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This is the Thing—

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The Story

This monograph investigates for the first time words like ā€˜thing’ of maximal semantic generality across languages. Not all languages have exact equivalents of English ā€˜thing’ – in some, for instance, the nearest equivalent is an interrogative stem (ā€˜what?’). Few languages extend their ā€˜thing’ words into indefinite ā€˜something’, ā€˜anything’, ā€˜nothing’, 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 ā€˜thing’, the earliest source usually given is the Germanic word for a ā€˜judicial assembly’. How does such a word develop the most general sense of ā€˜thing’ today? Do all languages follow this kind of pattern? These questions lead into an investigation of the concept of ā€˜thing’ 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.

Description

This monograph investigates for the first time words like ā€˜thing’ of maximal semantic generality across languages. Not all languages have exact equivalents of English ā€˜thing’ – in some, for instance, the nearest equivalent is an interrogative stem (ā€˜what?’). Few languages extend their ā€˜thing’ words into indefinite ā€˜something’, ā€˜anything’, ā€˜nothing’, 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 ā€˜thing’, the earliest source usually given is the Germanic word for a ā€˜judicial assembly’. How does such a word develop the most general sense of ā€˜thing’ today? Do all languages follow this kind of pattern? These questions lead into an investigation of the concept of ā€˜thing’ 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.