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Metaphor and metonymy: Making their connections more slippery

  • John A. Barnden
From the journal Cognitive Linguistics

Abstract

This paper continues the debate about how to distinguish metaphor from metonymy, and whether this can be done. It examines some of the differences that have been alleged to exist, and augments the already existing doubt about them. The main differences addressed are the similarity/contiguity distinction and the issue of whether source-target links are part of the message in metonymy or metaphor. In particular, the paper argues that metaphorical links can always be used metonymically and regarded as contiguities, and conversely that two particular, central types of metonymic contiguity essentially involve similarity. The paper also touches briefly on how metaphor and metonymy interact with domains, frames, etc. and on the role of imaginary identification/categorization of target as/under source items. With the possible exception of this last issue, the paper suggests that no combination of the alleged differences addressed can serve cleanly to categorize source/target associations into metaphorical ones and metonymic ones. It also suggests that it can be more profitable to analyse utterances at the level of the dimensions involved in the differences than at the higher level of metaphor and metonymy as such.


Correspondence address: School of Computer Science, The University of Birmingham, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK. Tel: (+44) (0)121 414-3816; Fax: (+44) (0)121 414-4281. E-mail: 〈

Received: 2008-07-08
Revised: 2009-05-14
Published Online: 2010-03-10
Published in Print: 2010-February

© 2010 Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, Berlin/New York

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