Abstract
Abstract
This paper investigates the asymmetrical behavior of Sources and Goals of motion in Homeric and Classical Greek within the frame
semantics paradigm. In particular, based on a corpus of 26 works covering four text types, it is shown that (a) regardless of
their semantic class, motion verbs display preference for Goal paths compared to Source ones; (b) the frame that a verb
belongs to affects the type of path chosen only to a certain degree that does not change the Source-Goal imbalance; (c)
semantically incongruent motion verb – path combinations are naturally less frequent than congruent combinations, but
within the category of incongruent combinations the tokens are distributed in a way that reflects the prevalence of Goals; (d) the
number of markers for the encoding of Goal is higher than that of Source; and (e) Source and Goal markers interact with Place ones
in an asymmetrical way: Goal markers come to encode Place and, similarly, Place markers come to express Goal. Conversely, the
interaction of markers exhibiting Source-Place polysemy is unidirectional, in the sense that none of these markers was originally
used to encode Place alone. Theoretical implications of the study are discussed and directions for future research are
suggested.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics
Reference81 articles.
1. Lexicographic Relevance: Selecting Information From Corpus Evidence
2. The typology of motion expressions revisited
3. Frame Semantics as a framework for describing polysemy and syntactic structures of English and German motion verbs in contrastive computational lexicography;Boas,2001
4. Greek Prepositions
5. Put project: The cross-linguistic encoding of placement events;Bowerman,2004
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献