Kinship terms are used as forms of address both literally and fictively, i.e. addressing people whom the speaker is not related to neither by blood nor by marriage. A thorough analysis of the occurrences of kinship terms in the Hebrew Bible, with some remarks concerning contemporary Israeli Hebrew, demonstrates that fictive use prevails over literal use, playing a primary role in the definition of social relationships. The subject is approached from a discourse analysis perspective in the theoretical framework of the conceptual metaphor, exploring the relations between discourse and cognition as well as between discourse and power
International audienceKinship terminologies, a set of words of a language that reflects genealogical...
Kinship term of address is important because it lets individual know the exact nature of his relatio...
The aim of this paper is to investigate some aspects of fictive kinship in ancient Sumer that we f...
The study of kinship has attracted the attention of many scholars in various linguistic, anthropolog...
In many different languages, kinship terms can be used in order to address or refer to non-kin. Thes...
assumed that the relation of possession (or ownership) is a special case of contextual relations. Th...
This article argues that kinship terminologies are best studied in their full linguistic context; th...
Swahili kinship terms are highly polysemous and occur in many figurative meanings out of which some ...
Since Hebrew does not differentiate between intimate and distant pronouns of address, a strategy of ...
Kinship terms in papyrus letters do not always refer to actual relatives and so pose many problems f...
The anthropologist David Schneider suggested two decades ago that we need to consider a hypothesis o...
This paper attempts to analyze the kinship structure and terminologies used in the Boro society. The...
This paper considers the linguistic analysis of kinship terms on the example of English and Uzbek la...
Harders A-C. Kinship terms, used metaphorically. In: Bagnall R, Brodersen K, Champion CB, Erskine A,...
Kinship terminology is a human universal, a kind of cultural knowledge circulated through language. ...
International audienceKinship terminologies, a set of words of a language that reflects genealogical...
Kinship term of address is important because it lets individual know the exact nature of his relatio...
The aim of this paper is to investigate some aspects of fictive kinship in ancient Sumer that we f...
The study of kinship has attracted the attention of many scholars in various linguistic, anthropolog...
In many different languages, kinship terms can be used in order to address or refer to non-kin. Thes...
assumed that the relation of possession (or ownership) is a special case of contextual relations. Th...
This article argues that kinship terminologies are best studied in their full linguistic context; th...
Swahili kinship terms are highly polysemous and occur in many figurative meanings out of which some ...
Since Hebrew does not differentiate between intimate and distant pronouns of address, a strategy of ...
Kinship terms in papyrus letters do not always refer to actual relatives and so pose many problems f...
The anthropologist David Schneider suggested two decades ago that we need to consider a hypothesis o...
This paper attempts to analyze the kinship structure and terminologies used in the Boro society. The...
This paper considers the linguistic analysis of kinship terms on the example of English and Uzbek la...
Harders A-C. Kinship terms, used metaphorically. In: Bagnall R, Brodersen K, Champion CB, Erskine A,...
Kinship terminology is a human universal, a kind of cultural knowledge circulated through language. ...
International audienceKinship terminologies, a set of words of a language that reflects genealogical...
Kinship term of address is important because it lets individual know the exact nature of his relatio...
The aim of this paper is to investigate some aspects of fictive kinship in ancient Sumer that we f...