Polysemy and metaphor in perception verbs: a cross-linguistic study
particular group of verbs and no other
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PhD-Thesis-99
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- CHAPTER 3: THE ETYMOLOGY OF PERCEPTION VERBS.
particular group of verbs and no other. In the following chapter the etymology of the verbs used in the analysis will be discussed. The objective of this chapter is to provide further support for the claim that meanings evolve from a physical domain to a more abstract domain. It is also the aim of this chapter to show how words that are not etymologically related convey the same meanings. B. Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano Polysemy and metaphor in perception verbs 90 CHAPTER 3: THE ETYMOLOGY OF PERCEPTION VERBS. In the previous chapter I have given a synchronic analysis of the semantic field of perception verbs in English, Basque and Spanish. This analysis offers us a picture of what meanings are conveyed by these perception verbs in present-day English, Basque and Spanish. However, perception verbs have not always contained the same meanings in the past. Semantic change occurs as a step by step process over time, such that at any given period a word may have several meanings and over time some of these meanings will remain, while others will change or disappear. Thus, the study of polysemy in perception verbs presented in the previous chapter can be considered as only one stage in the semantic development of these verbs. In order to understand why perception verbs have their present-day meanings it is necessary to examine how their meanings have developed and what the sources of perception verbs in these three languages are. Etymological information is very useful because as Sweetser puts it, “through a historical analysis of ‘routes’ of semantic change, it is possible to elucidate synchronic semantic connections between lexical domains; similarly, synchronic connections may help to clarify reasons for shifts of meaning in past linguistic history” (1990: 45). In this chapter, an etymological study of perception verbs is presented both as background information for some of the claims made in this thesis and as a basis for future research into semantic change in this field. The study of semantic change underwent a long period of relative neglect. It was generally regarded as whimsical, random and irregular, mainly because it did not offer as many tractable data to systematic analysis as other fields in Linguistics, such as Phonology and Syntax. The creation of general rules that could explain how and why these changes took place was thought to be impossible (Hock 1986: 308). As a consequence, most of the studies in this area focused on individual changes rather than on the search for regular semantic changes, which could provide some generalisations B. Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano Polysemy and metaphor in perception verbs 91 and constraints 82 . It was not until the last twenty years that Ullmann’s statement that in semantic change “the existence of […] regularities is in most cases extremely hard to demonstrate, and their very possibility is still doubted by many scholars” (1957: 154) was questioned and disputed. Researchers within the framework of Cognitive Linguistics, such as Sweetser (1990)(see Chapter 4), have challenged this view. They have shown that there are certain types of semantic change that are regular and recurrent enough to be predictable. It is important to remember that, as pointed out in Section 1.1.1, the traditional Saussurian dichotomy between synchrony and diachrony is not strict within this framework. Meanings are cognitive structures embedded in our patterns of knowledge and belief, and therefore it can be said that the same social, functional and cognitive motivation present in historical changes is also observable in ongoing changes. In other words, if we can provide a model that accounts for how and why polysemy occurs in a semantic field in present-day language, it will be possible to apply the same constraints and parameters to the study of how and why semantic evolution occurs in the same semantic field. Unfortunately a thorough analysis of the semantic changes in perception verbs is beyond the scope of this thesis. Here I base my analysis on present-day meanings of these verbs. Stemming from these data I propose a model that accounts for the reasons why, as well as for the ways in which, these meanings are conveyed by this semantic field in particular (see Chapters 5, 6, 7). Whether the framework put forward in this thesis can be applied, as predicted, to the study of semantic development remains a question for future research. The etymology of perception verbs 83 presented in this chapter will help to stimulate such a research by providing a useful basis that may have predictive applications. The etymological descriptions that follow will be used as further support for some of the claims put forward in this thesis. These descriptions support the cross- 82 Traditional accounts for semantic change can be found in Antilla (1972), Bloomfield (1935, 1983[1914]), Hock (1986), Jeffers and Lehiste (1979), Ullmann (1957, 1962), among others. McMahon (1994) is a good survey of both traditional and more recent approaches in semantic change. 83 Most of the information gathered in this chapter is drawn from etymological dictionaries (see special section in Bibliography), as well as specialised books on the subject. As it is not my aim to propose new etymologies or to disclaim any of those already in existence, I have limited myself to report what my sources have said about the etymological origins of these verbs. B. Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano Polysemy and metaphor in perception verbs 92 linguistic character of the semantic extensions presented in Chapter 2. The languages used in this analysis belong to different language families. English and Spanish are both Indo-European, but the former is a Germanic language, whereas the latter is a Romance language. Basque is not etymologically related to either. It is an isolated language. The fact that the perception verbs in these languages are not etymologically related, but at the same time show the same polysemous senses, gives further evidence for the cognitive linguistic tenet that these semantic extensions are motivated by our bodily, physical, social and cultural experiences. The bodily basis of the semantic extensions in perception verbs is presented in Chapter 5 and Chapter 6 shows how it may constrain the creation of such extended meanings. It is to the description of the etymology of these perception verbs that we now turn. Download 1.39 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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