Article published In: Emotion, Body and Mind across a Continent: Figurative representations of emotions in Australian Aboriginal languages
Edited by Maïa Ponsonnet, Dorothea Hoffmann and Isabel O'Keeffe
[Pragmatics & Cognition 27:1] 2020
► pp. 184–208
Be happy when your stomach is
Figurative extensions of the body in MalakMalak
Published online: 22 September 2021
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.00014.hof
https://doi.org/10.1075/pc.00014.hof
Abstract
In this paper I provide a description of the role of body-part terms in expressions of emotion and other semantic
extensions in MalakMalak, a non-Pama-Nyungan language of the Daly River area. Body-based expressions denote events, emotions, personality
traits, significant places and people and are used to refer to times and number. Particularly central in the language are
men ‘stomach’, pundu ‘head’ and tjewurr ‘ear’ associated respectively with basic
emotions, states of mind and reason. The figurative extensions of these body parts are discussed systematically, and compared with what is
known for other languages of the Daly River region. The article also explores the grammatical make up of body-based emotional collocations,
and in particular the role of noun incorporation. In MalakMalak, noun incorporation is a central part of forming predicates with body parts,
but uncommon in any other semantic domain of the language and only lexemes denoting basic emotions may also incorporate closed-class
adjectives.
Keywords: MalakMalak, language of emotion, parts of speech, cultural salience
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.The language
- 3.The figurative scope of body parts
- 4.Body parts in figurative descriptions of emotion
- 4.1Categories of body part lexemes
- 5.Lexical and grammatical properties
- 6.Conclusions
- Notes
- Abbreviations
References
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