What is it about?

Sensory Adjectives in the Discourse of Food presents a frame-based analysis of sensory descriptors. This book investigates the identification and usefulness of conceptual frames in three respects: First, an analysis of scientific language use shows that a semantic interpretation of the adjectives is dependent on the operationalizations performed in the field of sensory science. Second, a systematic frame semantic analysis of the descriptors sheds light on how meaning is constructed with regard to the lexemes’ wider context, from the utterance to the text type. Third, a comparison with German descriptors tests the applicability of a frame from one language to another (English – German). Framing presents itself as a means to capture the knowledge representation that underlies a particular discourse. With its detailed linguistic analyses and its interdisciplinary treatment of framing across discourse (specialized vs. public discourse), this book is interesting for researchers working within cognitive linguistics, terminology, and sensory science.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

This study emphasizes the role of context in the semantic modulation of food-related lexical items. It addresses the linguistic embedding of sensory adjectives and the event frames which they activate. Further, this work includes a frame-semantic analysis on the level of text type.

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Sensory Adjectives in the Discourse of Food, March 2015, John Benjamins,
DOI: 10.1075/celcr.16.
You can read the full text:

Read

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page