Iconicity ratings really do measure iconicity, and they open a new window onto the nature of language

Author:

Winter Bodo1,Perlman Marcus1

Affiliation:

1. Department of English Language & Linguistics , University of Birmingham , Birmingham , UK

Abstract

Abstract This paper reviews recent research using participant ratings to measure the iconicity (form-meaning resemblance) of words and signs. This method, by enabling wide coverage of lexical items and cross-linguistic comparison, has revealed systematic patterns in how iconicity is distributed across the vocabularies of different languages. These findings are consistent with established linguistic and psychological theory on iconicity, and they connect iconicity to factors like learning and acquisition, semantics, pragmatic aspects of language like playfulness, and to the semantic neighborhood density of words and signs. After taking stock of this research, we look critically at the construct validity of iconicity ratings, considering an alternative account of iconicity ratings recently put forward by Thompson, Arthur Lewis, Kimi Akita & Youngah Do. 2020a. Iconicity ratings across the Japanese lexicon: A comparative study with English. Linguistics Vanguard 6. 20190088. They propose that, for most vocabulary, participants might rate the iconicity of different words based on their meaning alone – specifically the degree to which it relates to the senses – independently of actual form-meaning resemblance. We argue that their hypothesis cannot account for many of the various, theory-driven results from this line of research, which strongly support the conclusion that the ratings really do measure iconicity.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics

Reference74 articles.

1. Akita, Kimi. 2009. A grammar of sound-symbolic words in Japanese: Theoretical approaches to iconic and lexical properties of mimetics. Kobe: Kobe University PhD thesis.

2. Akita, Kimi. 2013. Constraints on the semantic extension of onomatopoeia. Public Journal of Semiotics 5(1). 21–37, https://doi.org/10.37693/pjos.2013.5.9646.

3. Aristotle. 350AD. On interpretation. http://classics.mit.edu/Aristotle/interpretation.html (accessed 9 November 2020).

4. Armstrong, David F. & Sherman E. Wilcox. 2007. The gestural origin of language. Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press.

5. Bellugi, Ursula & Edward S. Klima. 1976. Two faces of sign: Iconic and abstract. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 280. 514–538.

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