Grammatical Effects of Affect A contrastive corpus analysis of the use and meaning of infant and baby
Abstract
This thesis aims at (1) outlining a basic understanding of how affective, or expressive,
meaning can be understood relative to linguistic meaning and language at large, and (2) analysing
how affective meaning may relate to epistemological status and reference type in actual language
use. The thesis' theoretical framework is largely situated within the paradigm of cognitive
linguistics, and in particular drawing from the work of Langacker (2008). The analysis combines
basic qualitative and quantitative methods in deconstructing clausal instantiations from transcripts
of spoken English from the COCA corpus. The clausal instantiations are analysed according to three
parameters: Semantic prosody (positive – inconspicuous – negative); Epistemological status
(extensional – intensional); and Reference type (specific – non-specific). The results can be said to
point to indications of correlative patterns between affective meaning and epistemological status,
whilst finding close to no indications of such patterns between affective meaning and reference
type. The results also point to the necessity of not only considering written text, but also other nonlexical
means of communication (such as tone of voice and gestures), in order to successfully study
affective meaning relative to language and linguistic processing.
Degree
Student essay
View/ Open
Date
2017-10-12Author
Karlsson, Carl-Anders
Keywords
Affective meaning
expressive meaning
semantics
Cognitive grammar
Series/Report no.
Magisteruppsats Engelska
SPL 2017-054
Language
eng