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  1. Introduction.Maïa Ponsonnet, Dorothea Hoffmann & Isabel O’Keeffe - 2020 - Pragmatics and Cognition 27 (1):1-19.
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  • The expression of emotions in Kunbarlang and its neighbours in the multilingual context of western and central Arnhem Land.Isabel O’Keeffe, Ruth Singer & Carolyn Coleman - 2020 - Pragmatics and Cognition 27 (1):83-138.
    This paper explores how emotions are expressed in the endangered Gunwinyguan language Kunbarlang and compares these expressions to those in the neighbouring Gunwinyguan language Bininj Kunwok, and neighbouring languages from other language families, Mawng (Iwaidjan) and Ndjébbana (Maningridan). As well as considering body-based emotion expressions and the tropes (metaphors and metonymies) they instantiate, we consider the range of other (non-body-based) expressions and tropes available in each language. These provide an important point of comparison with the body-part expressions, which are limited (...)
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  • The body and the verb.Frances Kofod & Anna Crane - 2020 - Pragmatics and Cognition 27 (1):209-239.
    This paper explores the figurative expression of emotion in Gija, a non-Pama-Nyungan language from the East Kimberley in Western Australia. As in many Australian languages, Gija displays a large number of metaphors of emotion where miscellaneous body parts – frequently, the belly – contribute to the figurative representation of emotions. In addition, in Gija certain verbal constructions describe the experience of emotion via metaphors of physical impact or damage. This second profile of metaphors is far less widespread, in Australia and (...)
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  • Feeling through your chest.James Bednall - 2020 - Pragmatics and Cognition 27 (1):139-183.
    This article explores the expression and conceptualisation of emotions in Anindilyakwa (Gunwinyguan, north-east Arnhem Land). Fundamental to the emotional lexicon of this language is the widespread use of body parts, which frequently occur in figurative expressions. In this article I examine the primary body parts that occur in emotion descriptions in both literal (physical) and figurative expressions. Particular attention is given toyukudhukudha /-werrik- ‘chest’, the body part conceptualised as the primary site of emotion in Anindilyakwa and the most productive body-related (...)
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