Contrastive lexicology 3. Studying metaphor with the british national corpus (BNC) презентация

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CORPUS-BASED LANGUAGE STUDIES Corpora studies present a new strategy which

CORPUS-BASED LANGUAGE STUDIES

Corpora studies present a new strategy which highlights the

evidence of natural, ‘real’ language. The term ‘corpus linguistics’ “refers not just to a new computer-based methodology, but, as G. Leech (1992: 106) put it, a ‘new research enterprise’, a new way of thinking about language, which is challenging some of the deeply-rooted ideas. To cope with the vastness of a living language the idea of corpora had been introduced to back up and foster linguistic studies born out by evidence, i.e. a large amount of facts of real language.
The three-fold approach to language data within the framework of corpus linguistics has been summarized as follows:
it is an empirical approach to the description of language use;
it operates within the framework of a contextual and functional theory of meaning;
it makes use of new technologies.
(Tognini-Bonelli, 2001: 2)
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CORPUS LINGUISTICS AND OTHER PARADIGMS The perspective of corpus linguistics

CORPUS LINGUISTICS AND OTHER PARADIGMS

The perspective of corpus linguistics differs from

that of generative grammarians who see language as an innate mechanism which empowers native speakers to produce an infinite set of ‘correct’ sentences.
“If we want to find out what is common to all languages, we should embrace Chomskyan linguistics. If we want to find out if a French sentence is structured grammatically, we should rely on standard linguistics. If we want to find out what words, sentences and texts mean, we should opt for corpus linguistics.”
(Teubert, 2005: 97)
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CORPUS LINGUISTICS AS PART OF THE FUNCTIONAL-COMMUNICATIVE PARADIGM Language is

CORPUS LINGUISTICS AS PART OF THE FUNCTIONAL-COMMUNICATIVE PARADIGM
Language is a Social

Phenomenon
A Corpus Linguistic Description of Language Prioritizes Lexis
Meaning and Form are Associated
(Mahlberg, 2007: 3)
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MEANING FROM “A BOTTOM-UP POINT-OF-VIEW”

MEANING FROM “A BOTTOM-UP POINT-OF-VIEW”

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CONCORDANCES – “LINES OF TEXT ON COMPUTER SHOWING THE WORD

CONCORDANCES – “LINES OF TEXT ON COMPUTER SHOWING THE WORD IN

ITS CONTEXTS”

Concordances of ‘look forward to’ in business letters
(The International Corpus of English – ICE-GB)

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COLLOCATE – A WORD HABITUALLY JUXTAPOSED WITH ANOTHER WITH A

COLLOCATE – A WORD HABITUALLY JUXTAPOSED WITH ANOTHER WITH A FREQUENCY

GREATER THAN CHANCE

Collocates for ‘mortgage’ include ‘lend’ and ‘property’
Absolutely – collocates on the right (R) and left sides (L)

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SEARCHING FOR METAPHOR IN THE CORPUS Corpus-based analysis can facilitate

SEARCHING FOR METAPHOR IN THE CORPUS

Corpus-based analysis can facilitate research into

metaphor. First of all, a large, representative corpus can provide ample data for constructing semantic frames, which enable the researcher to identify elements most prone to metaphoric use.
The basic tools for such analyses are selecting the search word (the core of the metaphor), sorted concordance lines, and collocates statistics.
(M. Fabiszak, P. Kaszubski “Studying metaphor with the BNC”, Volume Poznan Studies in Contemporary Linguistics, Issue 41, 2006, pp. 111-129)
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EXAMPLE: DECLARE WAR When sorted by the right co-text in

EXAMPLE: DECLARE WAR

When sorted by the right co-text in the BNC,

the concordance pointed to the preposition ‘on’ referring to:
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DECLARE WAR: THE SEMANTIC FRAME The analysis of most significant

DECLARE WAR: THE SEMANTIC FRAME

The analysis of most significant collocates in

the corpus points to a strong co-occurrence pattern between Declare war and names of states and Adverbs of time (in 1939, in September 1939, on 1 August 1914).
At the same time, at least 20 uses were found to be metaphorical. References to concrete and abstract entities occurred only in metaphorical contexts.
While ‘declaring war on acid rain’ is quite possible, ‘fighting a war against acid rain’ is most unlikely.
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THE SCALAR NATURE OF METAPHOR Corpus evidence can produce examples

THE SCALAR NATURE OF METAPHOR

Corpus evidence can produce examples unexpected for

the researcher. Although prototypically fighting a war involves two or more warring parties, fighting a war on drugs may require not military actions, but may consist in running campaigns or developing therapy centers (a metaphorical use).
A case of zeugma: “The Civil war, which was fought with texts and pamphlets as much as with weapons”.
The verb phrase (VP) ‘fight war’ is used with a coordinated noun phrase (NP) where each of the phrases texts and pamphlets, on the one hand, and weapons, on the other, appeal to a different, literal or metaphorical use of the VP.
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METAPHORICITY AS A MATTER OF DEGREE Zeugma and other rhetorical

METAPHORICITY AS A MATTER OF DEGREE

Zeugma and other rhetorical devices are

a play on words utilizing the ambiguity between the literal and metaphorical interpretation of the phrase.
“There are more wars to be fought than those with guns” makes use of this kind of ambiguity through an implication that non-military conflicts can be as fierce as wars.
A prototype is the central (focal) meaning or stereotype as the best general representative of a category.
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A SCALE OF METAPHORICITY The scale has two opposing focal

A SCALE OF METAPHORICITY

The scale has two opposing focal points: the

literal and the metaphorical. Between the two extremes extends a ground for more fuzzy examples ranging from non-prototypical literal to seriously ambiguous.
Focal literal meaning
non-prototypical literal
ambiguous
focal metaphorical
(Fabiszak, Kaszubski, op.cit, p. 126-127)
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EXAMPLE: THE SEARCH WORD BATTLEFIELD The left-sorted concordance indicated that

EXAMPLE: THE SEARCH WORD BATTLEFIELD

The left-sorted concordance indicated that battlefield tended

to appear in NPs of the structure: N of a battlefield:
Area
Guided tours
Chaos of a battlefield
Sombre imagery
The first premodifying noun (area) captures the spatial nature of the word. Guided tours point to the cultural development of the concept covered by the word battlefield, i.e. its development into a sightseeing place. Chaos and sombre imagery, both highly negative, stress the aspect of human suffering.
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EXAMPLE: BATTLEFIELD Despite undergoing a meaning extension to the tourist

EXAMPLE: BATTLEFIELD

Despite undergoing a meaning extension to the tourist domain, battlefield

is essentially non-metaphorical in nature: the metaphorical uses of this noun (ideological, political, parliamentary battlefield, a tour of the battlefield) are rather rare (12,9 % of all the tokens).
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EXAMPLE: BATTLEGROUND The left-sorted concordance showed a large number of

EXAMPLE: BATTLEGROUND

The left-sorted concordance showed a large number of metaphorical uses:

‘became a battleground in the government’s fight to promote a change’, ‘turning this former urban battleground into a holiday destination’, ‘classroom, competitive, electoral, ideological, moral, political battleground’, ‘a battleground of the sexes’.
The right-sorted concordance revealed the most common prepositional phrases, also mostly metaphorical: ‘the battleground for the competing ideologies of the academic community and of the state’, etc.
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BATTLEGROUND VS. BATTLEFIELD The semantic frame of battlefield:

BATTLEGROUND VS. BATTLEFIELD

The semantic frame of battlefield:

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