
doi: 10.4000/lexis.688
handle: 20.500.13089/hwdh
The English lexicon is known to disply a whole range of consonant clusters known as ideophones, phonaesthemes or submorphemic elements. This study reviews the arguments in favour of and against the validation of the submorphemic hypothesis and explores the ways in which a submorphemic competence may be formed by individual speakers in the course of everyday verbal practice.
Lexicography, distributed cognition, cognition distribuée, idéophones, remotivation, enaction, [SHS.LANGUE] Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics, submorphemic elements, P327-327.5, submorphemes, motivation, éléments submorphémiques, phonaesthemes, ideophones, embodiment
Lexicography, distributed cognition, cognition distribuée, idéophones, remotivation, enaction, [SHS.LANGUE] Humanities and Social Sciences/Linguistics, submorphemic elements, P327-327.5, submorphemes, motivation, éléments submorphémiques, phonaesthemes, ideophones, embodiment
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