Salience factors determining natural metonymic clippings illustrated through the medical lexicon

After briefly reviewing the cognitive-linguistic notions of metonymy and constructional form adhered to by the author (A) and discussing the general grammatical notion of clipping and A’s notion of “natural metonymic clipping”, the paper presents the list of salience factors whose combination determ...

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Main Author: Antonio Barcelona Sánchez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Asociación Europea de Lenguas para Fines Específicos 2017-10-01
Series:Ibérica
Subjects:
Online Access:http://aelfe.org/documents/34_01_IBERICA.pdf
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author Antonio Barcelona Sánchez
author_facet Antonio Barcelona Sánchez
author_sort Antonio Barcelona Sánchez
collection DOAJ
description After briefly reviewing the cognitive-linguistic notions of metonymy and constructional form adhered to by the author (A) and discussing the general grammatical notion of clipping and A’s notion of “natural metonymic clipping”, the paper presents the list of salience factors whose combination determines the overall relative salience of a word segment. Two well-known inventories of American English medical abbreviations are then analyzed with the goal of identifying natural metonymic clippings in this register, noting their scarcity. A sample of three word segments that have become conventional medical clippings (tab for tablet, Lytes for Electrolytes, and Chem panel for Chemistry panel) and a segment of one of the original full forms that has not become a conventional clipping (-blet in tablet) is then selected with the purpose of testing A’s salience factor grid on it. This grid is carefully described, including its numerical values, and systematically applied to the above-mentioned sample. The application of the grid to the sample seems to explain to a large extent the selection of the segments conventionalized as clippings in the sample, especially if compared to other “rival” segments. These results seem to confirm A’s earlier work arguing for the validity of the salience factor grid as a tool to account for the overall relative salience of a word segment and its (non) conventionalization as a natural metonymic clipping.
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spelling doaj.art-f244e7c8ebac41538f25b0a25935794b2022-12-22T02:30:48ZengAsociación Europea de Lenguas para Fines EspecíficosIbérica1139-72412340-27842017-10-01341743Salience factors determining natural metonymic clippings illustrated through the medical lexiconAntonio Barcelona Sánchez 0University of Cordoba, SpainAfter briefly reviewing the cognitive-linguistic notions of metonymy and constructional form adhered to by the author (A) and discussing the general grammatical notion of clipping and A’s notion of “natural metonymic clipping”, the paper presents the list of salience factors whose combination determines the overall relative salience of a word segment. Two well-known inventories of American English medical abbreviations are then analyzed with the goal of identifying natural metonymic clippings in this register, noting their scarcity. A sample of three word segments that have become conventional medical clippings (tab for tablet, Lytes for Electrolytes, and Chem panel for Chemistry panel) and a segment of one of the original full forms that has not become a conventional clipping (-blet in tablet) is then selected with the purpose of testing A’s salience factor grid on it. This grid is carefully described, including its numerical values, and systematically applied to the above-mentioned sample. The application of the grid to the sample seems to explain to a large extent the selection of the segments conventionalized as clippings in the sample, especially if compared to other “rival” segments. These results seem to confirm A’s earlier work arguing for the validity of the salience factor grid as a tool to account for the overall relative salience of a word segment and its (non) conventionalization as a natural metonymic clipping.http://aelfe.org/documents/34_01_IBERICA.pdflexical morphologymetonymylinguistic motivationmedical discourseclipping
spellingShingle Antonio Barcelona Sánchez
Salience factors determining natural metonymic clippings illustrated through the medical lexicon
Ibérica
lexical morphology
metonymy
linguistic motivation
medical discourse
clipping
title Salience factors determining natural metonymic clippings illustrated through the medical lexicon
title_full Salience factors determining natural metonymic clippings illustrated through the medical lexicon
title_fullStr Salience factors determining natural metonymic clippings illustrated through the medical lexicon
title_full_unstemmed Salience factors determining natural metonymic clippings illustrated through the medical lexicon
title_short Salience factors determining natural metonymic clippings illustrated through the medical lexicon
title_sort salience factors determining natural metonymic clippings illustrated through the medical lexicon
topic lexical morphology
metonymy
linguistic motivation
medical discourse
clipping
url http://aelfe.org/documents/34_01_IBERICA.pdf
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