$39.47
Original: $131.56
-70%This is the Thingā
$131.56
$39.47The Story
This monograph investigates for the first time words like āthingā of maximal semantic generality across languages. Not all languages have exact equivalents of English āthingā ā in some, for instance, the nearest equivalent is an interrogative stem (āwhat?ā). Few languages extend their āthingā words into indefinite āsomethingā, āanythingā, ānothingā, as in English. As regards Indo-European languages, Buck (1988) points out that such words typically derive from a more abstract source than that of simple material objects. In the case of āthingā, the earliest source usually given is the Germanic word for a ājudicial assemblyā. How does such a word develop the most general sense of āthingā today? Do all languages follow this kind of pattern? These questions lead into an investigation of the concept of āthingā in a wide range of contexts and in a wide variety of languages, involving both typological and cognitive aspects. The results have sometimes been unexpected.
Buck, C. D. 1988. A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo -European Languages. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Buck, C. D. 1988. A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo -European Languages. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Description
This monograph investigates for the first time words like āthingā of maximal semantic generality across languages. Not all languages have exact equivalents of English āthingā ā in some, for instance, the nearest equivalent is an interrogative stem (āwhat?ā). Few languages extend their āthingā words into indefinite āsomethingā, āanythingā, ānothingā, as in English. As regards Indo-European languages, Buck (1988) points out that such words typically derive from a more abstract source than that of simple material objects. In the case of āthingā, the earliest source usually given is the Germanic word for a ājudicial assemblyā. How does such a word develop the most general sense of āthingā today? Do all languages follow this kind of pattern? These questions lead into an investigation of the concept of āthingā in a wide range of contexts and in a wide variety of languages, involving both typological and cognitive aspects. The results have sometimes been unexpected.
Buck, C. D. 1988. A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo -European Languages. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Buck, C. D. 1988. A Dictionary of Selected Synonyms in the Principal Indo -European Languages. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.



