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How Language Makes Meaning: Embodiment and Conjoined Antonymy
Herbert L. Colston
(Author)
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Cambridge University Press
· Paperback
How Language Makes Meaning: Embodiment and Conjoined Antonymy - Colston, Herbert L.
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Synopsis "How Language Makes Meaning: Embodiment and Conjoined Antonymy"
Language's key function is to enable human social interaction, for which people are motivated to engage by powerful brain mechanisms. This book integrates recent work on embodied simulations, traditional meaning-making processes and a myriad of semantic and other meaning contributors to formulate a new model of how language functions following a pattern of conjoined antonymy. It investigates how embodied simulations, semantic information, deviation, omission, indirectness, figurativity, language play, and other processes leverage rich meaning from only a few words by using inherently biological, cognitive and social frameworks. The interaction of these meaning-making components of language is described and a language-functioning model based on recent neuroscientific research is laid out to allow for a more complete understanding of how language operates
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All books in our catalog are Original.
The book is written in English.
The binding of this edition is Paperback.
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