2013
DOI: 10.1080/07268602.2013.857571
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Semantic Extension in Kaytetye Flora and Fauna Terms

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Cited by 14 publications
(23 citation statements)
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“…Three decades later, the concept of Biocultural Diversity was born, coinciding with a renewed academic interest in the synergy between indigenous languages, traditional knowledge (TK), and biological diversity. This concept paved the way for a new wave of research that focused significantly on the use of vernacular/folk names, analyzing them both from a linguistic and TK perspective (Evans 1997;Kakudidi 2004;Turpin 2013;Unasho 2013;Zariquiey 2014). Researchers have demonstrated that folk names are not mere lexemes, but condensed forms of knowledge with multiple applications.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three decades later, the concept of Biocultural Diversity was born, coinciding with a renewed academic interest in the synergy between indigenous languages, traditional knowledge (TK), and biological diversity. This concept paved the way for a new wave of research that focused significantly on the use of vernacular/folk names, analyzing them both from a linguistic and TK perspective (Evans 1997;Kakudidi 2004;Turpin 2013;Unasho 2013;Zariquiey 2014). Researchers have demonstrated that folk names are not mere lexemes, but condensed forms of knowledge with multiple applications.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Saramaccan plant names contain all sorts of cultural information and are often fusions of words belonging to various domains. This practice is present among traditional cultures around the world (e.g., Turpin 2013;Fundiko et al 2015). Because the Saramaccan have an oral culture, plant names help them to classify their natural surroundings, safeguard their cultural knowledge, and remember certain aspects related to the plant's morphology, habitat, or use.…”
Section: Ethnobotanical Source Domainsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Plants play a vital role in traditional societies. Studying plant names, their structure, and their meaning is useful for documentation and plant classification purposes, but also for gaining a deeper understanding of the etymology of plant names (Berlin 1973(Berlin , 1992 and the source domains or categories they belong to, such as animals, people, morphology, or habitat (Leyew 2011;Turpin 2013). Plant names can also provide information on where people historically came from and with whom they had contact or exchanged knowledge (Van Andel et al 2014;Alcantara-Rodríguez 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, what is often overlooked is their capability to encode knowledge on ecological, and/ or cultural relationship between multiple denotata. Folk names that show such properties are usually metaphors or metonyms (Turpin 2013, Evans 1997. For instance, in the Dalabon language, both the cheeky yam and grasshoppers are denoted by the metonymic (Evans 1997) folk name yawok (Cutfield 2016).…”
Section: Editorialmentioning
confidence: 99%