In the existing literature on synaesthetic metaphors in poetry it is proposed that transfers tend to go from the ‘lower’ (touch, smell, taste) to the ‘higher’ (sight, hearing) sensory modalities. e purpose of this article is to establish if the same directionality also holds for synaesthetic associations found in other text types. To this end, a method for the semi-automatic extraction of synaesthesia is intro- duced and applied to general-purpose corpora of English (ukWaC) and Italian (itWaC). In the data collected for these languages, most transfers proceed in the expected direction, e.g. sweet voice, but instances of ‘backward’ transfers are also found, e.g. bitter cold. Based on these results, it is claimed that the ‘directionality pri...
For individuals with synaesthesia, stimuli in one sensory modality elicit anomalous experiences in a...
Abstract. In this article, an analytical view of the general theories of language genesis is present...
This paper focuses on synaesthetic shift occurring in translation of Emily Dickinson’s poetry into U...
Synaesthesia in language consists in the combination of linguistic expressions referring to differen...
Synaesthesia is a type of metaphor associating linguistic expressions that refer to two different se...
This research addresses the following questions: (1) Are there similarities in the sequential orderi...
The \u201cfigure of the senses\u201d par excellence is synaesthesia, that is, a type of metaphor in ...
It is usually taken for granted that synaesthesia (e.g., sweet voice) is a metaphor. However, the fa...
ABSTRACT: In a synesthetic metaphor, a certain perceptual mode is initially specified (or may be ass...
16th Workshop, CLSW 2015, Beijing, China, May 9-11, 2015This paper focuses on 15 sensory adjectives ...
Many studies have been devoted to the analysis of synaesthesia within individual lan- guages, and to...
This study adopted a corpus-based approach to examine the synaesthetic metaphors of gustatory adject...
Linguistic synaesthesia is pervasive but under-studied. Expressions such as "sweet voice", "tall tal...
For individuals with synaesthesia, stimuli in one sensory modality elicit anomalous experiences in a...
Synesthesia is a neurological condition typically described as a merging of the senses. In recent de...
For individuals with synaesthesia, stimuli in one sensory modality elicit anomalous experiences in a...
Abstract. In this article, an analytical view of the general theories of language genesis is present...
This paper focuses on synaesthetic shift occurring in translation of Emily Dickinson’s poetry into U...
Synaesthesia in language consists in the combination of linguistic expressions referring to differen...
Synaesthesia is a type of metaphor associating linguistic expressions that refer to two different se...
This research addresses the following questions: (1) Are there similarities in the sequential orderi...
The \u201cfigure of the senses\u201d par excellence is synaesthesia, that is, a type of metaphor in ...
It is usually taken for granted that synaesthesia (e.g., sweet voice) is a metaphor. However, the fa...
ABSTRACT: In a synesthetic metaphor, a certain perceptual mode is initially specified (or may be ass...
16th Workshop, CLSW 2015, Beijing, China, May 9-11, 2015This paper focuses on 15 sensory adjectives ...
Many studies have been devoted to the analysis of synaesthesia within individual lan- guages, and to...
This study adopted a corpus-based approach to examine the synaesthetic metaphors of gustatory adject...
Linguistic synaesthesia is pervasive but under-studied. Expressions such as "sweet voice", "tall tal...
For individuals with synaesthesia, stimuli in one sensory modality elicit anomalous experiences in a...
Synesthesia is a neurological condition typically described as a merging of the senses. In recent de...
For individuals with synaesthesia, stimuli in one sensory modality elicit anomalous experiences in a...
Abstract. In this article, an analytical view of the general theories of language genesis is present...
This paper focuses on synaesthetic shift occurring in translation of Emily Dickinson’s poetry into U...