All Stories

  1. Everything-cleft constructions in spoken British English
  2. A two-step procedure to identify lexical elements of stance constructions in discourse from political blogs
  3. Representing Wine – Sensory Perceptions, Communication and Cultures
  4. Emotive and sensory simulation through comparative construal
  5. Annotating Speaker Stance in Discourse: The Brexit Blog Corpus
  6. Denial outperforms apology in repairing organizational trust despite strong evidence of guilt
  7. Active Learning and Visual Analytics for Stance Classification with ALVA
  8. The State of the Art in Sentiment Visualization
  9. Verbs in speech framing expressions: Comparing English and Spanish
  10. Compromiser - a notional paradigm
  11. Detection of Stance and Sentiment Modifiers in Political Blogs
  12. Stance Classification in Texts from Blogs on the 2016 British Referendum
  13. Evaluative polarity words in risky choice framing
  14. Dialogic engagement in spoken discourse
  15. Chapter 9. We drink with our eyes first
  16. Unshared task: (Dis)agreement in online debates
  17. The in-group and out-groups of the British National Party and the UK Independence Party
  18. Sensory Perceptions in Language and Cognition
  19. Making sense of sensory perceptions across languages and cultures
  20. Visual analysis of online social media to open up the investigation of stance phenomena
  21. Conceptual Spaces at Work in Sensory Cognition: Domains, Dimensions and Distances
  22. Semantic profiles of antonymic adjectives in discourse
  23. Detecting speculations, contrasts and conditionals in consumer reviews
  24. Expanding a dictionary of marker words for uncertainty and negation using distributional semantics
  25. A model of trust-repair discourse
  26. Visual analysis of stance markers in online social media
  27. Antonym canonicity: Temporal and contextual manipulations
  28. The Construal of Spatial Meaning
  29. Windows In: Empirical Evidence of Construals of Spatial Meaning
  30. Negation and Approximation of Antonymic Meanings as Configuration Construals in SPACE
  31. Describing Sensory Experience: The Genre of Wine Reviews
  32. Lexical Semantics
  33. Cognitive Grammar
  34. From Culture to Text to Interactive Visualization ofWine Reviews
  35. Steven Jones, M. Lynne Murphy, Carita Paradis and Caroline Willners. Antonyms in English. Construals, Constructions and Canonicity.
  36. Antonyms in English
  37. Antonymy
  38. Visualization of Sensory Perception Descriptions
  39. Metonymization
  40. Swedish opposites
  41. Good and bad opposites
  42. Introduction: Lexical contrast in discourse
  43. Discourse functions of antonymy: A cross-linguistic investigation of Swedish and English
  44. Evidentiality in language and cognition
  45. Editorial
  46. “This beauty should drink well for 10–12 years”: a note on recommendations as semantic middles
  47. Configurations, construals and change: expressions of DEGREE
  48. Antonyms in dictionary entries: Methodological aspects
  49. Googling for ‘opposites’: a web-based study of antonym canonicity
  50. Antonymy and negation—The boundedness hypothesis
  51. Ontologies and Construals in Lexical Semantics
  52. Where Does Metonymy Stop? Senses, Facets, and Active Zones
  53. What does it mean to know a language?
  54. Carita Paradis, Degree modifiers of adjectives in spoken British English (Lund Studies in English 92). Lund: Lund University Press. 1997. Pp. 192. £14.95, ISBN 91 7966 427 X
  55. Adjectives and boundedness
  56. Degree Modifiers of Adjectives in Spoken British English
  57. Degree modifiers of adjectives in spoken British English By Carita Paradis
  58. Review of Paradis (1997): Degree modifiers of adjectives in spoken British English
  59. Carita Paradis. Degree Modifiers of Adjectives in Spoken British English
  60. 12. Meanings of words: Theory and application
  61. Between epistemic modality and degree: The case of really
  62. Reinforcing adjectives: A cognitive semantic perspective on grammaticalisation
  63. Preface
  64. References
  65. Perceptual landscapes from the perspective of cultures and genres
  66. Antonymy and antonyms
  67. Antonyms in context
  68. Antonyms and canonicity
  69. Antonyms in acquisition
  70. Antonyms and negation
  71. Antonyms as constructions
  72. The cognitive construal account
  73. Conclusions – looking backward, looking forward
  74. As lexical as it gets: The role of co-occurrence of antonyms in a visual lexical decision experiment
  75. 5. Corpus methods for the investigation of antonyms across languages