The aim of this paper is to examine the role of exemplification in categorization processes, that is, how examples can be used in discourse to communicate conceptual categories. Based on data from present-day Japanese and a corpus-driven methodology, it will be shown that exemplifying constructions can be used 1) to refine already explicit categories by contextualizing and actualizing the reference, and 2) to create categories ex novo by triggering associative inferences and abstractive processes. Accordingly, a detailed analysis of the linguistic properties of the examples will be provided in order to identify recurring encoding patterns and correlations with the functions described above. Furthermore, it will be argued that, although any conceptual category can be lexicalized by means of a category label, there exist some interesting correlations between the coding of the examples and the labelling of the category. Finally, we will conclude by showing that the linguistic analysis of exemplification can provide useful insights regarding the modalities in which the human brain categorizes.
This paper aims at investigating the semantics of nominal reduplication cross-linguistically. Nominal
reduplication is treated as an iconic morphological device expressing functions that have something to do with plurality.
Nevertheless, in the languages of the world, other types of functions are attested as well, which seem to pivot around different
notions like conceptual similarity, heterogeneity, combinations of them, or even possession. Based on a large-scale
cross-linguistic analysis, we provide a typology of nominal reduplication considering the range of semantic functions and the type
of reduplicative patterns. We argue that the attested variation clearly points to a common semantic core underlying the various
functions, and this core can be identified in some modification of the degree and type of referentiality. Finally, the attested
tendencies and correlations may shed new light on the role of iconicity in explaining the connection between reduplicated nouns
and their functions.
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