Theory of language :: the representational function of language /
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English German |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam ; Philadelphia :
John Benjamins Pub. Co.,
©2011.
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | DE-862 DE-863 |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource (xcviii, 518 pages :) |
Bibliographie: | Includes bibliographical references and indexes. |
ISBN: | 9789027286864 9027286868 |
Internformat
MARC
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100 | 1 | |a Bühler, Karl, |d 1879-1963. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n81128253 | |
240 | 1 | 0 | |a Sprachtheorie. |l English |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Theory of language : |b the representational function of language / |c Karl Bühler ; translated by Donald Fraser Goodwin, in collaboration with Achim Eschbach. |
260 | |a Amsterdam ; |a Philadelphia : |b John Benjamins Pub. Co., |c ©2011. | ||
300 | |a 1 online resource (xcviii, 518 pages :) | ||
336 | |a text |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
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338 | |a online resource |b cr |2 rdacarrier | ||
347 | |a data file | ||
504 | |a Includes bibliographical references and indexes. | ||
505 | 0 | |8 1.1\x |a The principles of language research : The idea and plan of the axiomatics : Observations and ideas guiding research ; Exact recording -- three manners of understanding ; Initial object of linguistic research -- the conceptual world of the linguistic researcher ; Axioms of language research ; The four principles -- The model of language as organon (a) : Manners of appearance of the concrete speech event ; Inadequacy of the casual view of substance-oriented thought ; The new model: three semantic functions of language ; Expression and appeal as independent variables in addition to representation-- the three books on language -- The significative nature of language (b) : The constructive model of language ; The etyma of the words for sign ; Directive analysis of the concept of sign -- comparative psychology -- a general formula ; "Aliquid stat pro aliquo": two determinations ; The principle of abstractive relevance, illustrated by phonology ; The problem of abstraction ; Two forms of material fallacy -- Speech action and language work; speech act and language structure (c) : Inadequacy of previous dichotomies: the four-celled pattern ; Speech action and language work -- empractical speech -- la parole ; The work of art in language -- the theory of speech action ; The structures in language -- criticism -- structural survey in linguistics -- the higher level of formalization -- comparisons outside the linguistic realm -- intersubjectivity ; Theory of speech acts -- Steinthal and Husserl -- appreciation of Husserl's theory of acts -- the social factor in language -- Word and sentence. The S-F-system of the type language (d) : The features of the concept of language ; Analysis of a one-class system of communicative signals ; The two-class language system -- the dogma of lexicon and syntax ; The productivity of field systems ; Logic and linguistics -- The deictic field of language and deictic words : Introduction : The deictic field -- models of deixis ; Wegener and Brugmann as predecessors ; Speech about perceptual things ; Psychological analysis -- The psychological foundations of the modes of positional deixis in Indo-European : Brugmann's modes of deixis and the general problem ; The myth to the deictic origin of language ; *to-deixis and ille-deixis ; The second and third deictic mode ; Natural deictic clues ; Quality of origin and the acoustic characterization of the voice ; Directions in thou-deixis and istic-deixis ; Yonder-deixis ; A general question -- The origin of the deictic field and its mark : The here-now-I system of subjective orientation ; The meaning of the deictic words from a logical perspective ; The words for 'here' and 'I' as cognates ; The indispensability of deictic clues ; The role of 'I' and 'thou' ; The usual classification of the pronouns -- criticism ; The necessity of demonstration --Imagination-oriented deixis and the anaphoric use of deictic words : The second and third modes of deixis ; Ocular demonstration and imagination-oriented deixis as a psychological problem ; Subjective orientation when awake and its components ; Spatial orientation and deictic speech ; Movement of the origo in the tactile bodily image ; Temporal orientation ; The three types of imagination-oriented deixis ; Psychological reduction ; Displacements -- dramatic and epic procedure -- Egocentric and topomnestic deixis in various languages : The deictic field ; The inclusive and exclusive 'we' ; Coalescence of deictic particles with prepositions ; Egocentric and topomnestic deixis -- the class of 'prodemonstratives' -- examples from Japanese and Amerindian languages -- The symbolic field of language and the naming words : The programme -- The sympractical, the symphysical, and the synsemantic field of language signs : The concept of surrounding field ; Empractical speech ; Materially attached names ; An analogy with heraldry ; Synsemantics of pictorial values in painting ; The question of the ellipsis -- Context and field factors in detail : Syntax without form from Miklosich to Wackernagel ; Material clues and word classes ; Hermann Paul's list of context factors -- reorganization in three classes -- the completeness of these classes ; Plea for syntax from without -- Symbolic fields in non-linguistic representative implements : The comparative survey ; Lexical signs and representational fields illustrated by two non-linguistic representational implements ; The painter's pictorial field, the actor's representational field, and a remark on field values ; The concept of the symbol -- proposed definition ; The relationship between picture and symbol, fidelity to appearance and relational fidelity ; The specificity of linguistic representation -- analogy to intermediary in the linguistic representational implement -- the inner form of language -- Onomatopoetic language : There is no pictorial field in language ; The devotees of sound symbolism ; The pictorial potentials of the acoustic material ; Limits of depiction in the structural law of language ; An example from Werner's experiments ; Two groups of onomatopoetic words ; Older views of the import of sound symbolism ; Wilhelm Oehl's studies -- factors counting against this -- The conceptual signs of language : Prescientific and scientific concepts ; The etymon -- magical thought and naming -- a result of psychology of thought: the spheres of meaning ; Synchytic concepts ; Incompatibility of radical nominalism with the core fact of phonology ; J. St. Mill about species names and proper names ; Husserl's doctrine of acts ; The interest of language research in the objectivist analysis -- Husserl's monadic construction -- connotation and etymon ; The living and governing etymon -- concluding remarks on proper names -- The Indo-European case system as an example of a field implement : Localist or logical, cases of inner determination, cases of outer determination ; Mixed systems in Indo-European -- Wundt on the declension of neuter nouns -- an overly broad concept of case ; Comparative review of the case systems of various languages -- what are inner and outer determination? ; Criticism of Wundt's theory -- connotations of the verb ; Objective and subjective cases, the example of the lion's death ; The category of action and an inner form of language -- A critical review : The idea of the symbolic field ; The discovery of syntactic schemata ; Objective verification of observations by means of experiential psychology ; Concluding remarks -- The make-up of human speech: elements and compositions : Introduction : Leibniz and Aristotle on synthesis and synthemata -- summative wholes and Gestalten ; The constructive series: phoneme, word, sentence and compound sentence -- The materially derived formation of the acoustic stream of speech : The law of articulation ; Materially determined and grammatical formation ; The acoustic theory of the syllable ; The motor theory of the syllable -- ballistic pressure pulses ; Union of aspects -- Stetson's criticism, counter-criticism -- the resonance factor ; The result -- The sound shape and the itemized phonematic description of words : Phonemes as phonetic features ; Comparison between phonematic and chemical elements ; Sound face and itemized description of word images ; Phonetic characteristics and material recognition features ; The number of syllables in German ; The central idea of phonology ; A new constancy law -- The simple and the complex word. | |
505 | 0 | |a The characteristics of the concept of the word : The idea of the pure lexicon ; Husserl's definition of simple meaning ; The inflected word and the compound ; The features of the concept word -- proposed definition ; The problem of the word classes -- The functions of the article : Mark of case and gender, modulus of the symbolic and field values of words ; History and theory of the article -- the three functions according to Wackernagel ; The article as a substantive formant from the perspective of language theory ; *So-deixis as a parallel -- The summative and : Gestalt theoretical remarks ; "And" used in numerals as an example -- "and" as a conjunction -- results: "and" to bundle things, "and" to conjoin sentences and clauses ; The pair compound -- Language theoretical studies on the compound : The word with a compound symbolic meaning -- Brugmann versus Paul ; The result of the language-historical survey --Initial and final position in Schmidt's theory -- criticism -- new suggestion -- law of correlation ; Plea for a distinction between attributive and predicative compounds ; Difference between nominal and verbal compounds ; The interference of the positional facto with intonational and phonematic modulations -- preference for final position in Romance languages ; The features of the concept of the word fulfilled by the compound -- The metaphor in language : The sematological core of the theory of the metaphor ; Psychological remarks -- findings of the historians of language -- parallels outside of language -- two metaphors by children ; The physiognomic gaze -- pleasure in functioning ; The differential effect, the technical model of the double filter -- the law of suppression -- plasticity of meanings ; Werner's taboo hypothesis -- criticism: the metaphor and para-phenomena ; General conclusion -- The problem of the sentence : The philological idea of the sentence and grammar ; Ries's definition, the denizen's quarter ; Ries's three features treat different aspects ; Examination of the older definitions -- the grammatical concept of the sentence -- The sentence without a deictic field : The release of the utterance from the circumstances of speech -- the feature of independence of the sense of the sentence ; Correlational sentences (nominal sentences) ; Self-sufficiency of the sense of the sentence -- an analogy with the painting -- the gradual release ; Exposition and subject ; The impersonal verbs ; The third person ; Absolutely deixis-free sentences in logic -- | |
590 | |8 1.2\x |a The anaphora : The joints of speech ; The old view of the essence of the anaphora and a new view -- criticism of Brugmann ; The word sequence in speech and the picture sequence in films ; The dream-like staging of imagination in the film and the waking stages in speech ; Wealth and poverty of anaphoric deixis -- The formal world of the compound sentence (a sketch) : The problem: multiple roots of the variety of forms ; Examples of lapidary and polyarthic speech -- the emergence of the relative in Egyptian ; Paul's type ; Kretschmer's type -- an early stage -- generalized version ; A comparison of the two types ; The concept of hypotaxis -- field breach -- Marty's suggestion, newer studies ; A new proposal: a theory of types. | ||
588 | 0 | |a Print version record. | |
650 | 0 | |a Language and languages. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85074518 | |
650 | 6 | |a Langage et langues. | |
650 | 7 | |a languages (study discipline) |2 aat | |
650 | 7 | |a FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY |x Miscellaneous. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES |x Reference. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES |x Linguistics |x Semantics. |2 bisacsh | |
650 | 7 | |a Language and languages |2 fast | |
700 | 1 | |a Goodwin, Donald Fraser. | |
700 | 1 | |a Eschbach, Achim. | |
758 | |i has work: |a Theory of language (Text) |1 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCGRfWqtmTjQtGTXTmgtFXb |4 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork | ||
776 | 0 | 8 | |i Print version: |a Bühler, Karl, 1879-1963. |s Sprachtheorie. English. |t Theory of language. |d Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Pub. Co., ©2011 |z 9789027211828 |w (DLC) 2011008153 |w (OCoLC)704121334 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
DE-BY-FWS_katkey | ZDB-4-EBA-ocn741691407 |
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adam_text | |
any_adam_object | |
author | Bühler, Karl, 1879-1963 |
author2 | Goodwin, Donald Fraser Eschbach, Achim |
author2_role | |
author2_variant | d f g df dfg a e ae |
author_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n81128253 |
author_facet | Bühler, Karl, 1879-1963 Goodwin, Donald Fraser Eschbach, Achim |
author_role | |
author_sort | Bühler, Karl, 1879-1963 |
author_variant | k b kb |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | localFWS |
callnumber-first | P - Language and Literature |
callnumber-label | P105 |
callnumber-raw | P105 .B8513 2011eb |
callnumber-search | P105 .B8513 2011eb |
callnumber-sort | P 3105 B8513 42011EB |
callnumber-subject | P - Philology and Linguistics |
collection | ZDB-4-EBA |
contents | The principles of language research : The idea and plan of the axiomatics : Observations and ideas guiding research ; Exact recording -- three manners of understanding ; Initial object of linguistic research -- the conceptual world of the linguistic researcher ; Axioms of language research ; The four principles -- The model of language as organon (a) : Manners of appearance of the concrete speech event ; Inadequacy of the casual view of substance-oriented thought ; The new model: three semantic functions of language ; Expression and appeal as independent variables in addition to representation-- the three books on language -- The significative nature of language (b) : The constructive model of language ; The etyma of the words for sign ; Directive analysis of the concept of sign -- comparative psychology -- a general formula ; "Aliquid stat pro aliquo": two determinations ; The principle of abstractive relevance, illustrated by phonology ; The problem of abstraction ; Two forms of material fallacy -- Speech action and language work; speech act and language structure (c) : Inadequacy of previous dichotomies: the four-celled pattern ; Speech action and language work -- empractical speech -- la parole ; The work of art in language -- the theory of speech action ; The structures in language -- criticism -- structural survey in linguistics -- the higher level of formalization -- comparisons outside the linguistic realm -- intersubjectivity ; Theory of speech acts -- Steinthal and Husserl -- appreciation of Husserl's theory of acts -- the social factor in language -- Word and sentence. The S-F-system of the type language (d) : The features of the concept of language ; Analysis of a one-class system of communicative signals ; The two-class language system -- the dogma of lexicon and syntax ; The productivity of field systems ; Logic and linguistics -- The deictic field of language and deictic words : Introduction : The deictic field -- models of deixis ; Wegener and Brugmann as predecessors ; Speech about perceptual things ; Psychological analysis -- The psychological foundations of the modes of positional deixis in Indo-European : Brugmann's modes of deixis and the general problem ; The myth to the deictic origin of language ; *to-deixis and ille-deixis ; The second and third deictic mode ; Natural deictic clues ; Quality of origin and the acoustic characterization of the voice ; Directions in thou-deixis and istic-deixis ; Yonder-deixis ; A general question -- The origin of the deictic field and its mark : The here-now-I system of subjective orientation ; The meaning of the deictic words from a logical perspective ; The words for 'here' and 'I' as cognates ; The indispensability of deictic clues ; The role of 'I' and 'thou' ; The usual classification of the pronouns -- criticism ; The necessity of demonstration --Imagination-oriented deixis and the anaphoric use of deictic words : The second and third modes of deixis ; Ocular demonstration and imagination-oriented deixis as a psychological problem ; Subjective orientation when awake and its components ; Spatial orientation and deictic speech ; Movement of the origo in the tactile bodily image ; Temporal orientation ; The three types of imagination-oriented deixis ; Psychological reduction ; Displacements -- dramatic and epic procedure -- Egocentric and topomnestic deixis in various languages : The deictic field ; The inclusive and exclusive 'we' ; Coalescence of deictic particles with prepositions ; Egocentric and topomnestic deixis -- the class of 'prodemonstratives' -- examples from Japanese and Amerindian languages -- The symbolic field of language and the naming words : The programme -- The sympractical, the symphysical, and the synsemantic field of language signs : The concept of surrounding field ; Empractical speech ; Materially attached names ; An analogy with heraldry ; Synsemantics of pictorial values in painting ; The question of the ellipsis -- Context and field factors in detail : Syntax without form from Miklosich to Wackernagel ; Material clues and word classes ; Hermann Paul's list of context factors -- reorganization in three classes -- the completeness of these classes ; Plea for syntax from without -- Symbolic fields in non-linguistic representative implements : The comparative survey ; Lexical signs and representational fields illustrated by two non-linguistic representational implements ; The painter's pictorial field, the actor's representational field, and a remark on field values ; The concept of the symbol -- proposed definition ; The relationship between picture and symbol, fidelity to appearance and relational fidelity ; The specificity of linguistic representation -- analogy to intermediary in the linguistic representational implement -- the inner form of language -- Onomatopoetic language : There is no pictorial field in language ; The devotees of sound symbolism ; The pictorial potentials of the acoustic material ; Limits of depiction in the structural law of language ; An example from Werner's experiments ; Two groups of onomatopoetic words ; Older views of the import of sound symbolism ; Wilhelm Oehl's studies -- factors counting against this -- The conceptual signs of language : Prescientific and scientific concepts ; The etymon -- magical thought and naming -- a result of psychology of thought: the spheres of meaning ; Synchytic concepts ; Incompatibility of radical nominalism with the core fact of phonology ; J. St. Mill about species names and proper names ; Husserl's doctrine of acts ; The interest of language research in the objectivist analysis -- Husserl's monadic construction -- connotation and etymon ; The living and governing etymon -- concluding remarks on proper names -- The Indo-European case system as an example of a field implement : Localist or logical, cases of inner determination, cases of outer determination ; Mixed systems in Indo-European -- Wundt on the declension of neuter nouns -- an overly broad concept of case ; Comparative review of the case systems of various languages -- what are inner and outer determination? ; Criticism of Wundt's theory -- connotations of the verb ; Objective and subjective cases, the example of the lion's death ; The category of action and an inner form of language -- A critical review : The idea of the symbolic field ; The discovery of syntactic schemata ; Objective verification of observations by means of experiential psychology ; Concluding remarks -- The make-up of human speech: elements and compositions : Introduction : Leibniz and Aristotle on synthesis and synthemata -- summative wholes and Gestalten ; The constructive series: phoneme, word, sentence and compound sentence -- The materially derived formation of the acoustic stream of speech : The law of articulation ; Materially determined and grammatical formation ; The acoustic theory of the syllable ; The motor theory of the syllable -- ballistic pressure pulses ; Union of aspects -- Stetson's criticism, counter-criticism -- the resonance factor ; The result -- The sound shape and the itemized phonematic description of words : Phonemes as phonetic features ; Comparison between phonematic and chemical elements ; Sound face and itemized description of word images ; Phonetic characteristics and material recognition features ; The number of syllables in German ; The central idea of phonology ; A new constancy law -- The simple and the complex word. The characteristics of the concept of the word : The idea of the pure lexicon ; Husserl's definition of simple meaning ; The inflected word and the compound ; The features of the concept word -- proposed definition ; The problem of the word classes -- The functions of the article : Mark of case and gender, modulus of the symbolic and field values of words ; History and theory of the article -- the three functions according to Wackernagel ; The article as a substantive formant from the perspective of language theory ; *So-deixis as a parallel -- The summative and : Gestalt theoretical remarks ; "And" used in numerals as an example -- "and" as a conjunction -- results: "and" to bundle things, "and" to conjoin sentences and clauses ; The pair compound -- Language theoretical studies on the compound : The word with a compound symbolic meaning -- Brugmann versus Paul ; The result of the language-historical survey --Initial and final position in Schmidt's theory -- criticism -- new suggestion -- law of correlation ; Plea for a distinction between attributive and predicative compounds ; Difference between nominal and verbal compounds ; The interference of the positional facto with intonational and phonematic modulations -- preference for final position in Romance languages ; The features of the concept of the word fulfilled by the compound -- The metaphor in language : The sematological core of the theory of the metaphor ; Psychological remarks -- findings of the historians of language -- parallels outside of language -- two metaphors by children ; The physiognomic gaze -- pleasure in functioning ; The differential effect, the technical model of the double filter -- the law of suppression -- plasticity of meanings ; Werner's taboo hypothesis -- criticism: the metaphor and para-phenomena ; General conclusion -- The problem of the sentence : The philological idea of the sentence and grammar ; Ries's definition, the denizen's quarter ; Ries's three features treat different aspects ; Examination of the older definitions -- the grammatical concept of the sentence -- The sentence without a deictic field : The release of the utterance from the circumstances of speech -- the feature of independence of the sense of the sentence ; Correlational sentences (nominal sentences) ; Self-sufficiency of the sense of the sentence -- an analogy with the painting -- the gradual release ; Exposition and subject ; The impersonal verbs ; The third person ; Absolutely deixis-free sentences in logic -- |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)741691407 |
dewey-full | 400 |
dewey-hundreds | 400 - Language |
dewey-ones | 400 - Language |
dewey-raw | 400 |
dewey-search | 400 |
dewey-sort | 3400 |
dewey-tens | 400 - Language |
discipline | Sprachwissenschaft |
format | Electronic eBook |
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Co.,</subfield><subfield code="c">©2011.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="300" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">1 online resource (xcviii, 518 pages :)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="336" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">text</subfield><subfield code="b">txt</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacontent</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="337" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">computer</subfield><subfield code="b">c</subfield><subfield code="2">rdamedia</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="338" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="347" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">data file</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="504" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references and indexes.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="8">1.1\x</subfield><subfield code="a">The principles of language research : The idea and plan of the axiomatics : Observations and ideas guiding research ; Exact recording -- three manners of understanding ; Initial object of linguistic research -- the conceptual world of the linguistic researcher ; Axioms of language research ; The four principles -- The model of language as organon (a) : Manners of appearance of the concrete speech event ; Inadequacy of the casual view of substance-oriented thought ; The new model: three semantic functions of language ; Expression and appeal as independent variables in addition to representation-- the three books on language -- The significative nature of language (b) : The constructive model of language ; The etyma of the words for sign ; Directive analysis of the concept of sign -- comparative psychology -- a general formula ; "Aliquid stat pro aliquo": two determinations ; The principle of abstractive relevance, illustrated by phonology ; The problem of abstraction ; Two forms of material fallacy -- Speech action and language work; speech act and language structure (c) : Inadequacy of previous dichotomies: the four-celled pattern ; Speech action and language work -- empractical speech -- la parole ; The work of art in language -- the theory of speech action ; The structures in language -- criticism -- structural survey in linguistics -- the higher level of formalization -- comparisons outside the linguistic realm -- intersubjectivity ; Theory of speech acts -- Steinthal and Husserl -- appreciation of Husserl's theory of acts -- the social factor in language -- Word and sentence. The S-F-system of the type language (d) : The features of the concept of language ; Analysis of a one-class system of communicative signals ; The two-class language system -- the dogma of lexicon and syntax ; The productivity of field systems ; Logic and linguistics -- The deictic field of language and deictic words : Introduction : The deictic field -- models of deixis ; Wegener and Brugmann as predecessors ; Speech about perceptual things ; Psychological analysis -- The psychological foundations of the modes of positional deixis in Indo-European : Brugmann's modes of deixis and the general problem ; The myth to the deictic origin of language ; *to-deixis and ille-deixis ; The second and third deictic mode ; Natural deictic clues ; Quality of origin and the acoustic characterization of the voice ; Directions in thou-deixis and istic-deixis ; Yonder-deixis ; A general question -- The origin of the deictic field and its mark : The here-now-I system of subjective orientation ; The meaning of the deictic words from a logical perspective ; The words for 'here' and 'I' as cognates ; The indispensability of deictic clues ; The role of 'I' and 'thou' ; The usual classification of the pronouns -- criticism ; The necessity of demonstration --Imagination-oriented deixis and the anaphoric use of deictic words : The second and third modes of deixis ; Ocular demonstration and imagination-oriented deixis as a psychological problem ; Subjective orientation when awake and its components ; Spatial orientation and deictic speech ; Movement of the origo in the tactile bodily image ; Temporal orientation ; The three types of imagination-oriented deixis ; Psychological reduction ; Displacements -- dramatic and epic procedure -- Egocentric and topomnestic deixis in various languages : The deictic field ; The inclusive and exclusive 'we' ; Coalescence of deictic particles with prepositions ; Egocentric and topomnestic deixis -- the class of 'prodemonstratives' -- examples from Japanese and Amerindian languages -- The symbolic field of language and the naming words : The programme -- The sympractical, the symphysical, and the synsemantic field of language signs : The concept of surrounding field ; Empractical speech ; Materially attached names ; An analogy with heraldry ; Synsemantics of pictorial values in painting ; The question of the ellipsis -- Context and field factors in detail : Syntax without form from Miklosich to Wackernagel ; Material clues and word classes ; Hermann Paul's list of context factors -- reorganization in three classes -- the completeness of these classes ; Plea for syntax from without -- Symbolic fields in non-linguistic representative implements : The comparative survey ; Lexical signs and representational fields illustrated by two non-linguistic representational implements ; The painter's pictorial field, the actor's representational field, and a remark on field values ; The concept of the symbol -- proposed definition ; The relationship between picture and symbol, fidelity to appearance and relational fidelity ; The specificity of linguistic representation -- analogy to intermediary in the linguistic representational implement -- the inner form of language -- Onomatopoetic language : There is no pictorial field in language ; The devotees of sound symbolism ; The pictorial potentials of the acoustic material ; Limits of depiction in the structural law of language ; An example from Werner's experiments ; Two groups of onomatopoetic words ; Older views of the import of sound symbolism ; Wilhelm Oehl's studies -- factors counting against this -- The conceptual signs of language : Prescientific and scientific concepts ; The etymon -- magical thought and naming -- a result of psychology of thought: the spheres of meaning ; Synchytic concepts ; Incompatibility of radical nominalism with the core fact of phonology ; J. St. Mill about species names and proper names ; Husserl's doctrine of acts ; The interest of language research in the objectivist analysis -- Husserl's monadic construction -- connotation and etymon ; The living and governing etymon -- concluding remarks on proper names -- The Indo-European case system as an example of a field implement : Localist or logical, cases of inner determination, cases of outer determination ; Mixed systems in Indo-European -- Wundt on the declension of neuter nouns -- an overly broad concept of case ; Comparative review of the case systems of various languages -- what are inner and outer determination? ; Criticism of Wundt's theory -- connotations of the verb ; Objective and subjective cases, the example of the lion's death ; The category of action and an inner form of language -- A critical review : The idea of the symbolic field ; The discovery of syntactic schemata ; Objective verification of observations by means of experiential psychology ; Concluding remarks -- The make-up of human speech: elements and compositions : Introduction : Leibniz and Aristotle on synthesis and synthemata -- summative wholes and Gestalten ; The constructive series: phoneme, word, sentence and compound sentence -- The materially derived formation of the acoustic stream of speech : The law of articulation ; Materially determined and grammatical formation ; The acoustic theory of the syllable ; The motor theory of the syllable -- ballistic pressure pulses ; Union of aspects -- Stetson's criticism, counter-criticism -- the resonance factor ; The result -- The sound shape and the itemized phonematic description of words : Phonemes as phonetic features ; Comparison between phonematic and chemical elements ; Sound face and itemized description of word images ; Phonetic characteristics and material recognition features ; The number of syllables in German ; The central idea of phonology ; A new constancy law -- The simple and the complex word. </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">The characteristics of the concept of the word : The idea of the pure lexicon ; Husserl's definition of simple meaning ; The inflected word and the compound ; The features of the concept word -- proposed definition ; The problem of the word classes -- The functions of the article : Mark of case and gender, modulus of the symbolic and field values of words ; History and theory of the article -- the three functions according to Wackernagel ; The article as a substantive formant from the perspective of language theory ; *So-deixis as a parallel -- The summative and : Gestalt theoretical remarks ; "And" used in numerals as an example -- "and" as a conjunction -- results: "and" to bundle things, "and" to conjoin sentences and clauses ; The pair compound -- Language theoretical studies on the compound : The word with a compound symbolic meaning -- Brugmann versus Paul ; The result of the language-historical survey --Initial and final position in Schmidt's theory -- criticism -- new suggestion -- law of correlation ; Plea for a distinction between attributive and predicative compounds ; Difference between nominal and verbal compounds ; The interference of the positional facto with intonational and phonematic modulations -- preference for final position in Romance languages ; The features of the concept of the word fulfilled by the compound -- The metaphor in language : The sematological core of the theory of the metaphor ; Psychological remarks -- findings of the historians of language -- parallels outside of language -- two metaphors by children ; The physiognomic gaze -- pleasure in functioning ; The differential effect, the technical model of the double filter -- the law of suppression -- plasticity of meanings ; Werner's taboo hypothesis -- criticism: the metaphor and para-phenomena ; General conclusion -- The problem of the sentence : The philological idea of the sentence and grammar ; Ries's definition, the denizen's quarter ; Ries's three features treat different aspects ; Examination of the older definitions -- the grammatical concept of the sentence -- The sentence without a deictic field : The release of the utterance from the circumstances of speech -- the feature of independence of the sense of the sentence ; Correlational sentences (nominal sentences) ; Self-sufficiency of the sense of the sentence -- an analogy with the painting -- the gradual release ; Exposition and subject ; The impersonal verbs ; The third person ; Absolutely deixis-free sentences in logic -- </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="590" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="8">1.2\x</subfield><subfield code="a">The anaphora : The joints of speech ; The old view of the essence of the anaphora and a new view -- criticism of Brugmann ; The word sequence in speech and the picture sequence in films ; The dream-like staging of imagination in the film and the waking stages in speech ; Wealth and poverty of anaphoric deixis -- The formal world of the compound sentence (a sketch) : The problem: multiple roots of the variety of forms ; Examples of lapidary and polyarthic speech -- the emergence of the relative in Egyptian ; Paul's type ; Kretschmer's type -- an early stage -- generalized version ; A comparison of the two types ; The concept of hypotaxis -- field breach -- Marty's suggestion, newer studies ; 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id | ZDB-4-EBA-ocn741691407 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2025-03-18T14:15:38Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789027286864 9027286868 |
language | English German |
oclc_num | 741691407 |
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owner | MAIN DE-862 DE-BY-FWS DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
owner_facet | MAIN DE-862 DE-BY-FWS DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
physical | 1 online resource (xcviii, 518 pages :) |
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publishDate | 2011 |
publishDateSearch | 2011 |
publishDateSort | 2011 |
publisher | John Benjamins Pub. Co., |
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spelling | Bühler, Karl, 1879-1963. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n81128253 Sprachtheorie. English Theory of language : the representational function of language / Karl Bühler ; translated by Donald Fraser Goodwin, in collaboration with Achim Eschbach. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Pub. Co., ©2011. 1 online resource (xcviii, 518 pages :) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier data file Includes bibliographical references and indexes. 1.1\x The principles of language research : The idea and plan of the axiomatics : Observations and ideas guiding research ; Exact recording -- three manners of understanding ; Initial object of linguistic research -- the conceptual world of the linguistic researcher ; Axioms of language research ; The four principles -- The model of language as organon (a) : Manners of appearance of the concrete speech event ; Inadequacy of the casual view of substance-oriented thought ; The new model: three semantic functions of language ; Expression and appeal as independent variables in addition to representation-- the three books on language -- The significative nature of language (b) : The constructive model of language ; The etyma of the words for sign ; Directive analysis of the concept of sign -- comparative psychology -- a general formula ; "Aliquid stat pro aliquo": two determinations ; The principle of abstractive relevance, illustrated by phonology ; The problem of abstraction ; Two forms of material fallacy -- Speech action and language work; speech act and language structure (c) : Inadequacy of previous dichotomies: the four-celled pattern ; Speech action and language work -- empractical speech -- la parole ; The work of art in language -- the theory of speech action ; The structures in language -- criticism -- structural survey in linguistics -- the higher level of formalization -- comparisons outside the linguistic realm -- intersubjectivity ; Theory of speech acts -- Steinthal and Husserl -- appreciation of Husserl's theory of acts -- the social factor in language -- Word and sentence. The S-F-system of the type language (d) : The features of the concept of language ; Analysis of a one-class system of communicative signals ; The two-class language system -- the dogma of lexicon and syntax ; The productivity of field systems ; Logic and linguistics -- The deictic field of language and deictic words : Introduction : The deictic field -- models of deixis ; Wegener and Brugmann as predecessors ; Speech about perceptual things ; Psychological analysis -- The psychological foundations of the modes of positional deixis in Indo-European : Brugmann's modes of deixis and the general problem ; The myth to the deictic origin of language ; *to-deixis and ille-deixis ; The second and third deictic mode ; Natural deictic clues ; Quality of origin and the acoustic characterization of the voice ; Directions in thou-deixis and istic-deixis ; Yonder-deixis ; A general question -- The origin of the deictic field and its mark : The here-now-I system of subjective orientation ; The meaning of the deictic words from a logical perspective ; The words for 'here' and 'I' as cognates ; The indispensability of deictic clues ; The role of 'I' and 'thou' ; The usual classification of the pronouns -- criticism ; The necessity of demonstration --Imagination-oriented deixis and the anaphoric use of deictic words : The second and third modes of deixis ; Ocular demonstration and imagination-oriented deixis as a psychological problem ; Subjective orientation when awake and its components ; Spatial orientation and deictic speech ; Movement of the origo in the tactile bodily image ; Temporal orientation ; The three types of imagination-oriented deixis ; Psychological reduction ; Displacements -- dramatic and epic procedure -- Egocentric and topomnestic deixis in various languages : The deictic field ; The inclusive and exclusive 'we' ; Coalescence of deictic particles with prepositions ; Egocentric and topomnestic deixis -- the class of 'prodemonstratives' -- examples from Japanese and Amerindian languages -- The symbolic field of language and the naming words : The programme -- The sympractical, the symphysical, and the synsemantic field of language signs : The concept of surrounding field ; Empractical speech ; Materially attached names ; An analogy with heraldry ; Synsemantics of pictorial values in painting ; The question of the ellipsis -- Context and field factors in detail : Syntax without form from Miklosich to Wackernagel ; Material clues and word classes ; Hermann Paul's list of context factors -- reorganization in three classes -- the completeness of these classes ; Plea for syntax from without -- Symbolic fields in non-linguistic representative implements : The comparative survey ; Lexical signs and representational fields illustrated by two non-linguistic representational implements ; The painter's pictorial field, the actor's representational field, and a remark on field values ; The concept of the symbol -- proposed definition ; The relationship between picture and symbol, fidelity to appearance and relational fidelity ; The specificity of linguistic representation -- analogy to intermediary in the linguistic representational implement -- the inner form of language -- Onomatopoetic language : There is no pictorial field in language ; The devotees of sound symbolism ; The pictorial potentials of the acoustic material ; Limits of depiction in the structural law of language ; An example from Werner's experiments ; Two groups of onomatopoetic words ; Older views of the import of sound symbolism ; Wilhelm Oehl's studies -- factors counting against this -- The conceptual signs of language : Prescientific and scientific concepts ; The etymon -- magical thought and naming -- a result of psychology of thought: the spheres of meaning ; Synchytic concepts ; Incompatibility of radical nominalism with the core fact of phonology ; J. St. Mill about species names and proper names ; Husserl's doctrine of acts ; The interest of language research in the objectivist analysis -- Husserl's monadic construction -- connotation and etymon ; The living and governing etymon -- concluding remarks on proper names -- The Indo-European case system as an example of a field implement : Localist or logical, cases of inner determination, cases of outer determination ; Mixed systems in Indo-European -- Wundt on the declension of neuter nouns -- an overly broad concept of case ; Comparative review of the case systems of various languages -- what are inner and outer determination? ; Criticism of Wundt's theory -- connotations of the verb ; Objective and subjective cases, the example of the lion's death ; The category of action and an inner form of language -- A critical review : The idea of the symbolic field ; The discovery of syntactic schemata ; Objective verification of observations by means of experiential psychology ; Concluding remarks -- The make-up of human speech: elements and compositions : Introduction : Leibniz and Aristotle on synthesis and synthemata -- summative wholes and Gestalten ; The constructive series: phoneme, word, sentence and compound sentence -- The materially derived formation of the acoustic stream of speech : The law of articulation ; Materially determined and grammatical formation ; The acoustic theory of the syllable ; The motor theory of the syllable -- ballistic pressure pulses ; Union of aspects -- Stetson's criticism, counter-criticism -- the resonance factor ; The result -- The sound shape and the itemized phonematic description of words : Phonemes as phonetic features ; Comparison between phonematic and chemical elements ; Sound face and itemized description of word images ; Phonetic characteristics and material recognition features ; The number of syllables in German ; The central idea of phonology ; A new constancy law -- The simple and the complex word. The characteristics of the concept of the word : The idea of the pure lexicon ; Husserl's definition of simple meaning ; The inflected word and the compound ; The features of the concept word -- proposed definition ; The problem of the word classes -- The functions of the article : Mark of case and gender, modulus of the symbolic and field values of words ; History and theory of the article -- the three functions according to Wackernagel ; The article as a substantive formant from the perspective of language theory ; *So-deixis as a parallel -- The summative and : Gestalt theoretical remarks ; "And" used in numerals as an example -- "and" as a conjunction -- results: "and" to bundle things, "and" to conjoin sentences and clauses ; The pair compound -- Language theoretical studies on the compound : The word with a compound symbolic meaning -- Brugmann versus Paul ; The result of the language-historical survey --Initial and final position in Schmidt's theory -- criticism -- new suggestion -- law of correlation ; Plea for a distinction between attributive and predicative compounds ; Difference between nominal and verbal compounds ; The interference of the positional facto with intonational and phonematic modulations -- preference for final position in Romance languages ; The features of the concept of the word fulfilled by the compound -- The metaphor in language : The sematological core of the theory of the metaphor ; Psychological remarks -- findings of the historians of language -- parallels outside of language -- two metaphors by children ; The physiognomic gaze -- pleasure in functioning ; The differential effect, the technical model of the double filter -- the law of suppression -- plasticity of meanings ; Werner's taboo hypothesis -- criticism: the metaphor and para-phenomena ; General conclusion -- The problem of the sentence : The philological idea of the sentence and grammar ; Ries's definition, the denizen's quarter ; Ries's three features treat different aspects ; Examination of the older definitions -- the grammatical concept of the sentence -- The sentence without a deictic field : The release of the utterance from the circumstances of speech -- the feature of independence of the sense of the sentence ; Correlational sentences (nominal sentences) ; Self-sufficiency of the sense of the sentence -- an analogy with the painting -- the gradual release ; Exposition and subject ; The impersonal verbs ; The third person ; Absolutely deixis-free sentences in logic -- 1.2\x The anaphora : The joints of speech ; The old view of the essence of the anaphora and a new view -- criticism of Brugmann ; The word sequence in speech and the picture sequence in films ; The dream-like staging of imagination in the film and the waking stages in speech ; Wealth and poverty of anaphoric deixis -- The formal world of the compound sentence (a sketch) : The problem: multiple roots of the variety of forms ; Examples of lapidary and polyarthic speech -- the emergence of the relative in Egyptian ; Paul's type ; Kretschmer's type -- an early stage -- generalized version ; A comparison of the two types ; The concept of hypotaxis -- field breach -- Marty's suggestion, newer studies ; A new proposal: a theory of types. Print version record. Language and languages. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85074518 Langage et langues. languages (study discipline) aat FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY Miscellaneous. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Reference. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Semantics. bisacsh Language and languages fast Goodwin, Donald Fraser. Eschbach, Achim. has work: Theory of language (Text) https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCGRfWqtmTjQtGTXTmgtFXb https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/ontology/hasWork Print version: Bühler, Karl, 1879-1963. Sprachtheorie. English. Theory of language. Amsterdam ; Philadelphia : John Benjamins Pub. Co., ©2011 9789027211828 (DLC) 2011008153 (OCoLC)704121334 |
spellingShingle | Bühler, Karl, 1879-1963 Theory of language : the representational function of language / The principles of language research : The idea and plan of the axiomatics : Observations and ideas guiding research ; Exact recording -- three manners of understanding ; Initial object of linguistic research -- the conceptual world of the linguistic researcher ; Axioms of language research ; The four principles -- The model of language as organon (a) : Manners of appearance of the concrete speech event ; Inadequacy of the casual view of substance-oriented thought ; The new model: three semantic functions of language ; Expression and appeal as independent variables in addition to representation-- the three books on language -- The significative nature of language (b) : The constructive model of language ; The etyma of the words for sign ; Directive analysis of the concept of sign -- comparative psychology -- a general formula ; "Aliquid stat pro aliquo": two determinations ; The principle of abstractive relevance, illustrated by phonology ; The problem of abstraction ; Two forms of material fallacy -- Speech action and language work; speech act and language structure (c) : Inadequacy of previous dichotomies: the four-celled pattern ; Speech action and language work -- empractical speech -- la parole ; The work of art in language -- the theory of speech action ; The structures in language -- criticism -- structural survey in linguistics -- the higher level of formalization -- comparisons outside the linguistic realm -- intersubjectivity ; Theory of speech acts -- Steinthal and Husserl -- appreciation of Husserl's theory of acts -- the social factor in language -- Word and sentence. The S-F-system of the type language (d) : The features of the concept of language ; Analysis of a one-class system of communicative signals ; The two-class language system -- the dogma of lexicon and syntax ; The productivity of field systems ; Logic and linguistics -- The deictic field of language and deictic words : Introduction : The deictic field -- models of deixis ; Wegener and Brugmann as predecessors ; Speech about perceptual things ; Psychological analysis -- The psychological foundations of the modes of positional deixis in Indo-European : Brugmann's modes of deixis and the general problem ; The myth to the deictic origin of language ; *to-deixis and ille-deixis ; The second and third deictic mode ; Natural deictic clues ; Quality of origin and the acoustic characterization of the voice ; Directions in thou-deixis and istic-deixis ; Yonder-deixis ; A general question -- The origin of the deictic field and its mark : The here-now-I system of subjective orientation ; The meaning of the deictic words from a logical perspective ; The words for 'here' and 'I' as cognates ; The indispensability of deictic clues ; The role of 'I' and 'thou' ; The usual classification of the pronouns -- criticism ; The necessity of demonstration --Imagination-oriented deixis and the anaphoric use of deictic words : The second and third modes of deixis ; Ocular demonstration and imagination-oriented deixis as a psychological problem ; Subjective orientation when awake and its components ; Spatial orientation and deictic speech ; Movement of the origo in the tactile bodily image ; Temporal orientation ; The three types of imagination-oriented deixis ; Psychological reduction ; Displacements -- dramatic and epic procedure -- Egocentric and topomnestic deixis in various languages : The deictic field ; The inclusive and exclusive 'we' ; Coalescence of deictic particles with prepositions ; Egocentric and topomnestic deixis -- the class of 'prodemonstratives' -- examples from Japanese and Amerindian languages -- The symbolic field of language and the naming words : The programme -- The sympractical, the symphysical, and the synsemantic field of language signs : The concept of surrounding field ; Empractical speech ; Materially attached names ; An analogy with heraldry ; Synsemantics of pictorial values in painting ; The question of the ellipsis -- Context and field factors in detail : Syntax without form from Miklosich to Wackernagel ; Material clues and word classes ; Hermann Paul's list of context factors -- reorganization in three classes -- the completeness of these classes ; Plea for syntax from without -- Symbolic fields in non-linguistic representative implements : The comparative survey ; Lexical signs and representational fields illustrated by two non-linguistic representational implements ; The painter's pictorial field, the actor's representational field, and a remark on field values ; The concept of the symbol -- proposed definition ; The relationship between picture and symbol, fidelity to appearance and relational fidelity ; The specificity of linguistic representation -- analogy to intermediary in the linguistic representational implement -- the inner form of language -- Onomatopoetic language : There is no pictorial field in language ; The devotees of sound symbolism ; The pictorial potentials of the acoustic material ; Limits of depiction in the structural law of language ; An example from Werner's experiments ; Two groups of onomatopoetic words ; Older views of the import of sound symbolism ; Wilhelm Oehl's studies -- factors counting against this -- The conceptual signs of language : Prescientific and scientific concepts ; The etymon -- magical thought and naming -- a result of psychology of thought: the spheres of meaning ; Synchytic concepts ; Incompatibility of radical nominalism with the core fact of phonology ; J. St. Mill about species names and proper names ; Husserl's doctrine of acts ; The interest of language research in the objectivist analysis -- Husserl's monadic construction -- connotation and etymon ; The living and governing etymon -- concluding remarks on proper names -- The Indo-European case system as an example of a field implement : Localist or logical, cases of inner determination, cases of outer determination ; Mixed systems in Indo-European -- Wundt on the declension of neuter nouns -- an overly broad concept of case ; Comparative review of the case systems of various languages -- what are inner and outer determination? ; Criticism of Wundt's theory -- connotations of the verb ; Objective and subjective cases, the example of the lion's death ; The category of action and an inner form of language -- A critical review : The idea of the symbolic field ; The discovery of syntactic schemata ; Objective verification of observations by means of experiential psychology ; Concluding remarks -- The make-up of human speech: elements and compositions : Introduction : Leibniz and Aristotle on synthesis and synthemata -- summative wholes and Gestalten ; The constructive series: phoneme, word, sentence and compound sentence -- The materially derived formation of the acoustic stream of speech : The law of articulation ; Materially determined and grammatical formation ; The acoustic theory of the syllable ; The motor theory of the syllable -- ballistic pressure pulses ; Union of aspects -- Stetson's criticism, counter-criticism -- the resonance factor ; The result -- The sound shape and the itemized phonematic description of words : Phonemes as phonetic features ; Comparison between phonematic and chemical elements ; Sound face and itemized description of word images ; Phonetic characteristics and material recognition features ; The number of syllables in German ; The central idea of phonology ; A new constancy law -- The simple and the complex word. The characteristics of the concept of the word : The idea of the pure lexicon ; Husserl's definition of simple meaning ; The inflected word and the compound ; The features of the concept word -- proposed definition ; The problem of the word classes -- The functions of the article : Mark of case and gender, modulus of the symbolic and field values of words ; History and theory of the article -- the three functions according to Wackernagel ; The article as a substantive formant from the perspective of language theory ; *So-deixis as a parallel -- The summative and : Gestalt theoretical remarks ; "And" used in numerals as an example -- "and" as a conjunction -- results: "and" to bundle things, "and" to conjoin sentences and clauses ; The pair compound -- Language theoretical studies on the compound : The word with a compound symbolic meaning -- Brugmann versus Paul ; The result of the language-historical survey --Initial and final position in Schmidt's theory -- criticism -- new suggestion -- law of correlation ; Plea for a distinction between attributive and predicative compounds ; Difference between nominal and verbal compounds ; The interference of the positional facto with intonational and phonematic modulations -- preference for final position in Romance languages ; The features of the concept of the word fulfilled by the compound -- The metaphor in language : The sematological core of the theory of the metaphor ; Psychological remarks -- findings of the historians of language -- parallels outside of language -- two metaphors by children ; The physiognomic gaze -- pleasure in functioning ; The differential effect, the technical model of the double filter -- the law of suppression -- plasticity of meanings ; Werner's taboo hypothesis -- criticism: the metaphor and para-phenomena ; General conclusion -- The problem of the sentence : The philological idea of the sentence and grammar ; Ries's definition, the denizen's quarter ; Ries's three features treat different aspects ; Examination of the older definitions -- the grammatical concept of the sentence -- The sentence without a deictic field : The release of the utterance from the circumstances of speech -- the feature of independence of the sense of the sentence ; Correlational sentences (nominal sentences) ; Self-sufficiency of the sense of the sentence -- an analogy with the painting -- the gradual release ; Exposition and subject ; The impersonal verbs ; The third person ; Absolutely deixis-free sentences in logic -- Language and languages. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85074518 Langage et langues. languages (study discipline) aat FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY Miscellaneous. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Reference. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Semantics. bisacsh Language and languages fast |
subject_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85074518 |
title | Theory of language : the representational function of language / |
title_alt | Sprachtheorie. |
title_auth | Theory of language : the representational function of language / |
title_exact_search | Theory of language : the representational function of language / |
title_full | Theory of language : the representational function of language / Karl Bühler ; translated by Donald Fraser Goodwin, in collaboration with Achim Eschbach. |
title_fullStr | Theory of language : the representational function of language / Karl Bühler ; translated by Donald Fraser Goodwin, in collaboration with Achim Eschbach. |
title_full_unstemmed | Theory of language : the representational function of language / Karl Bühler ; translated by Donald Fraser Goodwin, in collaboration with Achim Eschbach. |
title_short | Theory of language : |
title_sort | theory of language the representational function of language |
title_sub | the representational function of language / |
topic | Language and languages. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85074518 Langage et langues. languages (study discipline) aat FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY Miscellaneous. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Reference. bisacsh LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Semantics. bisacsh Language and languages fast |
topic_facet | Language and languages. Langage et langues. languages (study discipline) FOREIGN LANGUAGE STUDY Miscellaneous. LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Reference. LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES Linguistics Semantics. Language and languages |
work_keys_str_mv | AT buhlerkarl sprachtheorie AT goodwindonaldfraser sprachtheorie AT eschbachachim sprachtheorie AT buhlerkarl theoryoflanguagetherepresentationalfunctionoflanguage AT goodwindonaldfraser theoryoflanguagetherepresentationalfunctionoflanguage AT eschbachachim theoryoflanguagetherepresentationalfunctionoflanguage |