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Haya metaphors for speech

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2008

Peter Seitel
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Princeton University

Abstract

Metaphorical statements about speech are shown to embody implicitly certain indigenously named semantic dimensions. Hayas use these dimensions to conceive of and evaluate their own speech behavior. The dimensions are specified first through indigenous literal statements about speech, then through one-word metaphors applied to speech, and finally through ten proverbs about speech interactions that link metaphorically a named category of speech act with the alimentary act of expelling a flatus. (Metaphor, humor, componential analysis, folklore, proverbs, speech acts, ethnography of communication.)

Type
Articles: Sources of structure in ethnographic semantics
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1974

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References

REFERENCE

Fernandez, J. W. (1972). Persuasions and performances: of the beast in every body … and the metaphors of every man. Daedalus, Winter edition.Google Scholar