TITEL
From physical to mental acquisition: a corpus-based study of verbs
FöRFATTARE
Nordlund, Marie
INSTITUTION
Språk och kultur
SAMMANFATTNING
Based on the hypothesis that the frame to which a verb is linked influences
how easily that verb can be extended into the mental domain, the aim of this
thesis is to carry out a lexico-semantic analysis of the six verbs acquire,
buy, gather, grasp, receive and seize. These verbs were chosen because they
can express physical as well as mental acquisition and because they are
linked to frames of varying complexity. Frames contain not only linguistic
(syntactic and semantic) information, but also language users’ knowledge of
how society and its values affect the use of verbs. The complexity of a
frame involves, among other things, the number and nature of necessary
participants, circumstances under which the action may be successfully
carried out and institutionalised rules imposed or sanctioned by society.
Prior to the analyses, it was assumed in this work that the verbs gather,
grasp and seize are used as mental verbs to a higher extent than acquire,
buy and receive. This is so, because the simplicity of the former verbs’
frames facilitates meaning extension from the physical to the mental domain.
Specific questions addressed in the study are: (i) To what extent are the
verbs used as mental verbs? (ii) What other usages do the verbs display?
(iii) What is the relative frequency of different usages for each verb? (iv)
Are any of the verbs better suited to express mental acquisition than
others? And, if so, in what way?
The analyses of the verbs are based on material collected from the British
National Corpus (BNC), a 100 million word electronic corpus containing both
spoken (10%) and written (90%) British English. The material retrieved from
the corpus suggests that it is possible to claim that frames exert a
considerable influence on the circumstances, contextual or otherwise, under
which the verbs may be appropriately put to use. It is shown that experience-
based and uncomplicated verbs such as gather and grasp, which are tied to
minimalist unspecified frames, are used to a much greater extent within the
mental domain than acquire, buy and receive, which are linked to more
complex and institutionalised frames. The analyses further reveal that most
instances of seize are linked to a more complex frame than was assumed. As a
result, extensions of the verb into the mental domain are very rare. On the
whole, grasp is the one verb that more than any of the others lends itself
to mental usages: almost every second instance of grasp found in the BNC
expresses mental grasping. The results suggest that although English is full
of expressions pointing towards a conceptualisation of ideas and other
mental entities as concrete objects – the IDEAS ARE OBJECTS metaphor – it
might be the case that ideas are conceptualised as entities that are close
enough to be grasped or gathered rather than bought or acquired. As
demonstrated here, then, a vocabulary for mental activities and cognition is
more commonly borrowed from verbs that involve direct bodily movement.
ISSN 1402-1544 / ISRN LTU-DT--08/34--SE / NR 2008:34
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