Objects as human bodies: cross-linguistic colexifications between words for body parts and objects

Author:

Tjuka Annika1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Linguistic and Cultural Evolution , 28305 Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology , Deutscher Platz 6, 04103 Leipzig , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Many languages have words that denote a human body part and an object, for example, hand, which refers to a part of a person and a watch. As of yet, there is no systematic study on the distribution of these shared names, i.e., colexifications, between two concrete semantic domains in a variety of languages. Here, I present a study that investigates colexifications between body and object concepts, i.e., body-object colexifications. By using a newly established workflow, colexifications are automatically extracted based on a seed list containing 134 body concepts and 650 object concepts. The analysis focuses on the frequency, distribution, cognitive relations, and coincidental cases of 78 body-object colexifications occurring across 396 language varieties. The results show that some body-object colexifications are widespread, but most occur in a small number of language varieties. By creating a network structure to examine individual relations and additionally comparing ratings of visual and haptic perception across concepts, the study indicates that the similarity of visual perception plays a central role in the emergence of body-object colexifications. The findings provide a first general overview of the phenomenon and offer ample opportunities for future research.

Funder

International Max Planck Research School for the Science of Human History

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference114 articles.

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3. Apresjan, Jurij D. 1974. Regular polysemy. Linguistics 12(142). 5–32. https://doi.org/10.1515/ling.1974.12.142.5.

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