(5) She plunged into the swimming-pool.
(6) The falcon plunged towards its prey.
Sink, as the general term, denotes movement in a wider variety of contexts:
(7) Helen sank into water/mud/an armchair.
However, we postulate that the verbs dart, dive and sink prototypically describe movement in a given medium: dart is prototypically associated with air, and dive and sink with water. Our claim is supported by the fact that the medium parameter need not be syntactically present:
(8) She dived from the bridge and rescued the drowning child.
(9) The aircraft-carrier, hit by a torpedo, sank at once.
Further, as we will show below, sink has a metaphorical projection onto FEELING, which codifies the metaphor Emotion = Liquid (Goatly 1997):
(10) When he crashed, his heart sank at the thought that he might die.
Finally, glide refers to quiet/smooth movement in a wide range of contexts (water, air, land):
(11) The cruiser glided across the sea.
(12) An owl glided over the fields.
(13) The snake glided towards its prey.
As mentioned above, the domain of MOVEMENT is marked by the semantic parameter of direction, which can determine verb membership. The lexemes jump, vault, leap, hop and spring are subsumed under various subdomains depending on whether they denote forward or upward/downward movement over an obstacle:
VERB
|
DIRECTION
|
DIMENSION
|
MEANING
|
|
Jump
Vault
Leap
Hop
Spring
|
Forwards
|
To move forwards quickly/suddenly
|
To move forwards quickly using your legs
To jump onto sth with your hands on it
To jump energetically a long distance
To jump on one foot (sb)/with both feet (birds/small animals)
To jump suddenly
|
|
Jump
Vault
Leap
|
Over sth
|
To move across/over/
through
|
To move over sth quickly using your legs
To jump over sth with your hands on it
To jump over sth energetically
|
|
Jump
Spring
Hop
|
Up/Down
|
To move up/down using one's feet
|
To move up/down quickly using one's feet
To jump suddenly
To jump on one leg
|
|
|
(14) Robert jumped one metre/over the fence/out of the shadow.
(15) Carol sprang at him/to her feet.
Finally, as shown below, verb membership can also be determined by the parameter describing the nature of the subject or object.
ARGUMENT
|
SEMANTIC SCOPE
|
VERB
|
DIMENSION
|
MEANING
|
|
|
Human/
Object
|
shake
tremble
quiver
|
To move from side to side/back and forth/up and down repeatedly
|
To move quickly from side to side/ up and down
To shake un-controllably/ slightly
To shake slightly
|
|
|
Part of the body
|
shake
tremble
quiver
|
To move one's body
|
To move one's body quickly from side to side/up and down
To shake un-controllably/slightly
To shake slightly
|
|
Subject
|
Human
Boat
|
sail
|
To move towards a place
To move over liquid
|
To travel to a place by ship
To move (boat) over the sea
|
|
|
Object
|
rise
fall
|
To move upwards
To move downwards
|
To move upwards through air
To move down from a high position/the sky/a tree
|
|
|
Vehicle/
aircraft
|
plunge
plummet
|
To move in/downwards below the surface of a liquid
To move downwards through air
|
To move (vehicle) below the surface of water
To move down through air very quickly
|
|
|
Human
|
rise
fall
plunge
plummet
|
To move one's body by raising it
To move to the ground
|
To stand up (fml)
To move to the ground from force of weight / loss of balance
To fall suddenly a long way from a high position
To fall very quickly from a high position
|
|
Object
|
Object
|
swing
lift
raise
bend
|
To move from side to side/back and forth/up and down repeatedly
To cause stb/sth to move up
To move in a different direction
|
To move regularly from side to side/back and forth
To cause sb/sth to move up
To lift sth
To turn in a curve/angle
|
|
|
Part of the body
|
swing
lift
raise
bend
|
To move a part of one's body
|
To move regularly from side to side/back and forth
To move a part of one's body upwards (esp. head/arm/leg/foot)
To move a part of one's body upwards
To move a part of one's body downwards
|
|
|
The verbs shake, tremble and quiver may be found with a subject argument semantically characterized as human or as concrete. But they can also take an object denoting a part of the body via the metaphor Body part = Human (Goatly 1997):
(16) Mark was so nervous that his knees were shaking.
Sail typically occurs with a subject semantically characterized as boat. Its use with a human agent results from a metonymical process (content for receptacle):
(17) They sailed the Mediterranean.
Rise designates upward movement of both human and concrete entities, but the prototypical argument is human, as shown in the restricted use of rise with human subjects when it describes body movement:
(18) She rose to greet me.
Fall, plunge and plummet, which denote downward movement, may also occur with human and concrete entities:
(19) He fell off the horse.
(20) The vase fell from her hand.
Lastly, the verbs swing, lift, raise and bend take an object semantically marked as object or part of the body:
(21) She lifted her head when I came in.
(22) The suitcase is too heavy for him to lift.
2.3. Metaphorical extension of the lexemes
The verbs creep and escape fall within various subdomains because of their metaphorical extension.
VERB
|
SUBDOMAIN
|
MEANING
|
|
Creep
|
To move in a particular way
|
To move quietly and slowly in order to get to a place without being noticed
|
|
|
To move slowly
|
To move (light/shadow/mist) very slowly, so that you hardly notice it (lit.)
|
|
Escape
|
To move off/away from a place/thing/person
|
To leave a place after doing sth illegal
|
|
|
To move out of a place
|
To move (gas/liquid) out of an object/a container
|
|
|
Creep typically describes a person's slow movement towards a place and thus falls primarily within the subdomain To move in a particular way, which refers to movement on land. Yet it also belongs to the subdomain To move slowly through a process of personification (Object/Substance=Human), whereby a concrete entity semantically marked as “light/ shadow/ mist” is seen as a human entity. The meaning components speed --“slowly”-- and secrecy --“without/hardly being noticed”-- are basic to the definition of both verbs.
On the other hand, escape falls in the subdomains To move off/away from a place/ thing/ person and To move out of a place. This double membership obtains from the metaphorization of liquid as a human entity:
(23) Gas is escaping from this hole.
3. Interfield membership of MOVEMENT verbs
We have so far analysed the intrafield membership of a set of MOVEMENT verbs, i.e. their grouping under several subdomains within the semantic domain of MOVEMENT. We will now focus on the verbs' interfield membership, i.e. their projection onto other semantic fields.
The relations of a semantic domain with others codify metaphorical processes, thus showing that lexical structure is governed by conceptual structure., or, in Sweetser's words (1990:25), “much of meaning is grounded in speakers' understanding of the world”. Indeed, each language is equivalent to a particular conceptual system by means of which we interpret our environment, and this conceptual organization is reflected in the lexicon. This means that metaphor is not only a cognitive but also a linguistic phenomenon. Metaphorical processes are encoded in the lexicon and must thus be integrated in a lexical model.
Therefore, the codification of metaphorical processes in the lexicon not only tells us a great deal about how we understand and construct reality but also reflects the internal organization of the lexicon.
Below we sketch the metaphors codified in the domain of MOVEMENT, which establish connections with the semantic fields of COGNITION, SPEECH, CHANGE, FEELING and ACTION.
MET. PROCESS
|
TYPE METAPHOR
|
METAPHOR
|
LEX. EXPRESSION
|
TARGET DOMAIN
|
|
Reification
|
Concretization
|
Idea = Object
|
swing, revolve, stuff
cram, shove
|
COGNITION
|
|
|
|
Words = Object
|
raise, drop, pass
|
SPEECH
|
|
|
|
Ideas/Words = Cloth
|
spin, weave
|
SPEECH
|
|
|
Place/Space
|
Activity = Place
|
rush, leave, quit abandon
|
ACTION
|
|
|
Orientational
|
Health = Up
|
fall, sink
|
CHANGE
|
|
|
|
Pitch = Up
|
rise, raise, sink, lower drop
|
CHANGE
|
|
|
|
More = Up
|
jump, rise, raise, fall sink, plunge, plummet come down, lower drop, sink
|
CHANGE
|
|
|
|
Importance/Status = Up
|
rise, climb, come down
|
CHANGE
|
|
|
|
Happy = Up
|
fall, sink, lift
|
FEELING
|
|
|
|
Activity/Process = Movement forward
|
push, prod
|
ACTION
|
|
Personification
|
|
Emotion = Sense expression
|
shake, tremble, shiver shudder, quiver
|
FEELING
|
|
|
|
Idea = Human
|
slip, escape
|
COGNITION
|
|
|
|
Body part = Human
|
fall, sink
|
FEELING
|
|
|
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