ABSTRACT

In this ambitious and wide-ranging textbook Andrew Goatly explores the language of metaphor. Combining insights from relevance theory and functional linguistics, he provides a powerful model for understanding how metaphors work in real communicative situations, how we use them to communicate meaning as well as how we process them. This book:
* examines the distinction between literal and metaphorical language
* surveys the means by which metaphors are realised in texts
* locates the interpretation of metaphor in its social context
* contains tasks and suggestions for further work
* uses examples from a wide variety of genres, including conversation, popular science, advertising, news reports, novels and poetry.

chapter | 12 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 1 | 26 pages

METAPHORICAL AND LITERAL LANGUAGE

chapter 2 | 39 pages

METAPHOR AND THE DICTIONARY: ROOT ANALOGIES

chapter 3 | 26 pages

METAPHOR AND THE DICTIONARY

chapter 4 | 31 pages

HOW DIFFERENT KINDS OF METAPHORS WORK

chapter 5 | 33 pages

RELEVANCE THEORY AND THE FUNCTIONS OF METAPHOR

chapter 6 | 32 pages

THE SIGNALLING OF METAPHOR

chapter 7 | 34 pages

THE SPECIFICATION OF TOPICS

chapter 8 | 28 pages

THE SPECIFICATION OF GROUNDS

chapter 9 | 29 pages

THE INTERPLAY OF METAPHORS

chapter 10 | 46 pages

METAPHOR IN ITS SOCIAL CONTEXT