A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Stockholm
Almqvist & Wiksell
1976
|
Schriftenreihe: | Stockholm studies in English
35 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | 363 S. |
ISBN: | 9122000712 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur |c by Karl-Gunnar Lindkvist |
264 | 1 | |a Stockholm |b Almqvist & Wiksell |c 1976 | |
300 | |a 363 S. | ||
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490 | 1 | |a Stockholm studies in English |v 35 | |
490 | 0 | |a Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis | |
650 | 4 | |a Anglais (Langue) - Prépositions | |
650 | 4 | |a Englisch | |
650 | 4 | |a English language |x Prepositions | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS
Page
Preface
.............................................................
З
Contents
............................................................ 4
Introduction
......................................................... 9
First chapter. Conception of locality involving an enclosing space, area,
or environment
(1-380)................................................ 12
I. The idea of interiority
(2-242) ...................................... 12
IN, INTO
(3-73)................................................. 13
A. Analytic study
(3-72) ......................................... 13
1
a. Enclosure effected by a three-dimensional body
(4-23) ............ 14
a) Generally
(4) ............................................ 14
b) Buildings, conveyances, resting-places etc.
(5-7) ................. 15
c) Clothes
(8).............................................. 18
d) The body
(9, 10)......................................... 19
e) Atmospheric or physico-geographical phenomena etc.
(11-19)....... 20
β
Collectives, certain plurals etc.
(20-23)........................ 24
1
b. Enclosure effected by a surface, expanse, or area
(24-32) ......... 27
a) Generally
(24) ........................................... 27
b) Geographical areas
(25-32)................................. 27
2.
Motion or direction into anything with special implications
(33-72) .... 32
a) Generally
(33) ........................................... 32
b) Contact with a surface
(34-44).............................. 32
c) Progression inside a penetrated space or area
(45-50)............ 37
d) Extension into a space or area
(51-55) ....................... 40
e) Implication of withdrawing, confining, retaining by force, or depth
of penetration
(56-60)........................................ 43
f) Motion without reaching or simple direction
(61-69) ............. 45
g) Perfective implication etc.
(70-72)............................ 48
B. Follow-up observations
(73)..................................... 50
WITHIN, INSIDE
(101-137)....................................... 52
A. Analytic study
(101-136)....................................... 52
/.
On the inner surface of a body
(102) ........................... 53
2.
Not outside a space or area
(103-110).......................... 53
3.
Not beyond, or not past, a space or area
(111-121)................ 58
4.
Not near the outer side or surface of a space or area
(122-130)...... 64
5.
Used as emphatic substitutes for in
(131-134) ................... 68
6.
The notions of within/ inside and among mixed
(135, 136) ......... 70
B. Follow-up observations
(137).................................... 72
THROUGH
(201-242)............................................. 74
A. Analytic study
(201-241)....................................... 74
1.
Passing through a channel, opening, or medium
(202-222)........... 75
2.
Piercing through a substance
(223-228) ......................... 85
3.
Through a point
(229)....................................... 87
4.
Distribution or activity carried through a whole extent or to the end
(230-235)................................................... 88
5.
Through a collective or plurality
(236-240)...................------ 91
Page
б.
Perfective implication etc.
(241)................................ 94
B. Follow-up observations
(242).................................... 94
II. The idea of
interlocation
(300-369).................................. 96
BETWEEN, AMONG, AMID
(300-369)............................... 96
BETWEEN
(301-328)............................................. 96
A. Analytic study of between
(301-328)............................. 96
/.
Connection and separation
(302-313)........................... 97
2.
Somewhere in an interspace
(314-317).......................... 102
3.
In intervals
(318-320)....................................... 104
4.
Joint or reciprocal action, and dividing
(321-327) ................ 106
5.
Partitive implication
(328) .................................... 109
AMONG
(341-356) ............................................... 109
B. Analytic study of among
(341-356).............................. 109
1.
Simple position in, or motion in or to, an environment
(342-346)..... 110
2.
Association relating to certain localities, actions, attributes, opinions
etc.
(347-350)................................................ 114
3.
Joint or reciprocal action, and dividing
(351-354) ................. 116
4.
Partitive implication
(355, 356) ................................ 118
AMID
(361-368)................................................. 119
С
Analytic study of
amiď
(361-368)............................... 119
1.
Simple position in, or motion in or to, an environment
(362-364)..... 121
2.
With reference to conditions, actions, or events
(365-368) ........... 122
D. Follow-up observations concerning between , among , and
amiď
(369) .. 123
III. The idea of roofed enclosure
(370-375).............................. 126
UNDER, BELOW, BENEATH, UNDERNEATH, OVER, ABOVE, ACROSS
(370-375)........................................................ 126
A. Analytic study
(371-374)....................................... 127
B. Follow-up observations
(375).................................... 129
IV. A locality thought of as a kind of address
(380)....................... 130
IN, AT
(380).................................................... 130
Second chapter. Conception of locality involving a surface or extent
(400-503)..... 133
I. The idea of a surface or expanse extended over
(401-414) ................ 133
ABOUT, ROUND, AROUND, THROUGHOUT, OVER, ACROSS
(401-414)....................................................... 133
A. Analytic study
(402-413)....................................... 134
1.
In general
(402-411)........................................ 134
2.
Extension throughout
(412, 413)............................... 139
B. Follow-up observations
(414).................................... 141
II. The idea of contact with
a perimetrica!
surface
(421-428)................ 144
ABOUT, ROUND, AROUND
(421-428)............................... 144
A. Analytic study
(422-427)....................................... 144
B. Follow-up observations
(428).................................... 147
III. The idea of contact with an overlaid, bearing, or buffer surface
(430-465) ... 147
ON, ON TO, OVER, ACROSS, AGAINST
(430-465).................... 147
ON, ON TO
(431-446) ............................................ 148
A. Analytic study of on and on to
(431-446) ....................... 148
1.
On or on to a horizontal surface
(432-435)...................... 149
2.
Impact or application
(436-446) ............................... 151
OVER, ACROSS
(447)............................................ 155
B. Analytic study of over and across
(447)......................... 155
AGAINST
(450-464).............................................. 156
C. Analytic study of against
(450-464)............................. 156
Page
1.
Surfaces of rest, support, or application
(451-456)................. 157
2.
Symmetrical position
(457, 458)................................ 159
3.
Impact
(459-464)........................................... 161
D. Follow-up observations concerning on , on to , Over9, across , and
against
(465).................................................. 163
IV. The idea of contact with a surface turned downwards or inwards
(480-503)......................................................... 166
UNDER, BELOW, BENEATH, UNDERNEATH
(480-503) ............... 166
A. Analytic study
(481-502)....................................... 167
/.
Covering
(481-488) ......................................... 167
2.
Adherence or support
(489-497) ............................... 170
3.
Impact
(498-502)........................................... 173
B. Follow-up observations
(503).................................... 175
Third chapter. Conception of locality involving a length or line
(504-537)......... 177
I. The idea of longitudinal extension
(505-527)........................... 177
ALONG, ALONGSIDE, DOWN, UP, ON, IN, OVER, ACROSS
(505-527)....................................................... 177
ALONG
(506-520)................................................ 178
A. Analytic study of along
(506-520) .............................. 178
1.
Along an exact line
(506).................................... 178
2.
Along within a length
(507)................................... 179
3.
Parallel with a side
(508-514)................................. 180
4.
Along not linearly-extended objects
(515-518)..................... 182
5.
The direction of aiming, looking, sounds etc.
(519)................. 183
6.
Away from a point
(520)..................................... 184
ALONGSIDE
(521)............................................... 185
B. Analytic study of alongside
(521) ............................... 185
DOWN, UP
(522-525)............................................. 186
С
Analytic study of down and up
(522-525) ....................... 186
1.
Down or up vertically along a line
(522, 523)..................... 186
2.
Down or up horizontally along a line
(524) ...................... 189
3.
Up and down
(525) ......................................... 191
D. Follow-up observations concerning along , alongside , down , and
up
(526) ..................................................... 192
ON, IN, OVER, ACROSS
(527)..................................... 194
E. Analytic study of on , in , over, and across
(527) ................. 194
II. The idea of motion within a circular path
(531-537).................... 195
ABOUT, ROUND, AROUND
(531-537)............................... 195
A. Analytic study
(532-536)....................................... 195
B. Follow-up observations
(537).................................... 197
Fourth chapter. Conception of locality involving certain perceptions of the direction
in which something tends
(540-586)...................................... 198
TOWARDS, FOR, TO, AT, ON, ON TO, AGAINST
(540-586).............. 198
TOWARD/SI
(541-562) ........................................... 199
A. Analytic study of toward/sl
(541-562)........................... 199
1.
Gradual progression towards a goal
(542-550).................... 200
2.
Relation of direction
(551-562)................................ 202
FOR
(563-569) .................................................. 206
B. Analytic study of for*
(563-569) ................................ 206
/.
Destination etc.
(564-566).................................... 207
2.
Endeavour
(567-569)........................................ 208
Page
TO, AT
(570).................................................... 209
C. Analytic study of to and at
(570) .............................. 209
ON, ON TO
(571-575) ............................................ 211
D. Analytic study of on and on to
(571-575) ....................... 211
AGAINST
(581-585).............................................. 213
E. Analytic study of against
(581-585)............................. 213
F. Follow-up observations concerning towards , for , to , at , on , on to ,
and against
(586).............................................. 215
Fifth chapter. Conception of locality involving perceptions of exteriority, separation,
absence, departure, disconnection, or origin
(601-642)........................ 222
OUTSIDE, OUT OF, OFF, FROM
(601-642)............................ 222
A. Analytic study
(602-641) ........................................ 224
1.
Exteriority
(602-605).......................................... 224
a) In contact with an outer side
(602)............................. 224
b) Near an outer side
(603-605)................................. 224
2.
Separation or absence
(606-613)................................. 225
a) Off limits
(606-609) ........................................ 225
b) Detachment
(610-613)....................................... 228
3.
Departure
(614-627).......................................... 230
4.
Disconnection
(628-633) ....................................... 238
5.
Origin
(634-641)............................................. 240
a) A source
(634-638)......................................... 240
b) The origin of an extension
(639-641)........................... 243
B. Follow-up observations
(642)...................................... 245
Sixth chapter. Conception of locality involving certain perceptions of relative position
(681-847)........................................................... 249
/.
The idea of shared location
(682-700) ................................ 251
WITH
(682-700)................................................. 251
1.
Collocation in space
(683-694).................................. 252
2.
With in a definitive sense
(695-700)............................. 257
II. The idea of general proximity
(701-706).............................. 260
NEAR /TO/, CLOSE TO, NEXT /TO/, AT
(701-706) ................... 260
A. Analytic study
(702-705)....................................... 261
B. Follow-up observations
(706).................................... 265
III. The idea of lateral proximity
(707-734).............................. 266
BY, BESIDE
(707-734) ........................................... 266
BY
(708-721).................................................. 267
BESIDE
(730-734) ............................................. 280
IV. The idea of proximity related to surroundings
(751-767)................. 284
ABOUT, ROUND, AROUND
(751-767)............................... 284
A. Analytic study
(752-766)....................................... 285
B. Follow-up observations
(767).................................... 290
V. The idea of location in certain specific directions
(770)................... 291
AT, ON, IN, TO
(770)............................................. 291
VI. The idea of contraposition
(771-773)................................ 294
OPPOSITE /TO/, /OVER/ AGAINST
(771-773)........................ 294
VII.
The idea of sequential position in a horizontal or indeterminate plane
(774-801)......................................................... 296
BEFORE, IN FRONT OF, AHEAD OF, BEHIND, AT THE BACK OF, AFTER,
BELOW, ABOVE, DOWN, UP, PAST, BEYOND, OVER, ACROSS, ON THE
OTHER SIDE OF
(774-801) ....................................... 296
η
Page
BEFORE
(775-780).............................................297
IN FRONT OF
(781-785)........................................305
AHEAD OF
(786) ..............................................311
BEHIND, AT THE BACK OF, AFTER
(787-791) ......................313
BEHIND
(788, 789).............................................313
AT THE BACK OF
(790)........................................319
AFTER
(791)................................................ .320
BELOW, ABOVE
(792)............................................323
DOWN, UP
(793-795).............................................324
PAST, BEYOND, OVER, ACROSS, ON THE OTHER SIDE OF
(796-801).......................................................326
PAST
(797, 798) ...............................................326
BEYOND
(799, 800) ............................................329
OVER, ACROSS, ON THE OTHER SIDE OF
(801)..................334
VIII.
The idea of angular relationship
(802)..............................335
OVER, ACROSS
(802)............................................335
IX. The idea of sequential position in a vertical plane
(810-830) .............336
UNDER, BELOW, BENEATH, UNDERNEATH, OVER, ABOVE, DOWN,
UP
(810-830)....................................................336
UNDER, BELOW, BENEATH, UNDERNEATH, OVER, ABOVE
(811-828).....................................................337
A. Analytic study
(811-827).....................................337
B. Follow-up observations
(828)..................................344
DOWN, UP
(829, 830) ..........................................345
X. The idea of relative position at a specific point within a whole or read off as
against a background or scale
(840-845) ................................346
IN FRONT OF, BEHIND, AT THE BACK OF, UNDER, BELOW, BENEATH,
UNDERNEATH, OVER, ABOVE, AT
(840-845)........................346
XI. The idea of relation of remoteness
(846) .............................350
IN, AT, TO, WITHIN, WITHIN ...OF
(846)..........................350
XII.
The idea of relative starting-point
(847) .............................353
FROM PLUS ANOTHER PREPOSITION
(847)........................353
Supplementary bibliography
.............................................356
Index to
LI, L2,
and the present volume
..................................359
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Lindkvist, Karl-Gunnar |
author_GND | (DE-588)1158788010 |
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building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV003269754 |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | PE1335 |
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callnumber-search | PE1335 |
callnumber-sort | PE 41335 |
callnumber-subject | PE - English Languages |
classification_rvk | HF 306 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)3084519 (DE-599)BVBBV003269754 |
dewey-full | 425 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 425 - Grammar of standard English |
dewey-raw | 425 |
dewey-search | 425 |
dewey-sort | 3425 |
dewey-tens | 420 - English & Old English (Anglo-Saxon) |
discipline | Anglistik / Amerikanistik |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV003269754 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T15:57:13Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9122000712 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-002059085 |
oclc_num | 3084519 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-384 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-739 DE-20 DE-824 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-29 DE-11 DE-188 |
owner_facet | DE-384 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-739 DE-20 DE-824 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-29 DE-11 DE-188 |
physical | 363 S. |
publishDate | 1976 |
publishDateSearch | 1976 |
publishDateSort | 1976 |
publisher | Almqvist & Wiksell |
record_format | marc |
series | Stockholm studies in English |
series2 | Stockholm studies in English Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis |
spelling | Lindkvist, Karl-Gunnar Verfasser (DE-588)1158788010 aut A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur by Karl-Gunnar Lindkvist Stockholm Almqvist & Wiksell 1976 363 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Stockholm studies in English 35 Acta Universitatis Stockholmiensis Anglais (Langue) - Prépositions Englisch English language Prepositions Präposition (DE-588)4047008-8 gnd rswk-swf Lokativ (DE-588)4168128-9 gnd rswk-swf Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd rswk-swf Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 s Präposition (DE-588)4047008-8 s Lokativ (DE-588)4168128-9 s DE-604 Stockholm studies in English 35 (DE-604)BV035914666 35 Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=002059085&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Lindkvist, Karl-Gunnar A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur Stockholm studies in English Anglais (Langue) - Prépositions Englisch English language Prepositions Präposition (DE-588)4047008-8 gnd Lokativ (DE-588)4168128-9 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4047008-8 (DE-588)4168128-9 (DE-588)4014777-0 |
title | A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur |
title_auth | A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur |
title_exact_search | A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur |
title_full | A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur by Karl-Gunnar Lindkvist |
title_fullStr | A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur by Karl-Gunnar Lindkvist |
title_full_unstemmed | A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur by Karl-Gunnar Lindkvist |
title_short | A comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which English prepositions occur |
title_sort | a comprehensive study of conceptions of locality in which english prepositions occur |
topic | Anglais (Langue) - Prépositions Englisch English language Prepositions Präposition (DE-588)4047008-8 gnd Lokativ (DE-588)4168128-9 gnd Englisch (DE-588)4014777-0 gnd |
topic_facet | Anglais (Langue) - Prépositions Englisch English language Prepositions Präposition Lokativ |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=002059085&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV035914666 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT lindkvistkarlgunnar acomprehensivestudyofconceptionsoflocalityinwhichenglishprepositionsoccur |