한ㆍ일신체관용어의개념화 양상 - 존재론적 은유(Ontological metaphors)를 중심으로 -
- Authors
- 권익호; 성민희
- Issue Date
- 2009
- Publisher
- 대한일어일문학회
- Keywords
- ontological metaphors; bodily Idioms; metaphor; metonymy; 존재론적 은유; 신체관용어; 은유; 환유
- Citation
- 일어일문학, no.41, pp 19 - 36
- Pages
- 18
- Journal Title
- 일어일문학
- Number
- 41
- Start Page
- 19
- End Page
- 36
- URI
- https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/32660
- DOI
- 10.18631/jalali.2009..41.002
- ISSN
- 1226-4660
- Abstract
- In this study, I have accepted conceptual metaphor theory of Lakoff & Johnson(1980) and
defined conceptual metaphor in bodily idioms used conventionally in Korean and Japanese
everyday life. I have examined the process of language expressing human thoughts through
metaphor and metonymy and investigated the characteristics of the conceptualization
process of bodily idioms.
As research methods of examples, I have researched idioms containing body parts and
classified bodily idioms whose origin domain has something in common by considering the
meaning of inflected words. I have established what is found as more than a certain
number as the origin domain. Based on this, ontological metaphor in Korean and Japanese
bodily idioms is classified as the total 7 origin domains, that is, bowl, food, string, weather,
temperature, object, hole. I have continued investigating through these classifications. In
addition, on the basis of classified conceptual metaphor, I have also explored what cognitive
process the Korean and the Japanese have expressed abstract concepts and physical
experiences as bodily idioms through.
Now that this study deals with only Korean and Japanese bodily idioms, it cannot apply
to all of Korean and Japanese metaphoric expressions including everyday metaphor.
However, this study has its significance on examining the conceptualization of Korean and
Japanese bodily idioms in terms of cognitive-linguistic view. Therefore, I don't think it is
difficult to explore the aspect of how the Korean and the Japanese have conceptualized our
body between idioms and cognition.
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