Treść książki

Przejdź do opcji czytnikaPrzejdź do nawigacjiPrzejdź do informacjiPrzejdź do stopki
2.6Acognitiveconceptionofmetonymy
2.6.1Thedefinitionofconceptualmetonymy
2.6.2Typesofmetonymy
2.6.3Metonymyversusmetaphor
2.6.4Applications
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2.7Acognitivetheoryofmetaphor
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2.7.1Aclassicalviewofmetaphorversusacognitivelinguisticperspective
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2.7.2Metaphoricallinguisticexpressions
2.7.3Sourceandtargetdomains
2.7.4Partialmappingsandmetaphoricalentailments
2.7.5Kindsofmetaphor
2.7.6Metaphoricalsystems
2.7.7Metaphorandcontextualfactors
2.7.8Applications
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3.ONOMASIOLOGICALLEXICOGRAPHYASTHEORY
3.1Onomasiologicallexicographyasanemergingdiscipline
3.1.1Thescopeoflexicographicaldescription
3.1.2Onomasiologicallexicographyandappliedlinguistics
3.1.3Onomasiologicallexicographyasamany-sidedactivity
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3.2Theoreticalaspectsofdesigningonomasiologicaldictionaries
3.2.1Dictionarytypology
3.2.1.1Theperspectiveofthetargetuser
3.2.1.2Thepurposeofdictionaryconsultation
3.2.1.3Thelanguageofexplanations
3.2.1.4Thecoverageofthecontent
3.2.1.5Thearrangementofentries
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3.2.1.6Thedictionary’ssize
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3.2.1.7Thedictionary’smedium
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3.2.2Metalexicographiccriteriafordesigningthematicdictionaries
3.2.2.1Informationcategories
3.2.2.2Thenumberoflanguages
3.2.2.3Intendedusersandpurpose
3.2.2.4Keyelementsofdictionarystructure
3.2.2.5Definitions
3.2.2.6Otherwaysofexplainingmeaning
3.2.2.7Accessstructure
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3.2.3Anonomasiologicaldictionarybasedoncognitiveprinciples
3.2.3.1Typesofinformation
3.2.3.2Thelanguageofexplanation
3.2.3.3Usersandtheirpotentialneeds
3.2.3.4Conceptualstructure
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