Circumlocution

Kayle Sneed
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Circumlocution is the use of more words than necessary to express what could be said precisely and directly. Frequently present during wordfinding difficulties, circumlocutions typically involve production of functional or attributive descriptions in place of content words that cannot be immediately accessed (Benson and Ardila 1996). Examples include saying, “the thing that you use to tell time” instead of “clock” or saying “the thing that is red, white, and blue” instead of “American flag.” Circumlocution is found in neurotypical individuals who occasionally have a word on the “tip of the tongue,” that is, when the semantics of a needed word can be accessed but not the phonological form. It is also frequently present, however, as a symptom of anomia in individuals with fluent aphasias and cognitive-communication disorders (Davis 2013). In these circumstances, circumlocution can be viewed as both a symptom and a compensatory strategy to circumvent a failure of phonological access (Raymer 2015). In bilingual speakers who experience unwanted language switching, it can also serve to facilitate interlanguage access via the common conceptual store to which related words in different languages are linked (Kohnert and Peterson 2012).
婉转曲折的说法
绕弯子是指使用多余的词语来准确而直接地表达本可以表达的内容。经常出现在找词困难时,绕弯子通常涉及产生功能或属性描述,以代替不能立即访问的实词(Benson和Ardila 1996)。例如,说“你用来报时的东西”而不是“时钟”,或者说“红色,白色和蓝色的东西”而不是“美国国旗”。绕口令出现在神经正常的人身上,他们偶尔会有一个词在“舌尖上”,也就是说,当一个需要的词的语义可以得到,但却不能得到它的语音形式。然而,它也经常出现在患有流利性失语和认知沟通障碍的个体中,作为一种失语症的症状(Davis 2013)。在这种情况下,绕行既可以被视为一种症状,也可以被视为一种规避语音获取失败的补偿策略(Raymer 2015)。在经历不必要的语言转换的双语者中,它还可以通过不同语言中相关单词链接的共同概念库来促进语际访问(Kohnert和Peterson 2012)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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