TY - JOUR
T1 - Explicating the English lexicon of 'doing and happening'
AU - Goddard, Cliff
AU - Wierzbicka, Anna
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© John Benjamins Publishing Company.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - This study proposes NSM semantic explications for a cross-section of the English verbal lexicon of 'doing and happening'. The twenty-five verbs are drawn from about a dozen verb classes, including verbs for non-typical locomotion (crawl, swim, fly), other intransitive activities (play, sing), manipulation (hold), activities that affect material integrity (cut, grind, dig), creation/production (make, build, carve), actions that affect people or things (hit, kick, kill) or cause a change of location (pick up, put, throw, push), bodily reactions to feelings (laugh, cry), displacement (fall, sink) and weather phenomena (rain, snow). Though the verbs explicated are specifically English verbs, they have been chosen with an eye to their relevance to lexical typology and cross-linguistic semantics (many are drawn from the Verb Meanings List of the Leipzig Valency Patterns project) and it is hoped that the analytical strategy and methodology exemplified in this study can be a useful model for research into other languages. The study demonstrates the application of the NSM concept of semantic templates, which provide a clear "skeletal" structure for explications of considerable internal complexity and which help account for shared semantic and grammatical properties of verbs of a given subclass.
AB - This study proposes NSM semantic explications for a cross-section of the English verbal lexicon of 'doing and happening'. The twenty-five verbs are drawn from about a dozen verb classes, including verbs for non-typical locomotion (crawl, swim, fly), other intransitive activities (play, sing), manipulation (hold), activities that affect material integrity (cut, grind, dig), creation/production (make, build, carve), actions that affect people or things (hit, kick, kill) or cause a change of location (pick up, put, throw, push), bodily reactions to feelings (laugh, cry), displacement (fall, sink) and weather phenomena (rain, snow). Though the verbs explicated are specifically English verbs, they have been chosen with an eye to their relevance to lexical typology and cross-linguistic semantics (many are drawn from the Verb Meanings List of the Leipzig Valency Patterns project) and it is hoped that the analytical strategy and methodology exemplified in this study can be a useful model for research into other languages. The study demonstrates the application of the NSM concept of semantic templates, which provide a clear "skeletal" structure for explications of considerable internal complexity and which help account for shared semantic and grammatical properties of verbs of a given subclass.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84991105192&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1075/fol.23.2.03god
DO - 10.1075/fol.23.2.03god
M3 - Article
SN - 0929-998X
VL - 23
SP - 214
EP - 256
JO - Functions of Language
JF - Functions of Language
IS - 2
ER -