Theory and typology of proper names:
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Contents
General
introduction
. 1
Chapter
1: Nominal
and referential-semantic status of proper
names
.6
1.
Introduction
.6
1.1.
Proper names andproprial lemmas
.7
1.2.
The so-called pragmatic viewpoint
.9
1.3.
Proper names as a semantic-syntactic class
.11
1.4.
Radical Construction Grammar
.13
1.5.
Coseriu and
Willems. 14
1.6.
Dictionary lemmas
.15
2.
The nominal status of proper names
. 17
2.1.
The proper name as a nominal category
.17
2.2.
Proper names and appellatives
. 19
3.
The referential and semantic status of proper names
.20
3.1.
Some basic semantic notions applied in this work
.20
3.2.
Evaluation of the main views on the referential
and semantic status of proper names
.22
3.2.1.
Language philosophical views: from Mill to Kripke
.24
3.2.1.1.
John Stuart Mill
.24
3.2.1.2. Gottlob
Frege.
27
3.2.1.3.
Edmund
Husserl
.28
3.2.1.4.
Bertrand
Russell
.29
3.2.1.5. Ludwig
Wittgenstein and John Searle
.30
3.2.1.6.
Saul Kripke and Keith Donnellan
.33
3.2.2.
Some current linguistic theories of proper names
. 38
3.2.2.1.
The maximum meaningfulness thesis
.39
3.2.2.2.
Metalinguistic theories of proper names
.39
3.2.2.3.
Cognitive linguistic theories of proper names
. 50
3.2.2.4.
The set theoretic cognitivist approach
. 58
3.2.2.5.
The pragmatic view
.65
3.3.
Presuppositional meanings that proper names have or can have
. 71
3.3.1.
The thesis of the categorical presupposition in proper names.
71
3.3.2.
Categorical meanings as basic level concepts
. 79
3.3.3.
Associative meaning pertains to the referent and to the name
x
Contents
form on the level of usage
.81
3.3.4.
Emotive meaning: augmentative and diminutive
.83
3.3.5.
Grammatical meaning
.84
4.
Towards a more precise characterization and definition of
proper names and proprial lemmas
.84
4.1.
Towards a more precise characterization of proper names
.84
4.1.1.
Do proper names have meaning?
. 84
4.1.2.
In what way do proper names refer?
.86
4.1.3.
Towards a definition and a unified account of proper names
. 86
4.1.3.1.
The pragmatic component
.87
4.1.3.2.
The semantic component
.90
4.1.3.3.
The syntactic component
.91
4.1.4.
What is necessary to retrieve the referent of a proper name?
. 91
4.1.5.
Do proper names always originate in a 'baptismal act'?
.92
4.2.
A more precise characterization of proprial and nonproprial
lemmas
.93
4.2.1.
Three questions regarding the status of proprial and
nonproprial lemmas in connection with proper names
. 93
4.2.2.
Further arguments for the adoption of proprial lemmas
.95
4.2.2.1.
Proprial lemmas functioning as appellatives
oras
parts
of nonproprial words
.96
4.2.2.2. Multidenotative
proprial lemmas
.96
4.2.2.3.
One referent is a part of the other
. 97
4.2.2.4.
Names with a common part can be united via the adoption
of a proprial lemma
.98
4.2.2.5.
Names may share a basic level term
.99
4.2.2.6.
Nonproprial lemmas found in proper names
. 99
4.2.3.
Proprial lemmas and the typological theory of markedness
. 99
4.3.
Diagram of a proprial lemma and its valency
.100
5.
Monoreferential appellative expressions
. 102
5.1.
Monoreferential NPs with the definite article
. 103
5.2.
Articleless monoreferential NPs
.104
6.
Neurolinguistic evidence for the present analysis of proper names.
106
6.1.
Semenza
and Zettin(
і
988).108
6.2.
Bayer
(1991).
HO
6.3.
Miceli, Daniele,
Esposko and
Magarčili
(1998). 113
Contents
xi
6.4.
Discussion
.113
7.
Conclusions
. 116
Chapter
2:
Formal characteristics of proper names
. 119
1.
Introduction
.119
2.
The proper name as a nominal category
. 120
3.
Formal correlates of proprial meanings
.125
3.1.
Formal characteristics pertaining to the extension/intension
status of proper names
. 125
3.1.1.
Close apposition
. 125
3.1.1.1.
Close vs. loose apposition
. 126
3.1.1.2.
Close apposition as a criterion for proper-namehood
. 128
3.1.1.3.
Close apposition as a criterion for the basic level
presupposition in proper names
. 138
3.1.1.4.
A cline in
the tightness of the bond between proper name
element and basic level element
.141
3.1.2.
Restrictive modifiers
.143
3.1.3.
Quantification
.145
3.1.4.
Predicate
nominais
. 146
3.1.5.
Voor 'for'-phrases
. 149
3.1.6.
Coordination of homophonous NPs
. 150
3.1.7.
Anaphoric relations
. 153
3.2.
Formal features pertaining to grammatical meaning
. 153
3.2.1.
Definiteness
.154
3.2.1.1.
Proper names are definite
.154
3.2.1.2.
The functions of the definite article with proper names
.157
3.2.2.
Number
.159
3.2.3.
Countability
.161
3.2.4.
Recursiveness (genericness)
.163
3.2.5.
Person
.167
3.2.6.
Case
. 167
3.2.7.
A combination of grammatical phenomena as an indirect
test for proper-namehood
. 167
4.
Proper names between common nouns and personal pronouns
. 169
xii Contents
5. The proper
name as the most prototypical nominal category
. 171
5.1.
Proper names have the unmarked counterparts of nominal
grammatical features
.171
5.2.
Prototypical proper names are zero coded
.172
6.
Constructions in which the proprial lemma is appellativized
. 173
7.
Marked constructions in which the proprial lemma has
apropriai
function
. 176
7.1.
Proper names with the indefinite article a(n)
. 176
7.2.
Proprial lemmas in a partitive construction
.179
8.
Conclusions
. 182
Chapter
3:
Typology of proper names
.183
1.
Introduction
. 183
2.
Prototypical proper names
.186
2.1.
Personal names
.187
2.1.1.
Primary official personal names
. 189
2.1.2.
Secondary official personal names
. 191
2.1.3.
Unofficial personal names. Bynames
. 192
2.1.3.1.
The proper name status of bynames
.194
2.1.3.2.
Pragmatic characterization of bynames
.195
2.1.3.3.
Subdivision of bynames: individual and collective
bynames
.196
2.1.3.4.
Formal characteristics of bynames
. 197
2.1.3.5.
Personal name combinations
. 197
2.2.
Animal names
.201
2.3.
Names of hurricanes
.201
2.4.
Place names
.202
2.4.1.
The internal status of place names
. 202
2.4.2.
A hierarchy of place name categories
.204
2.4.2.1.
Formal classification and hierarchy
. 205
2.4.2.2.
Semantic classification and hierarchy
. 207
2.4.3.
Some further implications
.210
2.4.3.1.
An additional continuum of number and gender
.210
2.4.3.2.
Towards an implicational universal
.211
2.4.3.3.
Language typological differences
.212
Contents xiii
2.4.4.
The use of setting locative prepositions with place names
. 212
2.4.4.1.
Referential vs. attributive spatial relations
. 213
2.4.4.2.
Setting vs. relational spatial prepositions
. 214
2.4.4.3.
Isolative vs. non-isolative spatial relations
. 216
2.4.4.4.
Positional vs. directional spatial relations
. 218
2.5.
Names of astronomic objects
.218
2.6.
Names of buildings, ships, etc
.220
2.7.
Names of organizations and associations
.220
2.8.
The continuum in the semantic functions of the definite article.
221
2.8.1.
The two functions of the definite article with proper names
.221
2.8.2.
The continuum in the semantic functions of the definite
article with both common and proper nouns
.222
3.
Nonprototypical proper names
.223
3.1.
Countable proper names
.225
3.1.1.
Temporal names
.225
3.1.1.1.
Temporal names as proper names
.225
3.1.1.2.
A typology of temporal names
.228
3.1.1.3.
The setting function of temporal names. The function of
temporal prepositions
. 232
3.1.2.
Names of works of art, books, journals, films, etc
.233
3.1.3.
Names of institutions connected with buildings
.234
3.1.4.
Trade and brand names
. 235
3.1.5.
Names of currencies
.238
3.1.6.
Names of numbers and letters
.239
3.2.
Uncountable proper names
.241
3.2.1.
Names of languages
.241
3.2.2.
Names of colors
.244
3.2.3.
Names of diseases
.245
4.
Autonyms (metalinguistic names)
.246
5.
Count, mass nouns, and clauses with a restricted proprial
function
. 249
5.1.
Count nouns
.249
5.2.
Mass nouns
.250
5.3.
Clauses
.251
6.
Conclusions
.253
xiv Contents
Chapter
4:
Dialinguistic aspects of Flemish personal
names
.256
1.
Introduction
.256
2.
Geographical distribution of adult Flemish personal name
patterns
.
2.1.
Introduction
.257
2.2.
Taxonomy of personal name patterns in Flemish dialects
. 259
2.2.1.
Historical and terminological preliminaries
.259
2.2.2.
Taxonomy of Flemish personal name patterns
.260
2.2.2.1.
Unary patterns
.260
2.2.2.2.
Binary patterns
.260
2.2.2.3.
Descriptive patterns on their way to becoming surnames.
262
2.3.
Geographical distribution of Flemish personal name patterns
.262
2.4. Diachronie
shift to the pattern [first name
+
surname] and its causes
.265
2.5.
Conclusions
.267
3. Diachronie
analysis of Flemish personal names
. 267
3.1.
Introduction
.267
3.2. Diachronie
approaches
.269
3.2.1.
The etymological approach
.269
3.2.2.
Name fields
.270
3.2.3.
The paradigmatic/syntagmatic approach
. 271
3.2.4.
The axiological approach
.271
3.3. Diachronie
classification of adult bynames and family names
.271
3.3.1.
Principles for the diachronic-semantic classification
of bynames and family names
.271
3.3.1.1.
The distinction of word class vs. motivational structure
. 272
3.3.1.2.
The paradigmatic vs. the syntagmatic parameter
. 274
3.3.1.3.
More examples illustrating the distinction 'paradigmatic'
vs. 'syntagmatic'
.275
3.3.1.4.
Filiation in the assignment of a name form
. 276
3.3.1.5.
The use of tropes (metaphor, metonymy, irony) in the
motivational structure of bynames
.276
3.3.2.
Formal correlates of the diachronic semantics of bynames
. 277
3.3.2.1.
The paradigmatic (word) level
.277
3.3.2.2.
The syntagmatic (relational) level
. 278
3.3.3.
Bynames [BNs] vs. family names [FNs]
.280
Contents xv
3.3.4. Diachronie
classification
of Flemish family names and
3.3.4.1.
Origin
.282
3.3.4.2.
Characterization
.284
3.4. Diachronie
classification of juvenile byname patterns
.287
3.4.1.
Principles for the diachronic-semantic classification
of juvenile bynames
.287
3.4.2.
Taxonomy of juvenile Flemish bynames
.289
3.4.2.1.
Origin
.289
3.4.2.2.
Characterization
.290
3.4.2.3.
Expressivity
.292
3.5.
Surnames of Flemish foundlings
.295
3.5.1.
Origin
. 296
3.5.1.1.
Familial origin
. 296
3.5.1.2.
Local origin
.296
3.5.1.3.
Temporal origin
.297
3.5.2.
Characterization
. 298
3.5.3.
Purely formal names
. 299
3.6.
Flemish nicknames for internet chatting
. 300
3.6.1.
Psychological motivation
.301
3.6.2.
Semantic motivation
.302
3.6.2.1.
The category 'person'
. 302
3.6.2.2.
The world in which the person lives
.304
3.7.
Conclusions
.306
4.
Socio-onomastic aspects of Flemish personal names
. 306
4.1.
Introduction. Socio-onomastics
.306
4.1.1.
One-way traffic from society to names
.307
4.1.2.
Proper names, and especially personal names, as ideal
socio-onomastic parameters
.308
4.1.3.
The name-giving system vs. the use of names
.309
4.2.
Socio-onomastic aspects of adult Flemish personal-name-giving
.310
4.2.1.
The gender parameter
. 311
4.2.1.1.
At the
synchronie
level
.311
4.2.1.2.
At the diachronic level
.312
4.2.2.
The social class parameter
. 314
4.2.2.1.
The structure
[
title
+
personal name]
. 314
4.2.2.2.
The pattern [first name
+
occupation]
.315
4.2.2.3.
The metonymical combination [first name
+
occupational nickname]
. 315
xvi Contents
4.2.3.
Conclusions
.316
4.3.
Socio-onomastic characteristics
of juvenile
Flemish byname-
giving in contrast with the adult name-giving
.317
4.4.
Conclusions
.320
General summary and conclusions
. 321
Notes
.326
References
. 342
Subject index
.370 |
adam_txt |
Contents
General
introduction
. 1
Chapter
1: Nominal
and referential-semantic status of proper
names
.6
1.
Introduction
.6
1.1.
Proper names andproprial lemmas
.7
1.2.
The so-called pragmatic viewpoint
.9
1.3.
Proper names as a semantic-syntactic class
.11
1.4.
Radical Construction Grammar
.13
1.5.
Coseriu and
Willems. 14
1.6.
Dictionary lemmas
.15
2.
The nominal status of proper names
. 17
2.1.
The proper name as a nominal category
.17
2.2.
Proper names and appellatives
. 19
3.
The referential and semantic status of proper names
.20
3.1.
Some basic semantic notions applied in this work
.20
3.2.
Evaluation of the main views on the referential
and semantic status of proper names
.22
3.2.1.
Language philosophical views: from Mill to Kripke
.24
3.2.1.1.
John Stuart Mill
.24
3.2.1.2. Gottlob
Frege.
27
3.2.1.3.
Edmund
Husserl
.28
3.2.1.4.
Bertrand
Russell
.29
3.2.1.5. Ludwig
Wittgenstein and John Searle
.30
3.2.1.6.
Saul Kripke and Keith Donnellan
.33
3.2.2.
Some current linguistic theories of proper names
. 38
3.2.2.1.
The maximum meaningfulness thesis
.39
3.2.2.2.
Metalinguistic theories of proper names
.39
3.2.2.3.
Cognitive linguistic theories of proper names
. 50
3.2.2.4.
The set theoretic cognitivist approach
. 58
3.2.2.5.
The pragmatic view
.65
3.3.
Presuppositional meanings that proper names have or can have
. 71
3.3.1.
The thesis of the categorical presupposition in proper names.
71
3.3.2.
Categorical meanings as basic level concepts
. 79
3.3.3.
Associative meaning pertains to the referent and to the name
x
Contents
form on the level of usage
.81
3.3.4.
Emotive meaning: augmentative and diminutive
.83
3.3.5.
Grammatical meaning
.84
4.
Towards a more precise characterization and definition of
proper names and proprial lemmas
.84
4.1.
Towards a more precise characterization of proper names
.84
4.1.1.
Do proper names have meaning?
. 84
4.1.2.
In what way do proper names refer?
.86
4.1.3.
Towards a definition and a unified account of proper names
. 86
4.1.3.1.
The pragmatic component
.87
4.1.3.2.
The semantic component
.90
4.1.3.3.
The syntactic component
.91
4.1.4.
What is necessary to retrieve the referent of a proper name?
. 91
4.1.5.
Do proper names always originate in a 'baptismal act'?
.92
4.2.
A more precise characterization of proprial and nonproprial
lemmas
.93
4.2.1.
Three questions regarding the status of proprial and
nonproprial lemmas in connection with proper names
. 93
4.2.2.
Further arguments for the adoption of proprial lemmas
.95
4.2.2.1.
Proprial lemmas functioning as appellatives
oras
parts
of nonproprial words
.96
4.2.2.2. Multidenotative
proprial lemmas
.96
4.2.2.3.
One referent is a part of the other
. 97
4.2.2.4.
Names with a common part can be united via the adoption
of a proprial lemma
.98
4.2.2.5.
Names may share a basic level term
.99
4.2.2.6.
Nonproprial lemmas found in proper names
. 99
4.2.3.
Proprial lemmas and the typological theory of markedness
. 99
4.3.
Diagram of a proprial lemma and its valency
.100
5.
Monoreferential appellative expressions
. 102
5.1.
Monoreferential NPs with the definite article
. 103
5.2.
Articleless monoreferential NPs
.104
6.
Neurolinguistic evidence for the present analysis of proper names.
106
6.1.
Semenza
and Zettin(
і
988).108
6.2.
Bayer
(1991).
HO
6.3.
Miceli, Daniele,
Esposko and
Magarčili
(1998). 113
Contents
xi
6.4.
Discussion
.113
7.
Conclusions
. 116
Chapter
2:
Formal characteristics of proper names
. 119
1.
Introduction
.119
2.
The proper name as a nominal category
. 120
3.
Formal correlates of proprial meanings
.125
3.1.
Formal characteristics pertaining to the extension/intension
status of proper names
. 125
3.1.1.
Close apposition
. 125
3.1.1.1.
Close vs. loose apposition
. 126
3.1.1.2.
Close apposition as a criterion for proper-namehood
. 128
3.1.1.3.
Close apposition as a criterion for the basic level
presupposition in proper names
. 138
3.1.1.4.
A cline in
the tightness of the bond between proper name
element and basic level element
.141
3.1.2.
Restrictive modifiers
.143
3.1.3.
Quantification
.145
3.1.4.
Predicate
nominais
. 146
3.1.5.
Voor 'for'-phrases
. 149
3.1.6.
Coordination of homophonous NPs
. 150
3.1.7.
Anaphoric relations
. 153
3.2.
Formal features pertaining to grammatical meaning
. 153
3.2.1.
Definiteness
.154
3.2.1.1.
Proper names are definite
.154
3.2.1.2.
The functions of the definite article with proper names
.157
3.2.2.
Number
.159
3.2.3.
Countability
.161
3.2.4.
Recursiveness (genericness)
.163
3.2.5.
Person
.167
3.2.6.
Case
. 167
3.2.7.
A combination of grammatical phenomena as an indirect
test for proper-namehood
. 167
4.
Proper names between common nouns and personal pronouns
. 169
xii Contents
5. The proper
name as the most prototypical nominal category
. 171
5.1.
Proper names have the unmarked counterparts of nominal
grammatical features
.171
5.2.
Prototypical proper names are zero coded
.172
6.
Constructions in which the proprial lemma is appellativized
. 173
7.
Marked constructions in which the proprial lemma has
apropriai
function
. 176
7.1.
Proper names with the indefinite article a(n)
. 176
7.2.
Proprial lemmas in a partitive construction
.179
8.
Conclusions
. 182
Chapter
3:
Typology of proper names
.183
1.
Introduction
. 183
2.
Prototypical proper names
.186
2.1.
Personal names
.187
2.1.1.
Primary official personal names
. 189
2.1.2.
Secondary official personal names
. 191
2.1.3.
Unofficial personal names. Bynames
. 192
2.1.3.1.
The proper name status of bynames
.194
2.1.3.2.
Pragmatic characterization of bynames
.195
2.1.3.3.
Subdivision of bynames: individual and collective
bynames
.196
2.1.3.4.
Formal characteristics of bynames
. 197
2.1.3.5.
Personal name combinations
. 197
2.2.
Animal names
.201
2.3.
Names of hurricanes
.201
2.4.
Place names
.202
2.4.1.
The internal status of place names
. 202
2.4.2.
A hierarchy of place name categories
.204
2.4.2.1.
Formal classification and hierarchy
. 205
2.4.2.2.
Semantic classification and hierarchy
. 207
2.4.3.
Some further implications
.210
2.4.3.1.
An additional continuum of number and gender
.210
2.4.3.2.
Towards an implicational universal
.211
2.4.3.3.
Language typological differences
.212
Contents xiii
2.4.4.
The use of setting locative prepositions with place names
. 212
2.4.4.1.
Referential vs. attributive spatial relations
. 213
2.4.4.2.
Setting vs. relational spatial prepositions
. 214
2.4.4.3.
Isolative vs. non-isolative spatial relations
. 216
2.4.4.4.
Positional vs. directional spatial relations
. 218
2.5.
Names of astronomic objects
.218
2.6.
Names of buildings, ships, etc
.220
2.7.
Names of organizations and associations
.220
2.8.
The continuum in the semantic functions of the definite article.
221
2.8.1.
The two functions of the definite article with proper names
.221
2.8.2.
The continuum in the semantic functions of the definite
article with both common and proper nouns
.222
3.
Nonprototypical proper names
.223
3.1.
Countable proper names
.225
3.1.1.
Temporal names
.225
3.1.1.1.
Temporal names as proper names
.225
3.1.1.2.
A typology of temporal names
.228
3.1.1.3.
The setting function of temporal names. The function of
temporal prepositions
. 232
3.1.2.
Names of works of art, books, journals, films, etc
.233
3.1.3.
Names of institutions connected with buildings
.234
3.1.4.
Trade and brand names
. 235
3.1.5.
Names of currencies
.238
3.1.6.
Names of numbers and letters
.239
3.2.
Uncountable proper names
.241
3.2.1.
Names of languages
.241
3.2.2.
Names of colors
.244
3.2.3.
Names of diseases
.245
4.
Autonyms (metalinguistic names)
.246
5.
Count, mass nouns, and clauses with a restricted proprial
function
. 249
5.1.
Count nouns
.249
5.2.
Mass nouns
.250
5.3.
Clauses
.251
6.
Conclusions
.253
xiv Contents
Chapter
4:
Dialinguistic aspects of Flemish personal
names
.256
1.
Introduction
.256
2.
Geographical distribution of adult Flemish personal name
patterns
.
2.1.
Introduction
.257
2.2.
Taxonomy of personal name patterns in Flemish dialects
. 259
2.2.1.
Historical and terminological preliminaries
.259
2.2.2.
Taxonomy of Flemish personal name patterns
.260
2.2.2.1.
Unary patterns
.260
2.2.2.2.
Binary patterns
.260
2.2.2.3.
Descriptive patterns on their way to becoming surnames.
262
2.3.
Geographical distribution of Flemish personal name patterns
.262
2.4. Diachronie
shift to the pattern [first name
+
surname] and its causes
.265
2.5.
Conclusions
.267
3. Diachronie
analysis of Flemish personal names
. 267
3.1.
Introduction
.267
3.2. Diachronie
approaches
.269
3.2.1.
The etymological approach
.269
3.2.2.
Name fields
.270
3.2.3.
The paradigmatic/syntagmatic approach
. 271
3.2.4.
The axiological approach
.271
3.3. Diachronie
classification of adult bynames and family names
.271
3.3.1.
Principles for the diachronic-semantic classification
of bynames and family names
.271
3.3.1.1.
The distinction of word class vs. motivational structure
. 272
3.3.1.2.
The paradigmatic vs. the syntagmatic parameter
. 274
3.3.1.3.
More examples illustrating the distinction 'paradigmatic'
vs. 'syntagmatic'
.275
3.3.1.4.
Filiation in the assignment of a name form
. 276
3.3.1.5.
The use of tropes (metaphor, metonymy, irony) in the
motivational structure of bynames
.276
3.3.2.
Formal correlates of the diachronic semantics of bynames
. 277
3.3.2.1.
The paradigmatic (word) level
.277
3.3.2.2.
The syntagmatic (relational) level
. 278
3.3.3.
Bynames [BNs] vs. family names [FNs]
.280
Contents xv
3.3.4. Diachronie
classification
of Flemish family names and
3.3.4.1.
Origin
.282
3.3.4.2.
Characterization
.284
3.4. Diachronie
classification of juvenile byname patterns
.287
3.4.1.
Principles for the diachronic-semantic classification
of juvenile bynames
.287
3.4.2.
Taxonomy of juvenile Flemish bynames
.289
3.4.2.1.
Origin
.289
3.4.2.2.
Characterization
.290
3.4.2.3.
Expressivity
.292
3.5.
Surnames of Flemish foundlings
.295
3.5.1.
Origin
. 296
3.5.1.1.
Familial origin
. 296
3.5.1.2.
Local origin
.296
3.5.1.3.
Temporal origin
.297
3.5.2.
Characterization
. 298
3.5.3.
Purely formal names
. 299
3.6.
Flemish nicknames for internet chatting
. 300
3.6.1.
Psychological motivation
.301
3.6.2.
Semantic motivation
.302
3.6.2.1.
The category 'person'
. 302
3.6.2.2.
The world in which the person lives
.304
3.7.
Conclusions
.306
4.
Socio-onomastic aspects of Flemish personal names
. 306
4.1.
Introduction. Socio-onomastics
.306
4.1.1.
One-way traffic from society to names
.307
4.1.2.
Proper names, and especially personal names, as ideal
socio-onomastic parameters
.308
4.1.3.
The name-giving system vs. the use of names
.309
4.2.
Socio-onomastic aspects of adult Flemish personal-name-giving
.310
4.2.1.
The gender parameter
. 311
4.2.1.1.
At the
synchronie
level
.311
4.2.1.2.
At the diachronic level
.312
4.2.2.
The social class parameter
. 314
4.2.2.1.
The structure
[
title
+
personal name]
. 314
4.2.2.2.
The pattern [first name
+
occupation]
.315
4.2.2.3.
The metonymical combination [first name
+
occupational nickname]
. 315
xvi Contents
4.2.3.
Conclusions
.316
4.3.
Socio-onomastic characteristics
of juvenile
Flemish byname-
giving in contrast with the adult name-giving
.317
4.4.
Conclusions
.320
General summary and conclusions
. 321
Notes
.326
References
. 342
Subject index
.370 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Van Langendonck, Willy 1938- |
author_GND | (DE-588)13299318X |
author_facet | Van Langendonck, Willy 1938- |
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author_sort | Van Langendonck, Willy 1938- |
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dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 410 - Linguistics |
dewey-raw | 410 |
dewey-search | 410 |
dewey-sort | 3410 |
dewey-tens | 410 - Linguistics |
discipline | Sprachwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft |
discipline_str_mv | Sprachwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft |
format | Book |
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spellingShingle | Van Langendonck, Willy 1938- Theory and typology of proper names Name (DE-588)4127959-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4127959-1 |
title | Theory and typology of proper names |
title_auth | Theory and typology of proper names |
title_exact_search | Theory and typology of proper names |
title_exact_search_txtP | Theory and typology of proper names |
title_full | Theory and typology of proper names by Willy van Langendonck |
title_fullStr | Theory and typology of proper names by Willy van Langendonck |
title_full_unstemmed | Theory and typology of proper names by Willy van Langendonck |
title_short | Theory and typology of proper names |
title_sort | theory and typology of proper names |
topic | Name (DE-588)4127959-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Name |
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