Language's key function is to enable human social interaction, for which people are motivated to engage by powerful brain mechanisms. This book integrates recent work on embodied simulations, traditional meaning-making processes and a myriad of semantic and other meaning contributors to formulate a new model of how language functions following a pattern of conjoined antonymy. It investigates how embodied simulations,semantic information, deviation, omission, indirectness, figurativity, language play, and other processes leverage rich meaning from only a few words by using inherently biological, cognitive and social frameworks. The interaction of these meaning-making components of language is described and a language-functioning model based on recent neuroscientific research is laid out to allow for a more complete understanding of how language operates.

Titel
How Language Makes Meaning
Untertitel
Embodiment and Conjoined Antonymy
EAN
9781108382038
Format
E-Book (epub)
Veröffentlichung
07.11.2019
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
2.76 MB