Linguistic Discovery
Dartmouth College

Volume 8 Issue 1 (2010)        DOI:10.1349/PS1.1537-0852.A.378

Note: Linguistic Discovery uses Unicode characters to represent phonetic symbols. Please see Optimizing Display for requirements to accurately reproduce this page.

Polysemous Qualities, Continuity, and Graduation

Author’s reply to ‘Drawing Networks from Recurrent Polysemies’ by Michael Cysouw (2010)

Loïc-Michel Perrin

LLACAN-CNRS, Paris

Cysouw’s (2010) remarks concern three issues: the presentation of the concepts studied, the arbitrariness of the statistical approach, and the visualization of the networks. I will briefly comment upon each of those in turn.

As for the presentation of the cross-linguistic concepts, Cysouw is right: exemplifying by a sentence or above all by a small paragraph would have been very useful. The pilot study, conducted for African languages, was aimed at naming the concepts and assumed that these prototypical qualities were easily understandable; it made sense as a first step. But the approach Cysouw suggests is indeed preferable. In some instances, it would be even better to use a short paragraph rather that a single sentence, as some concepts, e.g. ‘dried fruit’ or ‘dry weather’, may be not cross-culturally attested.

Concerning the issue of statistical assessment of the frequencies attested, I will try to clarify my point of view. Cysouw points out that “arbitrary divisions of a scale [are] not very suitable for interpretative practice”. I fully agree with him: some qualities are very federative and some others are less federative, just as some polysemous patterns recur frequently while others are less recurrent. But it is clear that the algorithm used by Cysouw avoids the problem of quantifying a threshold because his representations give an account of the attestation frequencies (by means of the length of the line), whereas my qualitative notional maps forced me to add a quantitative viewpoint. For instance, I defined the federative notions as qualities involved in a minimum of five polysemous patterns and across a minimum of six languages. The reason behind specifying a threshold was that the particular functioning of these polysemous qualities becomes statistically more significant. Nevertheless, although a statistical approach enables me to distinguish regularities, it does not commit me to final inferences. As I tried to explain in the conclusion, a strictly quantitative conception of typology is not very productive because it goes beyond binary definitions and all-or-nothing oppositions.

We need to maintain a constructivist approach of language, which implies “a rejection of substantive universals, a definition of dynamic invariant features […], and a dynamic construction of salient patterns” (Fuchs 1999:17-18). And, once again, I will refer to Lazard (1992:432) who states that “semantic substance is continuous and unstable. Differences within it are gradual.” So, federative notions as well as recurring phenomena must be considered as continuous and gradual facts.

As for the networks drawn by Cysouw, there is no doubt that his model significantly improves the analysis of the polysemous patterns (whether recurring or not) because, as I just mentioned, his representations capture the principles of continuity/graduation better than mere reliance on attestation frequencies. As a consequence, we can clearly observe that Cysouw’s “clusters” are organized around conceptual cores of federative notions, e.g. strong/hard/solid or fat/big/thick, etc. And I think that, with such a method of representation, the expression “semantic field” as employed by Lazard (1992) really becomes meaningful.

References

Cysouw, Michael. 2010. Drawing networks from recurrent polysemies. Comment on Perrin 2010. Linguistic Discovery, this issue. doi:10.1349/ps1.1537-0852.a.377

Fuchs, Catherine. 1999. Diversity in linguistic representations: A challenge for cognitive science. Language diversity and cognitive representations, ed. by Catherine Fuchs and Stéphane Robert, 3-19. Amsterdam, Benjamins.

Lazard, Gilbert. 1992. Y a-t-il des catégories interlangagières? Texte, Sätze, Wörter und Moneme, ed. by S. Anschütz, 427-434. Heidelberg: Heidelberger Orientverlag.

Perrin, Loïc-Michel. 2010. Polysemous qualities and universal networks. Linguistic Discovery, this issue. doi:10.1349/ps1.1537-0852.a.353

 

 

 

 

 

Author’s contact information:

Loïc-Michel Perrin

Langage, Langues et Cultures d'Afrique Noire (LLACAN, CNRS - UMR 8135)


7, rue Guy Môquet


94 801 Villejuif

France

perrin@vjf.cnrs.fr

[ Home | Current Issue | Browse the Archive | Search the Site | Submission Information | Register for Updates | About | Editorial Board | Site Map | Help ]

Published by the Dartmouth College Library.
Copyright © 2002 Trustees of Dartmouth College.
For comments or feedback E-mail the site editor.
ISSN 1537-0852

Linguistic Discovery HomeDartmouth College Home