In:Figuring out Figuration: A cognitive linguistic account
María Sandra Peña-Cervel and Francisco José Ruiz de Mendoza Ibáñez
[Figurative Thought and Language 14] 2022
► pp. 105–178
Chapter 4Metaphor and metonymy revisited
Published online: 13 May 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/ftl.14.c4
https://doi.org/10.1075/ftl.14.c4
Article outline
- 4.1Conceptual Metaphor Theory and subsequent developments
- 4.2Tracing the boundary line between metaphor and metonymy
- 4.3Metaphor and metonymy in terms of cognitive operations
- 4.4A typology of metaphor and metonymy
- 4.4.1The type of cognitive operation licensing the mapping
- 4.4.2The formal complexity of the mapping system
- 4.4.3The conceptual complexity of the mapping system
- 4.4.4The ontological status of the domains involved in the mapping
- 4.4.5The levels of genericity of the domains involved in the mapping
- 4.5Metaphoric and metonymic complexes
- 4.5.1Correlation with resemblance
- 4.5.2Expansion with reduction
- 4.5.3Expansion or reduction with resemblance
- 4.5.4Correlation with correlation
- 4.6Metaphor, metonymy, and grammar
- 4.6.1High-level metaphor and metonymy
- 4.6.2Metonymy and anaphora
- 4.6.3On the metonymic grounding of fictive motion constructions
- 4.6.4Metaphor, metonymy, and image-schema transformations
- 4.7Metaphor-like figures
- 4.7.1Simile
- 4.7.2Zoomorphism and anthropomorphism
- 4.7.3Analogy, paragon, kenning, and allegory
- 4.7.4Synesthesia
- 4.8Metonymy-like figures
- 4.8.1Hypallage
- 4.8.2Antonomasia
- 4.8.3Anthimeria
- 4.8.4Proverbs
- 4.8.5Synecdoche
- 4.8.6Merism
- 4.9Constraining metaphor and metonymy
Notes
