
ÕªÒª
ÏÂÃæÊÇ¡¶ÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧÈëÃÅ¡·µÚ1£3Ò³µÄÕªÒª£º
We are surrounded by verity of organisms and objects. We distribute
them into different groups. Some of them have clear boundaries and some
objects haven¡¯t clear boundaries, such as temperature scale and colour
continuum. Some objects hasn¡¯t clear boundaries but categories
responding to has clear boundary. The fact shows that clear boundary of
categories is result of mental process. The mental process of
classification is called categorization and its product are called
cognitive categories.
There are two explanations about colour categories. The first is
that colour categories are totally arbitrary. The second is that the
colour continuum is structured by a system of reference points for
orientation. The anthropologists Brent Berlin and Paul Kay (1969) found
evidence that we rely on sp-called focal colours for colour
categorization.
ÔÚÄĶùÂò¡¶ÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧÈëÃÅ µ±´ú¹úÍâÓïÑÔѧÓëÓ¦ÓÃÓïÑÔ¡·.....
×¿Ô½Íø:26.20¡¡¡¡
µ±µ±Íø:27.10¡¡¡¡
εÀ¶Íø:27.10¡¡¡¡
×÷¡¡Õߣº×÷Õߣº(µÂ)θñÈð¶û£¨ F.Ungerer H.J.Schmid£©Öø
³ö°æÉ磺ÍâÓï½ÌѧÓëÑо¿³ö°æÉç 2001-9
ISBN£º7560023770
¶¨¡¡¼Û£º31.9Ôª
an introduction to cognitive linguistics
µ±´ú¹úÍâÓïÑÔѧÓëÓ¦ÓÃÓïÑÔѧÎÄ¿â¼ò½é
¡¡¡¡¡¶µ±´ú¹úÍâÓïÑÔѧÓëÓ¦ÓÃÓïÑÔѧÎĿ⡷Ê×Åú54ÖÖ×Ô2000Äê9ÔÂÎÊÊÀÒÔÀ´£¬È¡µÃºÜ´ó³É¹¦£¬Ê×Ó¡5000Ì×¹©²»Ó¦Çó£¬10Ô·ݱã·Ö¿ªÖØÓ¡6000Ìס£ÄÜÔÚ¶Ì ¶ÌµÄ¼¸¸öÔÂÄÚ³ö°æ·¢ÐÐÈç´Ëºê´ó¹æÄ£µÄÓïÑÔÑ§Öø×÷£¬ÕâÔÚÎÒ¹úѧÊõ³ö°æ·¢ÐÐÊ·ÉÏÊDz»¶à¼ûµÄ¡£×Ô³ö°æÒÔÀ´£¬Ðí¶àµ¥Î»ºÍ¸öÈËÕùÏà¶©¹º£¬Ñо¿ÉúºÍ´óѧÉúÉú°Ñ¡¶ÎĿ⡷ ÊÓΪÁ¼Ê¦ÒæÓÑ£¬½ÌʦÎÞÂÛÀÏÖÐÇà¶¼°Ñ¡¶ÎĿ⡷ÊÓΪ֪ʶ¸üеÄԴȪ¡£Êµ¼ùÖ¤Ã÷£¬ÍâÑÐÉçÍÆ³öµÄ¡¶ÎĿ⡷Êܵ½Á˹úÄÚÓïÑÔѧ½çºÍÍâÓï½Ìѧ½çµÄÆÕ±éºÃÆÀ£¬Ëü½«³ÉÎªÍÆ¶¯ ÎÒ¹úÓïÑÔѧ½ÌѧÓëÑо¿ºÍÍâÓï½ÌѧÓëÑо¿µÄÒ»¸ö±¦¿â¡£¡¡¡¡Ôڳɹ¦³ö°æ¡¶ÎĿ⡷Ê×Åú54ÖֵĻù´¡ÉÏ£¬ÍâÑÐÉçÏÖÔÚÓÖÍÆ³ö¡¶ÎĿ⡷µÚ¶þÅú58ÖÖ¡£¡¶ÎĿ⡷µÚ¶þÅú¾ßÓÐÎå´óÌØÉ«£ºÒ»¡¢ÓÉ58²¿Ó¢ÎÄÔÖø×é³É£¬Ëù¸²¸ÇµÄѧ¿Æ´Ó Ê×ÅúµÄ26¸öÔö¼Óµ½ÏÖÔÚµÄ33¸ö£¬ÐÂÔöѧ¿Æ°üÀ¨ÓïÑÔѧʷ¡¢ÓïÑÔÕÜѧ¡¢ÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧ¡¢ÈËÀàÓïÑÔѧ¡¢ÓïÑÔµÄÆðÔ´¡¢Óï·¨»¯Ñ§ËµµÈ£¬Äܸü¹ã·ºµØÂú×ã¶ÁÕßµÄÐèÇó£»¶þ¡¢ ÊÕÈëÁ˵±´úÓïÑÔѧ´óʦË÷Ð÷¶û¡¢ÈøØ§¶û¡¢²¼Áú·Æ¶ûµÂ¡¢º«ÀñµÂ¡¢ÇÇķ˹»ù¡¢°Â˹͡¡¢¸ñÀ³Ë¹¡¢ÀûÆæµÈÃû¼ÒµÄ×îÓÐÓ°ÏìµÄÉ˿ھßÓиü¸ßµÄȨÍþÐÔ£»Èý¡¢Ôö¼ÓÁËÅ£½ò´óѧ ³ö°æÉç¡¢¹þ·ð´óѧ³ö°æÉçµÈÊÀ½çÖªÃû³ö°æÉç³ö°æµÄÓïÑÔѧ¾µäÖø×÷£»ËÄ¡¢ÒÀÈ»ÅäÓÐר¼Òµ¼¶Á£¬×¨¼ÒµÄ¶ÓÎé±ÈÊ×Åú¸üΪǿ´ó£»Îå¡¢ÊÀ½çÖøÃûÓïÑÔѧ¼ÒÇÇķ˹»ù½ÌÊÚºÍÎÒ ¹úÖøÃûÓïÑÔѧ¼ÒÉò¼ÒìÓ½ÌÊÚ×÷Ðò¡£
¡¡¡¡±¾¡¶ÎĿ⡷ÊÇÒ»¸ö´óÐ͵ġ¢¿ª·ÅÐÔµÄϵÁдÔÊ飬Ëü½«¶ÔÎÒ¹úÓïÑÔ½ÌѧÓëÑо¿ºÍÍâÓï½ÌѧÓëÑо¿Æðµ½»ý¼«µÄÍÆ¶¯×÷Ó᣽ñºó£¬ÍâÑÐÉ绹½«¼ÌÐøÒý½ø£¬ÕùÈ¡°Ñ¹úÍâ×îеġ¢×î¾ßÓ°ÏìµÄÓïÑÔѧºÍÓ¦ÓÃÓïÑÔÑ§Öø×÷²»¶ÏµØ·îÏ׸ø¹ã´ó¶ÁÕß¡£
ÆÀÂÛ
¡¡¡¡¡¶ÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧÈëÃÅ¡·µÄǰÑÔ¸ÅÒª½éÉÜÁËÈý¸ö¡°¹Û¡±£ºexperiential view,prominence view,attentional view¡£ÕâЩÔÚÎÒÒÔǰ¼û¹ýÓйØÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧµÄ½éÉÜÖж¼Ã»ÓС£ÕâÆäÖиøÎÒÓ¡Ïó×îÉîµÄÊÇexperiential view¡££££££
¡¡¡¡¡¶ÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧÈëÃÅ¡·ºÍ¡¶ÓïÑԵķ¶³ë»¯¡·¶¼ÊÇ£²£°ÊÀ¼Í£¹£°Äê´ú³ö°æµÄ¡£ÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧÔÚ½ü¼¸ÄêÀ´ÓÐÁ˳¤×ãµÄ·¢Õ¹£¬ËùÉæ¼°µÄÁìÓòÒ²Ô½À´Ô½¹ã£¬¡¡Òò´ËÕâÁ½±¾ÊéµÄÄÚÈÝ ÏÔµÃÓÐЩ¾ÉÁË¡£¡¡½ü¼¸Äê¹úÍâ³ö°æÁËÁ½±¾ÐµÄÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧµÄµ¼ÂÛÊ飬¡¡Ò»±¾ÊÇ£×£é£ì£ì£é£á£í¡¡£Ã£ò£ï£æ£ôºÍ£Á£ì£á£î¡¡£Ã£ò£õ£ó£åдµÃ¡¶ÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧ¡·£¨½£ÇÅ´óѧ ÓïÑÔѧ½Ì¿ÆÊ飩£¬¡¡ÁíÒ»±¾Êǣģá£ö£é£ä¡¡£Ì£å£å±àдµÄ¡¶ÈÏÖªÓïÑÔѧµ¼ÂÛ¡·£¨Å£½ò´óѧ³ö°æÉ磩¡£µÚÒ»±¾Ð´µÃÈ«Ãæ¶øÏµÍ³£¬µ«¶ÁÆðÀ´½ÏΪ¼èɬ¡£
¸ü¶à£ºhttp://www.pkucn.com/archiver/?tid-34496-page-1.html
Ŀ¼
Preface by HallidayPreface by Chomsky
Typographical conventions
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Prototypes and categories
2 Levels of categorization
3 Conceptual metaphors and metonymies
4 Figure and ground
5 The frame and attention approach
6 Other issues in cognitive linguistics
Conclusion
References
Index of persons
Index of subjects
×îÐÂÆÀÂÛ