cognitive semantics
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Noun:
- A branch of semantics: Cognitive semantics is a subfield of linguistics that studies the cognitive aspects of meaning. It investigates how language reflects and influences human thought, categorization, and conceptualization.
- A theoretical approach: It is an approach to semantics that views meaning as being grounded in human perception, bodily experience, and mental processes, rather than as abstract relationships between symbols and the world.
Usage Examples
- Noun:
- The professor's research in cognitive semantics focuses on how metaphors structure our everyday thinking.
- Understanding cognitive semantics is crucial for analyzing how different cultures conceptualize time and space.
Advanced Usage
- "Frame semantics": A central theory within cognitive semantics that defines word meanings in relation to structured background knowledge (frames).
- Frame semantics, a key concept in cognitive semantics, explains the meaning of 'buy' by invoking a commercial transaction frame involving a buyer, seller, goods, and money.
- "Conceptual metaphor theory": Another major theory in cognitive semantics proposing that abstract thought is largely metaphorical, based on mappings from concrete, physical experiences.
- Lakoff and Johnson's work on conceptual metaphor theory is a cornerstone of cognitive semantics.
Variants and Related Words
- Cognitive linguistics (n): A broader field of linguistics that includes cognitive semantics, focusing on the interaction between language, mind, and embodied experience.
- Cognitive linguistics encompasses both cognitive semantics and cognitive approaches to grammar.
- Conceptual semantics (n): A closely related theoretical framework, often used synonymously or as a specific model within cognitive semantics.
- Ray Jackendoff's model of conceptual semantics shares many goals with cognitive semantics.
Synonyms
- Conceptual semantics: Often used interchangeably, though sometimes denoting a specific theoretical model.
- Experientialist semantics: Emphasizes the role of bodily experience in meaning construction.
Related Phrases
- "The embodiment hypothesis": The central idea in cognitive semantics that meaning is grounded in sensory-motor experiences.
- Cognitive semantics strongly supports the embodiment hypothesis.
- "Meaning construction": The dynamic process of creating meaning, a key focus of cognitive semantic analysis.
- A primary goal of cognitive semantics is to model the processes of meaning construction.
Related Idioms
(While not idioms in the traditional sense, the field has foundational principles often expressed as aphorisms.) - "Meaning is in the mind, not in the word.": A principle summarizing the cognitive semantic view that words are prompts for constructing meaning based on conceptual knowledge. - "Grammar is conceptualization.": A tenet linking syntactic structure to cognitive semantic processes of construal and perspective.
Noun
- the branch of semantics that studies the cognitive aspects of meaning