The Figurative History of Money: Cognitive Foundations of Money Names in Anglo-Saxon Cover Image

Metaforinė pinigų istorija: pinigų pavadinimų kognityviniai pagrindai senojoje anglų (anglo-saksų) kalboje
The Figurative History of Money: Cognitive Foundations of Money Names in Anglo-Saxon

Author(s): Natalya Davidko
Subject(s): Lexis, Semantics, Historical Linguistics, Sociolinguistics, Cognitive linguistics
Published by: Kauno Technologijos Universitetas
Keywords: Anglo-Saxon; cognitive foundations; image-schema; onomasiology; etymology; money names; social-cognitive linguistics;

Summary/Abstract: The current research is the first in a series of articles devoted to the study of money names in different periods of the English language history and is an attempt to reconstruct cognitive foundations for designating the concept of money in the Anglo-Saxon period (AD 410–1066) and look at how specific historical processes and human practices might have affected the naming. Money as an object of cognition has been the prerogative of economics, and as artifacts of numismatics. Linguistics has yet to contribute to the study of the phenomenon in question as its methods of semantic, etymological, and comparative analyses can help expose sociolinguistic forces at work in setting consistent patterns of denotation. In the history of concept formation figurative transfers played an important role in creating grounds for naming an object by the cognizing subject. Thus, onomasiology draws on cognitive schemes and image-schemata as its foundational elements. The aim of the current research is to study these elements. Diachronic cognitive onomasiology and social cognitive linguistics provide cross-disciplinary frameworks for the research.

  • Issue Year: 2017
  • Issue No: 30
  • Page Range: 56-72
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: English