My Account    Basket
 
English  Deutsch  Français  
BOOKSHOP AUTHORS SERVICES COMPANIES
 Highlights
 Bestsellers
 Books
   Search
   New Books
   Disciplines
   Textbooks
   Authors/Editors
   List of Titles
   How to search
 New Books
 Disciplines
 Textbooks
 Series
 Journals
 Rights and Licences
 Peter Lang Press
 Download catalogues
 General information
Quick search
Go!
Advanced search
Sitemap
Contact
Home
 Featured title
Wiesinger, Peter (Hrsg.)
Akten des X. Internationalen Germanistenkongresses Wien 2000
«Zeitenwende - Die Germanistik auf dem Weg vom 20. ins 21. Jahrhundert»
 Recently viewed books
Balteiro, Isabel
The Directionality of Convers...
Bergenholtz, Henning / Nielse...
Lexicography at a Crossroads
Zhang, Jingyu
The Semantic Salience Hierarc...
Camps, Assumpta
Italia-España en la época con...
Koutsantoni, Dimitra
Developing Academic Literacie...
 Details
Recommend this book to someone  
Balteiro, Isabel  available 
The Directionality of Conversion in English
A Dia-Synchronic Study
Series:  Linguistic Insights
Studies in Language and Communication  Vol. 59
Year of Publication: 2007
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2007. 276 pp.
ISBN 978-3-03911-241-8  pb.
 
[Review copy request    
[Buy Licence, translation rights] [Copyright]
[PDF version] [Table of contents]
Sales price
SFR 80.00 * 54.90 ** 56.40 51.30 £ 46.20 US-$ 79.95
  *  includes VAT - only valid for Germany  [Currency of invoice] 
  **  includes VAT - only valid for Austria
Discipline
  English and American Language and Literature
  Linguistics
Book synopsis
This book received the Leocadio Martín Mingorance award
This book describes three of the main problems that the word-formation process known as conversion presents, namely those related to its definition, its delimitation, and its directionality. The latter constitutes, however, the main focus of the study, which is based on a corpus of over seven hundred lexical units and, more specifically, on 231 actual noun-verb conversion pairs. Considering that directionality is intrinsic to conversion, the main question is whether it is always possible to establish the direction of conversion or whether it is possible to do so only in some cases. Moreover, the study reveals what 'type' of directionality is involved, that is, whether the process is unidirectional, bidirectional or multi-directional. In order to answer these questions, both diachronic (etymology and dates of first records) and synchronic criteria (semantic dependence, restriction of usage, semantic range, semantic pattern, phonetic shape, morphologic type, stress, and the principle of relative markedness) are analysed and assessed.
Contents
Contents: A problematic word-formation process - The directionality of conversion: a review of previous interpretations - A dia-synchronic study of the directionality of conversion.
About the author(s)/editor(s)
The Author: Isabel Balteiro obtained her B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. in English Studies at the University of Santiago de Compostela (Spain). She taught at the University of Granada (Spain) for a short period and she is currently a Lecturer at the University of Alicante (Spain). She is also the author of the book A Contribution to the Study of Conversion in English as well as of some articles and book chapters concerning the study of English word-formation and lexis.
     Top Print Page 
© 2005 Peter Lang Publishing Group  Created by Peter Lang AG  Design by Peter Lang AG
last update: 13 August 2010  Books online: 48265