Dénominations d’animés humains et dualité en anglais contemporain

Why can the noun phrase a German only denote a person (and not an object)? To refer to, say, a German desk, the lexeme /German/ takes the form of an adjective, not a noun. In the same way, why can a superior, where superior is a noun, only designate a person, and not, say, a book that is found bette...

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Main Author: Elise Mignot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires du Midi 2009-01-01
Series:Anglophonia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/acs/12372
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author Elise Mignot
author_facet Elise Mignot
author_sort Elise Mignot
collection DOAJ
description Why can the noun phrase a German only denote a person (and not an object)? To refer to, say, a German desk, the lexeme /German/ takes the form of an adjective, not a noun. In the same way, why can a superior, where superior is a noun, only designate a person, and not, say, a book that is found better than another? Two problems arise simultaneously: the designation of humans, and the difference between two parts of speech (adjective and noun). Firstly, we suggest that nouns which designate humans are characterized by the notion of duality, understood as an all-or-nothing opposition between two items. Secondly, we propose that, within the domain of word-formation, nouns involve a notion of opposition. To test this, we focus on one type of secondary nouns, i.e. noun+noun compounds. If our hypothesis is valid, it probably reveals a tendency of nouns (i.e. nouns generally express opposition). It is then no surprise that lexemes which include a semantic feature of opposition (such as German, for example, which expresses nationality) are oriented towards the nominal category when used to designate humans.
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spelling doaj-art-6766aecc406144ddb1daa0e559feaffa2025-01-30T12:33:30ZengPresses Universitaires du MidiAnglophonia1278-33312427-04662009-01-0113657610.4000/anglophonia.864Dénominations d’animés humains et dualité en anglais contemporainElise MignotWhy can the noun phrase a German only denote a person (and not an object)? To refer to, say, a German desk, the lexeme /German/ takes the form of an adjective, not a noun. In the same way, why can a superior, where superior is a noun, only designate a person, and not, say, a book that is found better than another? Two problems arise simultaneously: the designation of humans, and the difference between two parts of speech (adjective and noun). Firstly, we suggest that nouns which designate humans are characterized by the notion of duality, understood as an all-or-nothing opposition between two items. Secondly, we propose that, within the domain of word-formation, nouns involve a notion of opposition. To test this, we focus on one type of secondary nouns, i.e. noun+noun compounds. If our hypothesis is valid, it probably reveals a tendency of nouns (i.e. nouns generally express opposition). It is then no surprise that lexemes which include a semantic feature of opposition (such as German, for example, which expresses nationality) are oriented towards the nominal category when used to designate humans.https://journals.openedition.org/acs/12372humansnoundualitycompound nounsparts of speech
spellingShingle Elise Mignot
Dénominations d’animés humains et dualité en anglais contemporain
Anglophonia
humans
noun
duality
compound nouns
parts of speech
title Dénominations d’animés humains et dualité en anglais contemporain
title_full Dénominations d’animés humains et dualité en anglais contemporain
title_fullStr Dénominations d’animés humains et dualité en anglais contemporain
title_full_unstemmed Dénominations d’animés humains et dualité en anglais contemporain
title_short Dénominations d’animés humains et dualité en anglais contemporain
title_sort denominations d animes humains et dualite en anglais contemporain
topic humans
noun
duality
compound nouns
parts of speech
url https://journals.openedition.org/acs/12372
work_keys_str_mv AT elisemignot denominationsdanimeshumainsetdualiteenanglaiscontemporain