Abstract |
In this article I deal with the problem of how non-literal uses of words are treated in the four British learner's dictionaries. I will focus on the practical problem of how dictionaries define the literal and non-literal senses many words may have, how these are shown to be related under the entries and how - if at all - , therefore, the (non-native) language learner is made aware of the semantic enrichment this relation provides words with frequent, and therefore lexicalised, figurative senses. |
BibTex |
@InProceedings{ELX96_2-004, author = {Geart Van der Meer}, title = {The Treatment of Figurative Meanings in the English Learner's Dictionaries (OALD, LDOCE, CC and CIDE)}, pages = {423-429}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the 7th EURALEX International Congress}, year = {1996}, month = {aug}, date = {13-18}, address = {Göteborg, Sweden}, editor = {Martin Gellerstam, Jerker Järborg, Sven-Göran Malmgren, Kerstin Norén, Lena Rogström, Catalina Röjder Papmehl}, publisher = {Novum Grafiska AB}, isbn = {91-87850-14-1}, } |