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  • × classification_ss:"18.00 Einzelne Sprachen und Literaturen allgemein"
  1. Murphy, M.L.: Lexical meaning (2010) 0.02
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    Content
    Inhalt: Machine generated contents note: Part I. Meaning and the Lexicon: 1. The lexicon - some preliminaries; 2. What do we mean by meaning?; 3. Components and prototypes; 4. Modern componential approaches - and some alternatives; Part II. Relations Among Words and Senses: 5. Meaning variation: polysemy, homonymy and vagueness; 6. Lexical and semantic relations; Part III. Word Classes and Semantic Types: 7. Ontological categories and word classes; 8. Nouns and countability; 9. Predication: verbs, events, and states; 10. Verbs and time; 11. Adjectives and properties.
    Date
    22. 7.2013 10:53:30
  2. Kageura, K.: ¬The dynamics of terminology : a descriptive theory of term formation and terminological growth (2002) 0.02
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    Content
    PART I: Theoretical Background 7 Chapter 1. Terminology: Basic Observations 9 Chapter 2. The Theoretical Framework for the Study of the Dynamics of Terminology 25 PART II: Conceptual Patterns of Term Formation 43 Chapter 3. Conceptual Patterns of Term Formation: The Basic Descriptive Framework 45 Chapter 4. Conceptual Categories for the Description of Formation Patterns of Documentation Terms 61 Chapter 5. Intra-Term Relations and Conceptual Specification Patterns 91 Chapter 6. Conceptual Patterns of the Formation of Documentation Terms 115 PART III: Quantitative Patterns of Terminological Growth 163 Chapter 7. Quantitative Analysis of the Dynamics of Terminology: A Basic Framework 165 Chapter 8. Growth Patterns of Morphemes in the Terminology of Documentation 183 Chapter 9. Quantitative Dynamics in Term Formation 201 PART IV: Conclusions 247 Chapter 10. Towards Modelling Term Formation and Terminological Growth 249 Appendices 273 Appendix A. List of Conceptual Categories 275 Appendix B. Lists of Intra-Term Relations and Conceptual Specification Patterns 279 Appendix C. List of Terms by Conceptual Categories 281 Appendix D. List of Morphemes by Conceptual Categories 295.
    Date
    22. 3.2008 18:18:53
    Footnote
    Rez. in: Knowledge organization 30(2003) no.2, S.112-113 (L. Bowker): "Terminology is generally understood to be the activity that is concerned with the identification, collection and processing of terms; terms are the lexical items used to describe concepts in specialized subject fields Terminology is not always acknowledged as a discipline in its own right; it is sometimes considered to be a subfield of related disciplines such as lexicography or translation. However, a growing number of researchers are beginning to argue that terminology should be recognized as an autonomous discipline with its own theoretical underpinnings. Kageura's book is a valuable contribution to the formulation of a theory of terminology and will help to establish this discipline as an independent field of research. The general aim of this text is to present a theory of term formation and terminological growth by identifying conceptual regularities in term creation and by laying the foundations for the analysis of terminological growth patterns. The approach used is a descriptive one, which means that it is based an observations taken from a corpus. It is also synchronic in nature and therefore does not attempt to account for the evolution of terms over a given period of time (though it does endeavour to provide a means for predicting possible formation patterns of new terms). The descriptive, corpus-based approach is becoming very popular in terminology circles; however, it does pose certain limitations. To compensate for this, Kageura complements his descriptive analysis of conceptual patterns with a quantitative analysis of the patterns of the growth of terminology. Many existing investigations treat only a limited number of terms, using these for exemplification purposes. Kageura argues strongly (p. 31) that any theory of terms or terminology must be based an the examination of the terminology of a domain (i.e., a specialized subject field) in its entirety since it is only with respect to an individual domain that the concept of "term" can be established. To demonstrate the viability of his theoretical approach, Kageura has chosen to investigate and describe the domain of documentation, using Japanese terminological data. The data in the corpus are derived from a glossary (Wersig and Neveling 1984), and although this glossary is somewhat outdated (a fact acknowledged by the author), the data provided are nonetheless sufficient for demonstrating the viability of the approach, which can later be extended and applied to other languages and domains.
  3. Semantik, Lexikographie und Computeranwendungen : Workshop ... (Bonn) : 1995.01.27-28 (1996) 0.01
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    Date
    14. 4.2007 10:04:22
  4. Murphy, M.L.: Semantic relations and the lexicon : antonymy, synonymy and other paradigms (2008) 0.01
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    Date
    22. 7.2013 10:53:30
  5. Voß, V.: Denken, verstehen, wissen : eine sprachvergleichende Untersuchung zu lexikalischen Bezeichnungen mentaler Tätigkeiten, Vorgänge und Zustände (2009) 0.00
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    Isbn
    978-3-8405-0002-2
  6. Küster, M.W.: Geordnetes Weltbild : die Tradition des alphabetischen Sortierens von der Keilschrift bis zur EDV ; eine Kulturgeschichte (2006) 0.00
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    Footnote
    Rez. in: ZfBB 55(2008) H.2, S.105- (J. Sieglerschmidt): "Diese Studie, 2004 als Dissertation von der Universität Tübingen angenommen, ist »über einen längeren Zeitraum hinweg entstanden« (S. XI I I), wie angesichts des quantitativen wie qualitativen Umfangs sowie der Neuartigkeit der Herangehensweise nicht sehr verwundert. Sie folgt dem ehrgeizigen Plan, auf grammatologischer Grundlage sich der Entwicklung des Alphabets seit den ersten Schriftzeugnissen sowie der Geschichte des alphabetischen Sortierens anzunehmen und damit einen Beitrag zur noch aufzubauenden wissenschaftlichen Disziplin Grammatologie zu liefern. Dabei werden - wie das kleingedruckte, fast dreißigseitige Literaturverzeichnis ausweist - zahlreiche Fachgebiete einbezogen: neben der Linguistik und Semiotik vor allem die Philosophie und die Geschichte (sowie deren Schnittmengen), um nur die wichtigsten zu nennen. Das Ergebnis ist ein fulminantes, spannendes, ungemein gelehrtes Buch,das gleichwohl in den meisten Passagen lesbar bleibt. Es ist für alle, die sich mit der Organisation und Klassifikation unseres Wissens beschäftigen, eine Pflichtlektüre. In den ersten drei Kapiteln geht es um die Grundlegung der Grammatologie, die gewählte Terminologie (Linguistik und Semiotik) sowie die eigene Positionierung innerhalb des weiten Feldes der Grammatologie (S. 1-74). Es folgt der beschreibende Hauptteil der Geschichte des Schreibens und Sortierens seit sumerischer Zeit mit einem deutlichen Schwerpunkt auf der Frühzeit bis zur Spätantike (S. 75-327) und auf dem 17. und 18. Jahrhundert (5. 387-590). Es ist hier nicht möglich, die Ergebnisse im Einzelnen zu würdigen, zumal die Spannweite des ausgebreiteten Wissens eine detaillierte kritische Bearbeitung nicht erlaubt. Vielmehr soll versucht werden, einige wesentliche Punkte herauszugreifen und durch sie auf die weitere Lektüre neugierig zu machen. ..."

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