Results 1 to 10 of about 444 (136)
Psychological Model of Phonosemantics. [PDF]
AbstractPhonosemantics is a school of thought which believes that each sound or phoneme carries a specific psychological impression allotted by nature. And these psychological impressions were used to evolve different languages. Work has been done on this ground, but there is still scope for further research into the subject.
Agrawal PK.
europepmc +5 more sources
On the issue of interdisciplinary aspects of phonosemantic research
Introduction. This article is dedicated to the review of foundation and development of phonosemantics, which is known to be quite a young field of linguistics.
E. P. Korchagina
doaj +3 more sources
Size and shape ideophones in Nembe a phonosemantic analysis.pdf
In Nembe, ideophones, as in symbolic words in all languages in general, there is direct connection between sounds and the meanings they convey. For Nembe ideophones describing the fields of size and shape.
Omen N. Maduka
doaj +5 more sources
Fantasy Word Sounding in Marketing Phonosemantics
Abstract The paper represents the results of a linguistic experiment aimed at establishing if the sounding of different fantasy brand names can cause the same associations in collective consciousness. The experiment drew upon crowdsourcing. The data received can be useful for marketing phonosemantics in relation to the methods used for the creation of ...
exaly +2 more sources
ABOUT PHONOSEMANTICS OF THE TEXT
Xuraman Hacizade
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Stanislav Voronin’s Universal Classification of Onomatopoeic Words: a Critical Approach (Part 2)
Introduction. The present paper is a critical study of the classification methodology introduced by S. V. Voronin in 1969. The phonosemantic classification of onomatopoeic (sound imitative) words has been tested on the material of typologically different
M. A. Flaksman
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This study examines the neurocognitive underpinnings of orthographic, phonological, and semantic processing and functional connectivity of the identified brain regions using a within‐subject design. The results indicated that the three processes were supported by a large common network but had different connectivity patterns.
Chun Yin Liu +4 more
wiley +1 more source
A Cross‐Modal and Cross‐lingual Study of Iconicity in Language: Insights From Deep Learning
Abstract The present paper addresses the study of non‐arbitrariness in language within a deep learning framework. We present a set of experiments aimed at assessing the pervasiveness of different forms of non‐arbitrary phonological patterns across a set of typologically distant languages.
Andrea Gregor de Varda +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Onomastics in Pushkin Studies: The Names Larin, Larina, Lariny in Eugene Onegin [PDF]
The paper discusses the literary proper names Larin, Larina, Lariny (the Larins) from Pushkin’s novel Eugene Onegin, aiming to identify the most important factors behind the choice of this surname.
Anatoly A. Fomin
doaj +1 more source
On Phonosemantics in Russia. Article #3. Russian Phonosemantic Science Schools and Centr
exaly +2 more sources

