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Noun Composition in Mapudungun: Conceptual Patterns in the Naming of Places
Author(s) -
Belén Villena Araya,
Sabela Fernández-Silva
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ikala, revista de lenguaje y cultura
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.259
H-Index - 5
eISSN - 2145-566X
pISSN - 0123-3432
DOI - 10.17533/udea.ikala.v26n2a04
Subject(s) - neologism , referent , conceptualization , noun , natural (archaeology) , animism , linguistics , vocabulary , cognition , class (philosophy) , composition (language) , geography , sociology , computer science , psychology , artificial intelligence , archaeology , philosophy , neuroscience , anthropology
This study intended to identify which referent features are more frequently selected in the naming of the concept class of places and, in turn, determine which are the preferred conceptualizations in Mapudungun. This language is mainly spoken by Mapuche people in central and southern areas of Chile and in the Central-West area of Argentina. To identify the features of this conceptualization, a cognitive-semantic analysis of the conceptual patterns of 112 nominal compounds pertaining to the concept subclasses of natural places (intervened and non-intervened) and non-natural places (installations and territorial divisions) was conducted. Results show that, for non-intervened natural places, an entity present in the natural place is preferably selected in the name, whereas for intervened places, an agricultural activity or an animal associated to the place is preferably chosen. Concerning installations, the preferred conceptual pattern specifies, by means of the constituent ruka ‘house’, the man-made nature of the place. Regarding territorial divisions, the preferred naming pattern combines two place concepts. This information is crucial for the creation of neologisms in Mapudungun because it guarantees that newly formed lexical units are coherent with the Mapuche worldview and do not import foreign models.

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