Experiments in investigating sound symbolism and onomatopoeia

Authors

  • Åsa Abelin Department of Linguistics, University of Göteborg, Sweden Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2006/01/0009/000009

Abstract

The area of sound symbolism and onomatopoeia is an interesting area for studying the production and interpretation of neologisms in language. One question is whether neologisms are created haphazardly or governed by rules. Another question is how this can be studied. Of the approximately 60 000 words in the Swedish lexi-con 1 500 have been judged to be sound symbolic (Abelin 1999). These were ana-lyzed in terms of phonesthemes, (i. e. sound symbolic morpheme strings) which were subjected to various experiments in order to evaluate their psychological reality in production and understanding. In test 1 nonsense words were constructed accord-ing to the results of the preliminary analysis of phonesthemes and then interpreted by subjects. In test 2 subjects were instructed to create new words for some given, sense related, domains. In test 3 subjects were to interpret these neologisms. Test 4 was a lexical decision experiment on onomatopoeic, sound symbolic and arbitrary words. The results of the first three tests show that the phonesthemes are productive, to different degrees, in both production and understanding. The results of the lexical decision test do not show perceptual productivity. The methods are presented and discussed.

 

References

Abelin, Å. 1996. A lexical decision experiment with onomatopoeic, sound symbolic and arbitrary words. TMH-QPSR 2, 151–154, Department of Speech, Music and Hearing, Royal institute of Technology, Stockholm.

Abelin, Å. 1999. Studies in Sound Symbolism. Göteborg, Göteborg monographs in linguistics 17

Arbib, M. A. 2005. From monkey-like action recognition to human language: An evolutionary framework for neurolinguistics. Behavioral and brain sciences 28, 105–167.

Bolinger, D. 1950. Rime, assonance and morpheme analysis. Word 6. 117–136

Rhodes, R. 1994. Aural images. In Hinton, L., Nichols, J., Ohala. J.J. (eds.) 1994, Sound symbolism, 276–292. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

Downloads

Published

01-01-2006

How to Cite

Experiments in investigating sound symbolism and onomatopoeia. (2006). Linguistic Proceedings Series, 1(1), 61-64. https://doi.org/10.36505/ExLing-2006/01/0009/000009