Cross-Linguistic Metonymies in Human Limb Nomenclature

File(s)
Date
2014-05-01Author
Pattillo, Kelsie E.
Department
Linguistics
Advisor(s)
Garry W. Davis
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This dissertation is a cross-linguistic lexical study of metonymic change in human limb nomenclature. The data analyzed for this study make up both synchronic and diachronic databases. The synchronic data come from a sample of 153 non-Indo-European languages from 66 language families and are balanced for genetic and areal influence. The diachronic data are made up of a large collection of Indo-European etymologies. By comparing the metonymic patterns found in the Indo-European historical data with the synchronic cross-linguistic data, this dissertation explores to what extent the patterns of change found in Indo-European are cross-linguistic tendencies. In addition to showing how etymological data from one language family can help identify cross-linguistic tendencies, this dissertation also supports the claim that semantic change is regular, predictable and unidirectional. This serves as a framework for identifying cross-linguistic lexical tendencies. Along with its contributions to the theoretical discussion of regularity in lexical change, this dissertation proposes three universal tendencies and a substantial amount of lexical data that is useful for future cross-linguistic studies.
Subject
Body Parts
Cross-Linguistic
Historical Linguistics
Human Limbs
Metonymy
Typology
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/93846Type
dissertation
