Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1103108 | Language Sciences | 2014 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to shed some light on the semantic properties of the viewpoint shifter -eha- in Korean and to model the conceptual structure it evokes within a cognitive semantics framework. Korean does not allow direct attribution of another person's mental states; however, there are some linguistic buffers speakers can use to keep from violating constraints on consistency of viewpoint. -Eha- is one of the buffers; when it is used with an experiential predicate, the utterance will be interpreted as, “the protagonist behaves as if he/she were X” (XÂ =Â a subjective experience) instead of “the protagonist is X,” by invoking the implicit viewpoint of the speaker. This affix is of special interest in the following reasons. -Eha- takes experiential predicates as its stem such as oylop- 'be lonely,' sulphu- 'be sad,' and so forth, and it blocks his/her direct access to the experiencer's internal state. Second, depending on which subcategory of the experiential predicates it is attached to, the -eha- construction shows different semantic distributions; -eha- freely combines with experiencer-profiled experiential predicates (e.g., chwup- 'be cold'), theme-profiled experiential predicates (e.g., cop- 'be narrow'), and some evaluative predicates (e.g., kyemsonha- 'be modest'), but it does not combine with evaluative predicates with a semantic role affected involved (e.g., chincelha- 'be kind'). This paper provides cognitive motivations underlying the semantic distributions by modeling the conceptual structures that are evoked by the -eha- construction within a framework of causal event structure, which captures dynamic interactions among relevant thematic roles such as affected, agent, cause, experiencer, and perceiver.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Arts and Humanities
Language and Linguistics
Authors
Iksoo Kwon,