Berlin & Kay's basic colour term framework claims that there is an ordering in the diachronic development of languages' colour systems. One generalisation is that primary colours, WHITE, BLACK, RED, YELLOW, GREEN, BLUE, are lexicalised before derived colours, which are perceptual blends, e.g. ORANGE is the blend of YELLOW and RED. The colour systems of Lower Sorbian and Upper Sorbian offer an important typological contribution. It is already known that primary colour space can contract upon the emergence of a basic derived term; our findings indicate that derived categories also shift as colour systems develop. Tsakhur offers corroborating evidence
International audienceLanguages differ markedly in the number of colour terms in their lexicons. The...
Social and cultural factors shape the linguistic perception of colour. At the same time, colour term...
Languages vary in their number of color terms. A widely accepted theory proposes that languages evol...
Berlin & Kay's basic colour term framework claims that there is an ordering in the diachronic develo...
One of the milestones in typological studies is Berlin & Kay's (1969) account of basic colour terms,...
Linguistic categorisation of colours: relative basicness of French colour terms Categorisation is o...
In order to assess Berlin and Kay's (1969) theory of linguistic universals and to test their proposa...
This article traces the birth of two different pink categories in western Europe and the lexicalizat...
This thesis investigates the relationship between colour perception and colour language. Three quest...
Recent research has questioned the universal basis of color categorization and has instead emphasize...
The relationship between language and colour categorisation is explored testing the predictions of t...
Color categorization is a cognitive mechanism that assigns a linguistic label to a color stimulus. I...
We set out to establish the 'basic' colour term inventory of Catalan, and to see if the inventory wa...
Through their thorough investigation of the Hadza, a nonindustrialized language community in Tanzani...
According to Berlin & Kay’s theory, it is possible for a language to include more than 11 basic colo...
International audienceLanguages differ markedly in the number of colour terms in their lexicons. The...
Social and cultural factors shape the linguistic perception of colour. At the same time, colour term...
Languages vary in their number of color terms. A widely accepted theory proposes that languages evol...
Berlin & Kay's basic colour term framework claims that there is an ordering in the diachronic develo...
One of the milestones in typological studies is Berlin & Kay's (1969) account of basic colour terms,...
Linguistic categorisation of colours: relative basicness of French colour terms Categorisation is o...
In order to assess Berlin and Kay's (1969) theory of linguistic universals and to test their proposa...
This article traces the birth of two different pink categories in western Europe and the lexicalizat...
This thesis investigates the relationship between colour perception and colour language. Three quest...
Recent research has questioned the universal basis of color categorization and has instead emphasize...
The relationship between language and colour categorisation is explored testing the predictions of t...
Color categorization is a cognitive mechanism that assigns a linguistic label to a color stimulus. I...
We set out to establish the 'basic' colour term inventory of Catalan, and to see if the inventory wa...
Through their thorough investigation of the Hadza, a nonindustrialized language community in Tanzani...
According to Berlin & Kay’s theory, it is possible for a language to include more than 11 basic colo...
International audienceLanguages differ markedly in the number of colour terms in their lexicons. The...
Social and cultural factors shape the linguistic perception of colour. At the same time, colour term...
Languages vary in their number of color terms. A widely accepted theory proposes that languages evol...