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<XML><RECORDS>
<RECORD>
	<REFERENCE_TYPE>0</REFERENCE_TYPE>
	<AUTHORS>
		<AUTHOR>Diller, Anne-Marie</AUTHOR>
	</AUTHORS>
	<YEAR>1991</YEAR>
	<TITLE>Metaphorical coherence, verbal action, and mental action in French</TITLE>
	<SECONDARY_TITLE>Communications</SECONDARY_TITLE>
	<VOLUME>53</VOLUME>
	<PAGES>209-228</PAGES>
	<KEYWORDS>
		<KEYWORD>metaphor</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>cohesion</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>cognitive semantics</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>conceptual metaphor theory</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>linguistic activity</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>verbal action</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>conduit metaphor</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>container/contents relationship</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>metaphorical coherence</KEYWORD>
		<KEYWORD>French</KEYWORD>
	</KEYWORDS>
	<ABSTRACT>In a rehabilitation of the metaphor by cognitive semantics, the Conduit metaphor is shown to structure the description of verbal and mental actions - target fields - along with metaphors using the source fields of food and vision. Following a cognitive schema of food, metaphorical correspondence is illustrated. The Conduit metaphor mostly relates words to ideas - the word contains the idea. This container/contents relationship is also what relates the properties of food or vision to the target field, manipulating it in a dynamic way. Just as we eat - not only to feed ourselves but for the pleasure of tasting - we speak to savor the words before getting to the ideas.(M. Perdoux in LLBA, Accession Number 9106160)</ABSTRACT>
</RECORD>
</RECORDS></XML>
