Yearbook of Phraseology 7

Phraseology is deeply rooted in culture and history. The clear implication is that phraseology should take into account the amazing diversity of languages and cultures. Although there is no complete agreement on the ranking of the most spoken languages of the world, Chinese (Mandarin), English, Span...

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Main Author: Colson, Jean-Pierre
Other Authors: UCL - SSH/ILC/PLIN - Pôle de recherche en linguistique, UCL - SSH/ILC - Institut Langage et Communication
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter Mouton 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/179671
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spelling ftunivlouvain:oai:dial.uclouvain.be:boreal:179671 2024-05-19T07:43:08+00:00 Yearbook of Phraseology 7 Colson, Jean-Pierre UCL - SSH/ILC/PLIN - Pôle de recherche en linguistique UCL - SSH/ILC - Institut Langage et Communication 2016 http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/179671 eng eng De Gruyter Mouton boreal:179671 http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/179671 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess info:eu-repo/semantics/book 2016 ftunivlouvain 2024-04-24T01:22:37Z Phraseology is deeply rooted in culture and history. The clear implication is that phraseology should take into account the amazing diversity of languages and cultures. Although there is no complete agreement on the ranking of the most spoken languages of the world, Chinese (Mandarin), English, Spanish and Hindi are often cited as the four most spoken languages, and we should never forget that three of them are Indo-European languages, probably sharing many common phraseological features. If phraseology is to become a theory, or if we wish to make claims about the theoretical underpinnings of phraseological hypotheses, they should not only be tested against English and other European languages, but against very different languages selected from the whole palette of linguistic diversity, from the very agglutinating Inuit languages at one extreme, to the most isolating languages at the other end, with for instance Chinese languages and Vietnamese. Book inuit DIAL@UCLouvain (Université catholique de Louvain)
institution Open Polar
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description Phraseology is deeply rooted in culture and history. The clear implication is that phraseology should take into account the amazing diversity of languages and cultures. Although there is no complete agreement on the ranking of the most spoken languages of the world, Chinese (Mandarin), English, Spanish and Hindi are often cited as the four most spoken languages, and we should never forget that three of them are Indo-European languages, probably sharing many common phraseological features. If phraseology is to become a theory, or if we wish to make claims about the theoretical underpinnings of phraseological hypotheses, they should not only be tested against English and other European languages, but against very different languages selected from the whole palette of linguistic diversity, from the very agglutinating Inuit languages at one extreme, to the most isolating languages at the other end, with for instance Chinese languages and Vietnamese.
author2 UCL - SSH/ILC/PLIN - Pôle de recherche en linguistique
UCL - SSH/ILC - Institut Langage et Communication
format Book
author Colson, Jean-Pierre
spellingShingle Colson, Jean-Pierre
Yearbook of Phraseology 7
author_facet Colson, Jean-Pierre
author_sort Colson, Jean-Pierre
title Yearbook of Phraseology 7
title_short Yearbook of Phraseology 7
title_full Yearbook of Phraseology 7
title_fullStr Yearbook of Phraseology 7
title_full_unstemmed Yearbook of Phraseology 7
title_sort yearbook of phraseology 7
publisher De Gruyter Mouton
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/179671
genre inuit
genre_facet inuit
op_relation boreal:179671
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.1/179671
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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