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Study of  Attributive Ethnonyms  in the History of English with Special Reference to  Foodsemy
Study of  Attributive Ethnonyms  in the History of English with Special Reference to  Foodsemy
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Study of Attributive Ethnonyms in the History of English with Special Reference to Foodsemy

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The author studies ethnic stereotypes in the history of English from the perspective of Cognitive Linguistics. He views an ethnic stereotype as an idealised cognitive model (ICM) which consists of a cluster of metonymic submodels (such as BODY, CUISINE, NAME, etc.). Each submodel may trigger the formation of an attributive ethnonym, which ascribes some attribute to the target group. While such terms are mostly derogatory, context plays a crucial role in their perception. The analysis proper focuses on foodsemic ethnonyms (most of which activate the submodel of CUISINE). Out of 168 items, above 50% follow the FOODSTUFF FOR ETHNIC GROUP or FOODSTUFF EATER FOR ETHNIC GROUP metonymy. Most examples come from Am.E., with Mexicans being the most frequently described target group.
ISBN
9783653949834
Språk
Engelsk
Utgivelsesdato
8.4.2016
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