In:Proverbs within Cognitive Linguistics: State of the art
Edited by Sadia Belkhir
[Cognitive Linguistic Studies in Cultural Contexts 16] 2024
► pp. 260–297
Chapter 10The only good snowclone is a dead snowclone
A cognitive-linguistic exploration of the frayed ends of proverbiality
Published online: 30 May 2024
https://doi.org/10.1075/clscc.16.10jen
https://doi.org/10.1075/clscc.16.10jen
Abstract
This chapter proposes that some snowclones (schematic stock phrases) display some degree of proverbiality to the extent
that it can be argued that they occupy a grey zone between proverbs proper and semi-schematic idioms. Drawing on theoretical insights
from construction grammar and cognitive-semantic approaches to socio-cultural cognition, this chapter also presents three case studies
of snowclones within the English language that are based on corpus-data and corpus-linguistic methodology. More specifically, this
chapter studies patterns of use, such as productivity, epistemic status marking, and co-occurrence with co-textual topics, of
the only good X is a dead X, one does not simply X into Y, and in X no one can hear you
Y so as to address their potential proverbial nature.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Proverbial snowclones as constructions
- 2.1Snowclones
- 2.2Proverbiality
- 2.3Proverbial snowclones
- 3.Data and method
- 4.Only good as a marker of social attitude
- 5.Difficulties in Mordor
- 6.Screaming in space and bread with Ripley
- 8.Concluding remarks
Notes References Appendix
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