In:Ideophones, Mimetics and Expressives
Edited by Kimi Akita and Prashant Pardeshi
[Iconicity in Language and Literature 16] 2019
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 6 May 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/ill.16.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/ill.16.toc
Table of contents
Editors and contributors
Abbreviations and symbols
Introduction: Ideophones, mimetics, and expressives: Theoretical and typological perspectives
Kimi Akita
Prashant Pardeshi
Part I.Phonology and morphology
Chapter 1.‘Ideophone’ as a comparative concept
Mark Dingemanse
Chapter 2.The phonological structure of Japanese mimetics and motherese
Haruo Kubozono
Chapter 3.Monosyllabic and disyllabic roots in the diachronic development of Japanese mimetics
Shoko Hamano
Chapter 4.Cross-linguistic variation in phonaesthemic canonicity, with special reference to Korean and English
Nahyun Kwon
Chapter 5.Classification of nominal compounds containing mimetics: A Construction Morphology perspective
Kiyoko Toratani
Part II.Semantics and pragmatics
Chapter 6.Towards a semantic typological classification of motion ideophones: The motion semantic grid
Iraide Ibarretxe-Antuñano
Chapter 7.The sensori-semantic clustering of ideophonic meaning in Pastaza Quichua
Janis B. Nuckolls
Chapter 8.The power of ‘not saying who’ in Czech onomatopoeia
Masako U. Fidler
Chapter 9.Mimetics, gaze, and facial expression in a multimodal corpus of Japanese
Kimi Akita
Part III.Language acquisition and multilingualism
Chapter 10.The structure of mimetic verbs in child and adult Japanese
Keiko Murasugi
Chapter 11.Iconicity in L2 Japanese speakers’ multi-modal language use: Mimetics and co-speech gesture in relation to L1 and Japanese proficiency
Noriko Iwasaki
Keiko Yoshioka
Chapter 12.Ideophones as a measure of multilingualism
G. Tucker Childs
Subject index
Language index
