Author: Sandra/Taf
Publisher: Psychology Press
Keywords: lexical, access, representation, morphological, structure
Number of Pages: 252
Published: 1994-09-01
List price: $50.00
ISBN-10: 0863779263
ISBN-13: 9780863779268
Author: Dave Willi
Publisher: Collins CoBUILD
Keywords: syllabus, lexical
Number of Pages: 144
Published: 1990-10-21
List price: unknow
ISBN-10: 0003702847
ISBN-13: 9780003702842
Author: Daniel Clausen
Publisher: Lulu.com
Keywords: funk, lexical
Number of Pages: 158
Published: 2008-10-26
List price: $14.95
ISBN-10: 0557022304
ISBN-13: 9780557022304
Author: John Fisher
Publisher: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Keywords: vegliote, affiliations, lexical
Number of Pages: 165
Published: 1975-01
List price: $20.00
ISBN-10: 0838677967
ISBN-13: 9780838677964
Author: D. A. Cruse
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Keywords: linguistics, textbooks, cambridge, semantics, lexical
Number of Pages: 328
Published: 1986-09-26
List price: $58.00
ISBN-10: 0521276438
ISBN-13: 9780521276436
Lexical Semantics is about the meaning of words. Although obviously a central concern of linguistics, the semantic behaviour of words has been unduly neglected in the current literature, which has tended to emphasize sentential semantics and its relation to formal systems of logic. In this textbook D. A. Cruse establishes in a principled and disciplined way the descriptive and generalizable facts about lexical relations that any formal theory of semantics will have to encompass. Among the topics covered in depth are idiomaticity, lexical ambiguity, synonymy, hierarchical relations such as hypo
Author:
Publisher: Presses universitaires de Lille
Keywords: french, lexique, lexical, acces
Number of Pages: 189
Published: 1989
List price: unknow
ISBN-10: 2907170023
ISBN-13: 9782907170024
Author: Michael Hoey
Publisher: Routledge
Keywords: words, language, theory, new, priming, lexical
Number of Pages: 240
Published: 2005-06-13
List price: $45.95
ISBN-10: 0415328632
ISBN-13: 9780415328630
Lexical Priming proposes a radical new theory of the lexicon, which amounts to a completely new theory of language based on how words are used in the real world. Here they are not confined to the definitions given to them in dictionaries but instead interact with other words in common patterns of use. Using concrete statistical evidence from a corpus of newspaper English, but also referring to travel writing and literary text, the author argues that words are ’primed’ for use through our experience with them, so that everything we know about a word is a product of our encounters