Jump to ContentJump to Main Navigation

Editor-in-Chief: Dabrowska, Ewa

4 Issues per year

Increased IMPACT FACTOR 2010: 1.021
5-year IMPACT FACTOR: 1.717
Rank 41 out of 141 in category Linguistics in the 2010 Thomson Reuters Journal Citation Report/Social Sciences Edition

ERIH category 2011: INT1

VolumeIssuePage

Issues

A construction approach to innovative verbs in Japanese

1Indiana University

c1Address for correspondence: Natsuko Tsujimura, Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, Goodbody Hall 248, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA.

Citation Information: Cognitive Linguistics. Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 799–825, ISSN (Online) 1613-3641, ISSN (Print) 0936-5907, DOI: 10.1515/cogl.2011.029, October 2011

Publication History:

Received: 08/09/2009;
Accepted: 17/05/2010;
Published Online: 26/02/2012

Abstract

Innovative verbs in Japanese are formed from nouns of various sources including loanwords, Sino-Japanese nouns, mimetics, and proper names. Regardless of their different origin, these innovative denominal verbs exhibit a collection of intriguing properties, ranging from phonological, morphological, to semantic and pragmatic. These properties are not strictly predictable from the component parts including the nature of the parent noun and verbal morphology. Such an unpredictable nature is suggestive of a constructional analysis. The form-meaning-function complex takes a templatic representation, which expresses the phonological and morphological characteristics, and associated with it are semantic and pragmatic properties. These phonological, morphological, semantic, and pragmatic properties combine to capture the nature of innovative denominal verbs as a construction. The analysis supports the idea of applying construction grammar to morphology along the lines of the developing field of construction morphology (e.g., Booij, Compounding and derivation: Evidence for construction morphology, John Benjamins, 2005, Construction morphology and the lexicon: 34–44, Cascadilla Press, 2007, Linguistische Berichte 19: 1–14, 2009a, Compounding and construction morphology, Oxford University Press, 2009b). We further show how insights from templatic (or prosodic) morphology (e.g., McCarthy and Prince, Prosodic morphology, University of Massachusetts and Brandeis University, 1986, Natural Language and Linguistic Theory 8: 209–282, 1990) can be conceptualized in terms of construction grammar.

Keywords:: Innovative verbs ; denominal verbs ; construction ; construction morphology ; templates ; prosodic morphology ; Japanese ; youth language

Comments (0)

Please log in or register to comment.