Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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887079
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Title & Author
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Mixing metaphor /\ edited by Raymond W. Gibbs, Jr.
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Publication Statement
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Amsterdam ;Philadelphia :: John Benjamins Publishing Company,, [2016]
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Series Statement
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Metaphor in Language, Cognition, and Communication,; 6
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Page. NO
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1 online resource.
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ISBN
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9027267502
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: 9789027267504
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9027202109
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9789027202109
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Bibliographies/Indexes
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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Contents
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Intro -- Mixing Metaphor -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of contents -- Introduction -- 1. Mixing metaphor in perspective -- 2. Summary of the chapters -- 1. A view of "mixed metaphor" within a conceptual metaphor theory framework -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Some questions about mixed metaphors -- 1.2.1 Why are imagistically incongruent metaphors selected at a particular point in discourse? -- 1.2.2 Why are mixed metaphors so common? -- 1.2.3 Why do we have cases of metaphorically entirely homogeneous discourse? -- 1.2.4 Why are often widely divergent source domains inserted into discourse? -- 1.2.5 How do we comprehend mixed metaphors? -- 1.3 Mixed metaphors and the issue of deliberateness -- 1.4 Conclusions -- Reference -- 2. Mixed metaphors from a discourse dynamics perspective -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Multiple metaphors in talk -- 2.2.1 The production of multiple metaphors -- 2.2.2 Multiple metaphors arising from shifting discourse topics -- 2.2.3 Multiple metaphors arising from anaphoric reference and lexico{u2011}conceptual pacts -- 2.2.4 Multiple metaphors combining in a metaphorical scenario -- 2.2.5 Layered metaphors -- 2.2.6 Multiple metaphors in metaphor clusters: Summary -- 2.3 Multiple metaphors in theory-building -- 2.4 Conclusions -- References -- 3. Why mixed metaphors make sense -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Why should mixing metaphors be problematic? -- 3.3 Mixed metaphors foreground uncommon aspects of meaning -- 3.4 Conclusion -- A dynamic view on metaphors in language use -- References -- 4. Tackling mixed metaphors in discourse -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Study 1 -- 4.2.1 Method -- 4.2.2 Results -- 4.3 Study 2 -- 4.3.1 Method -- 4.3.1.1 Participants -- 4.3.1.2 Materials and Procedure -- 4.3.2 Results -- 4.4 Conclusion -- References -- Appendix A -- 5. Mixed metaphor -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The ATT-Meta approach.
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10.1 Introduction: Mixed metaphor as a 'folk' concept and a technical term -- 10.2 Data -- 10.3 Patterns in the use of 'mixed metaphor' in the data -- 10.3.1 Clashes between different uses of metaphor involving the same source domain -- 10.3.2 Grammatical boundaries and 'mixed metaphor' -- 10.3.3 'Mixed metaphor' and relationships between source domain and topic -- 10.4 Concluding remarks -- References -- 11. Mixing in pictorial and multimodal metaphors? -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Characteristics of mixed verbal metaphors -- 11.3 Mixed metaphor in pictures and multimodal discourse: Candidates -- 11.4 Mixed metaphors and Blending Theory -- 11.5 Concluding remarks and further research -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 12. Extended metaphor in the web of discourse -- 12.1 Introduction: A cognitive perspective -- 12.2 Stylistic pattern of extended metaphor as a structure of thought -- 12.3 Types of extended metaphor -- 12.4 A diachronic approach to the stylistic use of extended metaphor -- 12.5 Sustainability of figurative thought: A discourse dimension -- 12.6 Extended metaphor in multimodal discourse: A case study -- 12.7 "Mixed" metaphors -- 12.8 Conclusion -- References -- Index.
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5.2.1 ATT-Meta's orientation and a quick example -- 5.2.2 Fictionalist/pretence-based approach -- 5.2.3 Metaphorical views and mappings in ATT-Meta -- 5.2.4 The pretence-based nature of mappings -- 5.2.5 Detail in a sub-persons example -- 5.2.6 Ancillary assumptions -- 5.2.7 View-neutral mapping adjuncts -- 5.2.8 Goal-directed reasoning -- 5.2.9 ATT-Meta and blending -- 5.3 ATT-Meta and mixed metaphor -- 5.3.1 The marigold example: Mixed form -- 5.3.2 Deployment of pretence spaces, VNMAs and inference -- 5.3.3 More on parallel mixing -- 5.3.4 Combining different types of mixing -- 5.3.5 Advantages that ATT-Meta brings to mixed metaphor -- 5.4 Further discussion: Variability of analysis -- 5.5 Conclusions -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 6. Mixed metaphor is a question of deliberateness -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 Mixed metaphor and deliberateness -- 6.3 Deliberate versus non-deliberate metaphor -- 6.4 From deliberate to mixed metaphor -- 6.5 Epilogue -- References -- 7. When languages and cultures meet -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Metaphor and the learner of English -- 7.3 Mixed, extended, and repeated metaphors in language learner discourse -- 7.4 Discussion and conclusion -- References -- 8. The 'dull roar' and the 'burning barbed wire pantyhose' -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Complex metaphor -- 8.3 Mixed metaphor -- 8.4 Extended and elaborated metaphor -- 8.5 Embodied simulation, pain and systematic metaphor -- 8.6 The interviews -- 8.7 Analysis of complex use of metaphor -- 8.7 Conclusion -- References -- 9. We drink with our eyes first -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Describing and evaluating sensory experience -- 9.3 Sensory descriptors -- 9.4 Sensory and kinesthetic imagery -- 9.5 The discursive role of imagery -- 9.6 Summary -- References -- 10. A corpus-based study of 'mixed metaphor' as a metalinguistic comment.
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Subject
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Cognitive grammar.
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Subject
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Concepts.
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Subject
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Metaphor-- Psychological aspects.
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Subject
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Metaphor-- Usage.
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Subject
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Semantics.
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Subject
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Thought and thinking.
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Subject
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Cognitive grammar.
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Subject
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Concepts.
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Subject
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LANGUAGE ARTS DISCIPLINES-- Composition Creative Writing.
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Subject
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LANGUAGE ARTS DISCIPLINES-- Rhetoric.
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Subject
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Metaphor-- Psychological aspects.
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Subject
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REFERENCE-- Writing Skills.
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Subject
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Semantics.
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Subject
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Thought and thinking.
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Dewey Classification
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808/.032
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LC Classification
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P301.5.M48
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Added Entry
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Gibbs, Raymond W.
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