Search results for "Prepositional phrase"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Continuity and discontinuity in the semantics of the Latin preposition per: a cognitive hypothesis

2011

Abstract We propose a description of the semantic network of the Latin prepositional phrase per ‘through’ + Accusative in the early stage of this language. Drawing upon the insights of Cognitive Grammar, we analyze the role of the schematic import in the spread from basic to abstract meanings. Finally, we draw a map of the polysemous network of per, showing that the continuity of the different, but consistently linked, meanings does not necessarily imply the unidirectionality of the concrete-to-abstract shifts.

Discontinuity (linguistics)Cognitive grammarSemantic mapEarly Latin Cognitive Grammar prepositional phrase semantic map spatial meaningCognitionLinguisticsMathematicsPrepositional phraseSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E Linguistica
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The embodied sources of purpose expressions in Latin

2016

This chapter examines the phrasal means of encoding the semantic role of purpose in Latin. After discussing the notion of semantic role and its use in cognitive linguistics, we illustrate the conceptual relation between the notional domains of space and causation. On this basis, we analyze the source of purpose expressions in Latin, which are mainly based on direction (bare dative and the allative markers, i.e. ad / in + accusative), but also include prepositional phrases metaphorically derived from location (e.g. per + accusative, prō + ablative, propter + accusative), or metonymically spreading from reason to purpose (as in the case of causal markers such as genitive + causā and gratiā ).

Space (punctuation)Genitive caseEmbodied cognitionDative caseEncoding (semiotics)space reason location direction metonymy metaphor prepositional phrases phrasal constructions purpose causationCausationPsychologyCognitive linguisticsLinguisticsSettore L-LIN/01 - Glottologia E LinguisticaAllative case
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