Transaction verbs : a lexical and semantic analysis of rob and steal

The work presented in this D-extended essay has been carried out as part of the project “Linguistics in the Midnight Sun” at the Department of Language and Culture, Luleå University of Technology. The research area chosen for my paper is that of Possession and Transaction. The overall purpose of thi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thorgren, Sara
Format: Bachelor Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
BNC
rob
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-56412
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spelling ftluleatu:oai:DiVA.org:ltu-56412 2023-05-15T17:09:15+02:00 Transaction verbs : a lexical and semantic analysis of rob and steal Thorgren, Sara 2005 application/pdf http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-56412 eng eng http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-56412 Local d2f181a7-63a5-4664-9e04-737f9e13c3de info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Humanities Theology linguistics cognitive linguistics possession transaction BNC corpus-based illegal transactions rob steal semantic domain frame semantics English Humaniora Teologi Student thesis info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesis text 2005 ftluleatu 2022-10-25T20:51:44Z The work presented in this D-extended essay has been carried out as part of the project “Linguistics in the Midnight Sun” at the Department of Language and Culture, Luleå University of Technology. The research area chosen for my paper is that of Possession and Transaction. The overall purpose of this paper is to give an introductory description of the Possession domain and to examine the dimensions central to Possession. The lexemes chosen for detailed study, rob and steal, were looked up in six well-known dictionaries. To describe how these lexemes are used in actual speech and writing the British National Corpus (BNC) was used for data collection. Contrasting the definitions in the six dictionaries, the main difference between rob and steal is that steal is used when something is taken secretly from a person, whereas rob is used when something is taken violently from a person or place. For rob, the data from the BNC showed that prototypically the one who robs is a man, the robbed person is a bank and the thing robbed is often money or other valuable objects. In prototypical constructions with steal, the one who steals is a male, the stolen thing is something that belongs to another person and there is a wide mix of people whom it has been stolen from. In non-prototypical constructions with rob or steal, at least one of the dimensions central to the lexeme differs from the prototypical configurations of roles. Validerat; 20101217 (root) Bachelor Thesis Luleå Luleå Luleå midnight sun Luleå University of Technology Publications (DiVA)
institution Open Polar
collection Luleå University of Technology Publications (DiVA)
op_collection_id ftluleatu
language English
topic Humanities Theology
linguistics
cognitive linguistics
possession
transaction
BNC
corpus-based
illegal transactions
rob
steal
semantic domain
frame semantics
English
Humaniora
Teologi
spellingShingle Humanities Theology
linguistics
cognitive linguistics
possession
transaction
BNC
corpus-based
illegal transactions
rob
steal
semantic domain
frame semantics
English
Humaniora
Teologi
Thorgren, Sara
Transaction verbs : a lexical and semantic analysis of rob and steal
topic_facet Humanities Theology
linguistics
cognitive linguistics
possession
transaction
BNC
corpus-based
illegal transactions
rob
steal
semantic domain
frame semantics
English
Humaniora
Teologi
description The work presented in this D-extended essay has been carried out as part of the project “Linguistics in the Midnight Sun” at the Department of Language and Culture, Luleå University of Technology. The research area chosen for my paper is that of Possession and Transaction. The overall purpose of this paper is to give an introductory description of the Possession domain and to examine the dimensions central to Possession. The lexemes chosen for detailed study, rob and steal, were looked up in six well-known dictionaries. To describe how these lexemes are used in actual speech and writing the British National Corpus (BNC) was used for data collection. Contrasting the definitions in the six dictionaries, the main difference between rob and steal is that steal is used when something is taken secretly from a person, whereas rob is used when something is taken violently from a person or place. For rob, the data from the BNC showed that prototypically the one who robs is a man, the robbed person is a bank and the thing robbed is often money or other valuable objects. In prototypical constructions with steal, the one who steals is a male, the stolen thing is something that belongs to another person and there is a wide mix of people whom it has been stolen from. In non-prototypical constructions with rob or steal, at least one of the dimensions central to the lexeme differs from the prototypical configurations of roles. Validerat; 20101217 (root)
format Bachelor Thesis
author Thorgren, Sara
author_facet Thorgren, Sara
author_sort Thorgren, Sara
title Transaction verbs : a lexical and semantic analysis of rob and steal
title_short Transaction verbs : a lexical and semantic analysis of rob and steal
title_full Transaction verbs : a lexical and semantic analysis of rob and steal
title_fullStr Transaction verbs : a lexical and semantic analysis of rob and steal
title_full_unstemmed Transaction verbs : a lexical and semantic analysis of rob and steal
title_sort transaction verbs : a lexical and semantic analysis of rob and steal
publishDate 2005
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-56412
genre Luleå
Luleå
Luleå
midnight sun
genre_facet Luleå
Luleå
Luleå
midnight sun
op_relation http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-56412
Local d2f181a7-63a5-4664-9e04-737f9e13c3de
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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