This article reviews the theoretical and methodological status of the traditional distinction between denotational ambiguity and vagueness, concluding that it is valid and necessary to use it in modeling natural lexical representation. The definitional criterion is argued to be unreliable, but the equivocality that linguistic and logical criteria appear to exhibit does not challenge the basis of the distinction. Rather, it is argued, their use must be qualified, and in particular confined to denotational rather that referential phenomena. While it may restrict their practical utility, the weakness of these metacognitive criteria does not establish the absence of a cognitive distinction between ambiguity and vagueness. An account of polysemy...
In this paper, I attempt to distinguish four linguistic concepts: fuzziness, vagueness, generality a...
This chapter provides a (biased) overview of analyses of vagueness within linguistics. First, the na...
When asked to indicate which items from a set of candidates belong to a particular natural language ...
The study of polysemy is of fundamental importance for any semantic study of language. Nerlich and C...
Background. The problem of polysemy has attracted scholars’ attention since antiquity and interest ...
Standardly, one says that vagueness arises whenever a concept or linguistic expression admits of bor...
There is an ongoing debate about the meaning of lexical words, i.e., words that contribute with cont...
Cognitive linguistic analyses of the relationship between ambiguity and vagueness suggest that these...
This thesis explores the processing of lexical ambiguity: words with several unrelated meanings (hom...
Polysemy is a semantic phenomenon which occurs when one lexical item has more meanings which can be ...
Polysemy is a semantic phenomenon which occurs when one lexical item has more meanings which can be ...
It is well established in the theoretical (see Weinreich 1964) and empirical study (see Jastrzembski...
Polysemy is a semantic phenomenon which occurs when one lexical item has more meanings which can ...
The study of polysemy has a venerable tradition in Cognitive Linguistics. Since the pioneering of wo...
International audienceThis chapter introduces the field of polysemy and synonymy studies from a Cogn...
In this paper, I attempt to distinguish four linguistic concepts: fuzziness, vagueness, generality a...
This chapter provides a (biased) overview of analyses of vagueness within linguistics. First, the na...
When asked to indicate which items from a set of candidates belong to a particular natural language ...
The study of polysemy is of fundamental importance for any semantic study of language. Nerlich and C...
Background. The problem of polysemy has attracted scholars’ attention since antiquity and interest ...
Standardly, one says that vagueness arises whenever a concept or linguistic expression admits of bor...
There is an ongoing debate about the meaning of lexical words, i.e., words that contribute with cont...
Cognitive linguistic analyses of the relationship between ambiguity and vagueness suggest that these...
This thesis explores the processing of lexical ambiguity: words with several unrelated meanings (hom...
Polysemy is a semantic phenomenon which occurs when one lexical item has more meanings which can be ...
Polysemy is a semantic phenomenon which occurs when one lexical item has more meanings which can be ...
It is well established in the theoretical (see Weinreich 1964) and empirical study (see Jastrzembski...
Polysemy is a semantic phenomenon which occurs when one lexical item has more meanings which can ...
The study of polysemy has a venerable tradition in Cognitive Linguistics. Since the pioneering of wo...
International audienceThis chapter introduces the field of polysemy and synonymy studies from a Cogn...
In this paper, I attempt to distinguish four linguistic concepts: fuzziness, vagueness, generality a...
This chapter provides a (biased) overview of analyses of vagueness within linguistics. First, the na...
When asked to indicate which items from a set of candidates belong to a particular natural language ...