanninchemistry.chemical_compoundMicePhosphatidylinositol 3-KinasesHomer Scaffolding ProteinsInternal medicinemental disordersmedicineAnimalsEthanolEthanolMetabotropic glutamate receptor 5business.industryGeneral NeuroscienceAntagonistUp-RegulationMice Inbred C57BLAlcoholismEndocrinologyPhenotypechemistryMetabotropic glutamate receptorbusinessCarrier ProteinsNeuroscienceSignal TransductionThe Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
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Shining castles and humans of metal/floral appearance ? metaphorical language in the Palaiologan romances Kallimachos and Velthandros

2019

About eight centuries after Heliodorus, the Greek novel resurfaced in the twelfth century, in Komnenian Byzantium, and again two centuries later under the Palaiologan dynasty. This latter literary revival was due to the political stability of the imperial Byzantine government, which promoted cultural production, rhetorical education, and patronage networks. Kallimachos and Velthandros, two Palaiologan romances presented as court literature, combine ancient and medieval tropes with rhetorical artistry to blur the boundaries between the artificial and the natural. Castles and objects made of precious metals thus resemble living, natural spaces, and human characters are portrayed in metallurgi…

Metaphorical languageSimileUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRAScombine ancient and medieval tropes with rhetorical artistry to blur the boundaries between the artificial and the natural. Castles and objects made of precious metals thus resemble livingand patronage networks. Kallimachos and Velthandrosthe Greek novel resurfaced in the twelfth centuryand again two centuries later under the Palaiologan dynasty. This latter literary revival was due to the political stability of the imperial Byzantine governmentHomeric modelnatural spacesand human characters are portrayed in metallurgical//pages.uv.es/SPhV/cas/numero21.wiki [and zoomorphic terms. Palaiologan romance ? Homeric model ? ekphrasis ? metaphorical language ? simile 83 100 https]Ekphrasistwo Palaiologan romances presented as court literaturein Komnenian Byzantium1135-9560 8276 Studia philologica valentina 536436 2019 21 7225814 Shining castles and humans of metal/floral appearance ? metaphorical language in the Palaiologan romances Kallimachos and Velthandros Fonsecawhich promoted cultural productionanthomorphicByzantine literaturePalaiologan romancerhetorical education:CIENCIAS DE LAS ARTES Y LAS LETRAS [UNESCO]and zoomorphic terms. Palaiologan romance ? Homeric model ? ekphrasis ? metaphorical language ? simile 83 100 https://pages.uv.es/SPhV/cas/numero21.wikiRui Carlos About eight centuries after Heliodorus
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La construcción del tipo del 'salvaje' en Homero

1999

Estudio del mito del 'hombre salvaje' en la épica homérica, sobre todo en la 'Odisea' y en el canto IX, en el que se narra la visita de Odiseo y sus amigos al país de los cíclopes, en contraste con la visita posterior a la tierra de los feacios, modelos respectivos de salvajes y de civilizados. Este prototipo de 'salvaje', antropófago, orgulloso y soberbio, impío y cruel, aislado y desconocedor de la agricultura, la navegación y la hospitalidad, marcará la historia de Occidente, en la que sufre una serie de aleccionadoras transformaciones.

Mito del hombre salvajeHistoria de la antropologíaUNESCO::FILOSOFÍA:FILOSOFÍA [UNESCO]:ANTROPOLOGÍA [UNESCO]HomeroAntropología filosóficaFilosofía de la culturaUNESCO::ANTROPOLOGÍA
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The Homeric compound Ὑπερίων and the sun in the Indo-European culture

2017

This paper aims at reconstructing the semantic meaning of Homeric Ὑπερίων, the epithet of the sun, whose etymology is still not clear. After presenting the modern interpretations, which describe it as an adjective in the comparative form derived from the adverbial particle ὑπέρ ‘up, above’, the ancient grammarians’ hypothesis on Ὑπερίων as a compound is tested, taking into consideration the textual analysis of those discourse contexts in which the terms for sun are used in archaic Greek and Vedic Sanskrit in comparative perspective. In particular, the co-occurrence with the motion verb go, i.e. εἶμι and i from the same IE root *h1ey-, in the Homeric poems and in the Rigveda respectively, mi…

Morphological compounds Indo-European etymology historical-comparative analysis Homeric Greek Vedic SanskritSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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Lexical Aspect and Motion Event Encoding in Homeric Greek: A Case Study - poster

2017

Lexical Aspect and Motion Event Encoding in Homeric Greek: A Case Study This paper aims to investigate the role that lexical aspect (Aktionsart) plays in motion event encoding in Homeric Greek. In particular, the role of telicity as an inherent semantic property of the verb has been recently re-evaluated within the verbal system of early Indo-European languages (Bartolotta 2016). On the basis of textual analysis of the Iliad and the Odyssey, I will argue how Homeric Greek motion verbs appear to be compatible with the entailment of the arrival of the Figure to the Ground according to their inherent telicity (see Bartolotta forthcoming). Specifically, I will focus on the Homeric verbs for ̔ru…

Motion events Homeric Greek Lexical aspect Telicity Spatial particles Figure/GroundSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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