Juri Apresjan's book Systematic Lexicography is a very interesting and highly recommendable publication for both a practicing lexicographer and an expert in lexicographic theory. Not the least profit is to be gained by a theoretical semanticist who has never been exposed to Apresjan's stimulating and innovative ideas.

Igor Burkhanov, Lexicos

The strengths of this book are great, and mostly stem from the sheer breadth of the author's approach.

International Journal of Lexicography

Though packed with rich and detailed subject matter, Systematic Lexicography is generally fairly easy to read, and its comprehensive indices of names, subjects, and Russian and English lexemes mean that it is also easy to use. Anyone interested in synonymy, lexicography, semantics or Russian language and culture is sure to find it a valuable resource.

Journal of Linguistics

Se alle

This translation by Kevin Windle provides the English-speaking world with a valuable chance to gain access to the work of Apresjan and the whole school ... It is an indispensable text for both semanticists and lexicographers, as well as for scholars of Russian language and culture.

Journal of Linguistics

Semanticists will find Apresjan's work accessible and interesting, and his approach refreshing.

Journal of Linguistics

This book unites lexicography with theoretical linguistics. The two fields tend to ignore each other: lexicographers produce dictionaries, linguists grammars. As a result grammars and dictionaries are often discordant and sometimes glaringly incompatible. In Systematic Lexicography Juri Apresjan shows the insights linguistics has to offer lexicography, and equally that the achievements and challenges of lexicography provide a rewarding field for linguistic inquiry. The author presents the vocabulary of a language as a complicated system reflecting a specific view of the world. He does so within an integrated theory of language, in which grammatical and lexical meanings, and the conceptualizations underlying them, blend and interact. Each lexeme, he argues, is a point of intersection of various lexicographic types classes of lexemes with shared semantic, syntactic, pragmatic or mental properties, that are sensitive to the same rules, and which should thus be uniformly described in the dictionary. When any lexeme is viewed against the whole set of linguistic rules, new facets emerge, and these reveal, he shows, key characteristics of words that dictionaries do not currently record. Professor Apresjan not only presents an original, unified theory of language, inspired by the Moscow school of semantics. He also works out its consequences and describes the problems he faced in applying it to the description of Russian. The reader will find that travelling with the author through Russian semantic space is both enlightening and entertaining. The books wealth of lexical facts, illuminated by systematic thought, give it unique character and importance: it will be of great interest to theoretical linguists and to all concerned with writing of dictionaries as well as to semanticists and students of Russian.
Les mer
Juri Apresjan unites theoretical linguistics and lexicography to produce a series of dazzling insights into lexical analysis which will be of equal interest to lexicologists, lexicographers, and those concerned with semantic and lexical theory.
Les mer
Introduction ; PART I: PROBLEMS OF SYNONYMY ; Chapter 1: English Synonyms and a Dictionary of Synonyms ; Chapter 2: Types of Information in a Dictionary of Synonyms ; Chapter 3: The Picture of Man as Reflected in Linguistic Data: An attempt at a systematic description ; Chapter 4: The Synonymy of Mental Predicates: schitat' [to consider] and its synonyms ; Chapter 5: The Problem of Factivity: znat' [to know] and its synonyms ; Chapter 6: Khotet' [to want] and its synonyms: Notes about words ; PART II: SYSTEMATIC LEXICOGRAPHY ; Chapter 7: Metaphor in the Semantic Representation of Emotions ; Chapter 8: On the Language of Explications and Semantic Primitives ; Chapter 9: Lexicographic Portraits ; Chapter 10: A Lexicographic Portrait of the Verb vyiti [to emerge, come out] ; References
Les mer
`The book is an attempt to bridge the gap between lexicography and theoretical linguistics by demonstrating that the two fields can successfully contribute to and supplement each other.' Andrzej Zychla, Teachers' Training College of English, Zielona Gora, Poland.
Les mer
Brings to bear the insights of theoretical linguistics on lexicography and shows what lexicography has to offer general linguistics Written in an entertaining and accessible style with numerous examples
Les mer
Professor Ju. Apresjan is Head of the Department of Theoretical Semantics, Russian Language Institute, RAS, and Principal Researcher at the Institute for Information Transmission Problems, RAS. Dr Kevin Windle is Reader in the Department of Classical and Modern European Languages, Australian National University.
Les mer
Brings to bear the insights of theoretical linguistics on lexicography and shows what lexicography has to offer general linguistics Written in an entertaining and accessible style with numerous examples
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780198237808
Publisert
2000
Utgiver
Oxford University Press
Vekt
600 gr
Høyde
242 mm
Bredde
163 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
320

Oversetter

Biografisk notat

Professor Ju. Apresjan is Head of the Department of Theoretical Semantics, Russian Language Institute, RAS, and Principal Researcher at the Institute for Information Transmission Problems, RAS. Dr Kevin Windle is Reader in the Department of Classical and Modern European Languages, Australian National University.