Lexical meaning as a testable hypothesis

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Lexical meaning as a testable hypothesis

The case of English look, see, seem and appear

Semantics, discourse analysis, stylistics

Author: Nadav Sabar

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Collection: Studies in Functional and Structural Linguistics

Language: English

Published by: John Benjamins Publishing Company

Published on: 26th April 2018

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 160 pages

ISBN: 9789027264343


Introduction

This book offers an original treatment of the lexical form look. The work is innovative in that it establishes that the Columbia School conception of an invariant meaning — hitherto found primarily in grammar — is equally operative in core vocabulary items like look and see.

Key Findings

The upshot is that grammar and lexicon are both amenable to synchronic monosemic analysis. The invariant meaning proposed for look explains the full range of its distribution, without the need to posit as linguistic units 'look-noun' and 'look-verb', 'look-visual' and 'look-intellectual', or constructions such as have-a-look, look-like, etc.

Analysis and Support

The analysis places look in opposition with see, seem and appear for which tentative meanings are posited as well. The hypotheses are supported through qualitative analyses of attested examples and quantitative predictions tested in a massive corpus.

Implications

These predictions offer new knowledge about the distribution of look, see and other forms that may provide useful for other scholars.

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