SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.6 issue2THE JAPANESE LOANWORDS FOR ARTEDITORIAL HISTORY AND SURVIVAL IN THE DIGITAL ERA OF A SPANISH SCIENTIFIC TREATISE. NOTES ON ESPECIFICO NUEVAMENTE DESCUBIERTO EN EL REYNO DE GOATEMALA, PARA LA CURACION RADICAL DEL HORRIBLE MAL DEL CANCRO, Y OTROS MAS FRECUENTES (1782) BY JOSÉ FLORES AND ITS ITALIAN EDITIONS (1784, 1785) author indexsubject indexsearch form
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Indicators

Related links

  • Have no similar articlesSimilars in SciELO

Share


Anuario de letras. Lingüística y filología

On-line version ISSN 2448-8224Print version ISSN 2448-6418

Abstract

JIMENEZ MARTINEZ, María Isabel  and  MELIS, Chantal. THE EVOLUTION OF CAUSATIVE EMOTION COLLOCATIONS FROM LATIN TO SPANISH. Anu. let. lingüíst. filol. [online]. 2018, vol.6, n.2, pp.75-109.  Epub Dec 06, 2021. ISSN 2448-8224.  https://doi.org/10.19130/iifl.adel.6.2.2018.1519.

In contemporary Spanish collocations involving a notion of causation and a noun referring to an emotion are regularly formed with dar ‘to give’, as in dar alegría ‘to make happy’ or dar pena ‘to cause to feel shame’. At earlier stages of the language, however, with models rooted in Latin, these constructions licensed other verbs, in particular, hacer ‘to do, to create’ and poner ‘to put’. In the present paper, we trace the evolution of some causative emotion collocations with the three mentioned verbs from the 13th to the 20th century, paying special attention to the changes that took place in the transition between Latin and the Romance language. From this perspective, the phenomenon of major interest lies in the innovative use of poner meaning ‘to cause an emotion’, which, under our proposal, can be attributed to the persistence in Spanish of a collocational pattern firmly entrenched in Latin that contributed to the semantic shift and motivated the competition with dar in the constructions under study for many centuries.

Keywords : verb-noun collocations; causativity; emotion nouns; Spanish; Latin.

        · abstract in Spanish     · text in Spanish