The Language of Pain: Expression or description?
2007 • 264 pages

How is the universal, yet private and subjective, experience of pain talked about by different people in everyday encounters? What does the analysis of pain-related lexico-phraseological choices, grammatical structures, and linguistic metaphors reveal as to how pain is perceived and experienced? Are pain utterances primarily used to express or to describe this experiential domain? This is the first book that investigates such questions from both a functional and a cognitive perspective: it combines two converging usage-based theoretical models in a systematic linguistic inquiry of the construal of pain in everyday language. This work is based on a specialised electronic corpus of Greek naturally-occurring dialogues in a health care context, the underlying assumption being that in the absence of factual evidence intuition about language cannot reliably detect or predict patterns of usage. Comparing Greek with English data, this book significantly contributes to the development of this research field cross-linguistically.


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2 primary books

#9 in Converging Evidence in Language and Communication Research

Converging Evidence in Language and Communication Research is a 2-book series with 2 released primary works first released in 2007 with contributions by Sverker Johansson and Chryssoula Lascaratou.

#5
The Dawn of Language: Axes, Lies, Midwifery and How We Came to Talk
#9
The Language of Pain: Expression or description?

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