In:A Cognitive Perspective on Spatial Prepositions: Intertwining networks
Maria Brenda and Jolanta Mazurkiewicz-Sokołowska
[Human Cognitive Processing 74] 2022
► pp. v–viii
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Published online: 13 October 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.74.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.74.toc
Table of contents
List of figures
List of tables
Preface
Chapter 1.Introduction
Chapter 2.Prepositions in the subject literature
2.1English prepositions and the preposition to
2.2German prepositions and the preposition zu
2.3Polish prepositions and the preposition do
2.4Russian prepositions and the preposition к
Chapter 3.Construal of spatial scenes and meaning construction
3.1Construal of spatial scenes
3.2Meaning construction
Chapter 4.Prepositions to, zu, do, and к as conceptual categories
Chapter 5.Image schema, metonymy and metaphor
5.1Image schema and metonymy
5.2Conceptual metaphor
Chapter 6.Method of analysis
Chapter 7.The characteristics of the established prepositional senses
7.1The senses established for to, zu, do, and к
7.1.1The Physical-path Sense
7.1.2The Attainment Sense
7.1.3The Abstract-attainment Sense
7.1.4The Purpose Sense
7.1.5The Range Sense
7.1.6The Abstract-range Sense
7.1.7The Scale Sense
7.1.8The Temporal-range Sense
7.1.9The Processual-path Sense
7.1.10The Focus-of-attention Sense
7.1.11The Effect Sense
7.1.12The Reference Sense
7.1.13The Abstract-reference Sense
7.1.14The Judgment Sense
7.1.15The Orientation Sense
7.1.16The Transfer Sense
7.1.17The Abstract-transfer Sense
7.1.18The Recipient Sense
7.1.19The Inclusion Sense
7.1.20The Abstract-inclusion Sense
7.2The senses established for to, do, and к
7.2.1The Contact Sense
7.2.2The Abstract-contact Sense
7.3The senses established for to, zu, and do
7.3.1The Change-of-state Sense
7.4The senses established for to, zu, and к
7.4.1The Response Sense
7.5The senses established for to and zu
7.5.1The Location Sense
7.5.2The Temporal-location Sense
7.6The senses established for do and к
7.6.1The Addition Sense
7.7The senses established for to
7.7.1The Change-of-position Sense
7.7.2The Experience Sense
7.8The senses established for zu
7.8.1The Means-of-transport Sense
7.8.2The Grouping Sense
7.8.3The Part-of-whole Sense
7.8.4The Content-clarification Sense
7.8.5The Arrangement Sense
7.9The semantics of the infinitive
7.9.1The English infinitive
7.9.2The semantics of infinitival to
7.9.2.1The Abstract-attainment Sense
7.9.2.2The Purpose Sense
7.9.2.3The Processual-path Sense
7.9.2.4The Effect Sense
7.9.2.5The Change-of-state Sense
7.9.2.6The Judgment Sense
7.9.2.7The Abstract-inclusion Sense
7.9.3The German infinitive
7.9.4The semantics of infinitival zu
7.9.4.1The Abstract-attainment Sense
7.9.4.2The Processual-path Sense
7.9.4.3The Focus-of-attention Sense
7.9.4.4The Effect Sense
7.9.4.5The Change-of-state Sense
7.9.4.6The Judgment Sense
7.9.4.7The Abstract-inclusion Sense
7.9.5Um […] zu (in order to), ohne […] zu (without to), and (an)statt […] zu (instead to) constructions
7.10The semantic networks and sense frequency
7.10.1English
7.10.2German
7.10.3Polish
7.10.4Russian
Chapter 8.Discussion of results
8.1The conceptual categories of to, zu, do, and к and the motion event frame
8.1.1Path
8.1.2Other spatial concepts of the motion event frame
8.1.3Cognitive mechanisms grounded in the motion event frame
8.1.4Metonymy in prepositional senses
8.1.5Findings of the semantic analysis
8.2Problematic issues concerning sense identification
8.3The investigated prepositions in a cross-linguistic perspective
8.4The relation of language and conceptualization
8.5Prepositional frequencies in contrast
Chapter 9.Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
