The Dual Meaning Potential of Prepositional Grammatical Metaphor in Prose Fiction

From a Systemic Functional perspective, Grammatical Metaphor (GM) as is taken to be a chief driving force in the discourse of different genres, an important adult language machinery for ideational meanings to be semantically cross-mapped and realized through a different form in the stratum of the le...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yaser Hadidi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Islamic Azad University, Tabriz Branch 2018-08-01
Series:Journal of English Language Pedagogy and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jal.iaut.ac.ir/article_541069_6fa460c5c02ce75fe47aeb617de55dcf.pdf
id doaj-8ba6f3a46f5b435bae900ec3722a210f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8ba6f3a46f5b435bae900ec3722a210f2020-11-25T01:02:20ZengIslamic Azad University, Tabriz BranchJournal of English Language Pedagogy and Practice2645-35762645-35842018-08-011122127140541069The Dual Meaning Potential of Prepositional Grammatical Metaphor in Prose FictionYaser HadidiFrom a Systemic Functional perspective, Grammatical Metaphor (GM) as is taken to be a chief driving force in the discourse of different genres, an important adult language machinery for ideational meanings to be semantically cross-mapped and realized through a different form in the stratum of the lexico-grammar, in order to convey changed meanings and tinker with the discursive flow and development of text in real time, mainly through nominalization of adjectives and verbs. Using a number of established works of the English novel as data, this study draws upon the author’s previous model for the categories of GM used in modern prose fiction, with the main focus placed on one of the six categories, Prepositional GM (PGM). PGM figures with a very high frequency in fiction and occurs when a GM is preceded by a preposition. This study finds that the language of prose fiction in English deploys some of these PGMsin either of two different meaning sof the adverbial, varying according to context. Again, as seen to be the hallmark of GM by many, GM is found to open up vast ideational meaning potentials in the semantics stratum, from which the lexico-grammar makes choices according to context and intended meaning. As argued elsewhere in the literature and here, and as backed up by the author’s own experience of the advanced teaching of writing and reading, broadened understanding of GM is a critically important component to writing instruction and its effectiveness, as seen in the large-scale horizons and agendas for effective teaching of English as a Foreign Language in Iran and beyond.http://jal.iaut.ac.ir/article_541069_6fa460c5c02ce75fe47aeb617de55dcf.pdfSystemic functional linguisticsgrammatical metaphorprose fictionprepositional grammatical metaphoradvanced reading and writing instruction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yaser Hadidi
spellingShingle Yaser Hadidi
The Dual Meaning Potential of Prepositional Grammatical Metaphor in Prose Fiction
Journal of English Language Pedagogy and Practice
Systemic functional linguistics
grammatical metaphor
prose fiction
prepositional grammatical metaphor
advanced reading and writing instruction
author_facet Yaser Hadidi
author_sort Yaser Hadidi
title The Dual Meaning Potential of Prepositional Grammatical Metaphor in Prose Fiction
title_short The Dual Meaning Potential of Prepositional Grammatical Metaphor in Prose Fiction
title_full The Dual Meaning Potential of Prepositional Grammatical Metaphor in Prose Fiction
title_fullStr The Dual Meaning Potential of Prepositional Grammatical Metaphor in Prose Fiction
title_full_unstemmed The Dual Meaning Potential of Prepositional Grammatical Metaphor in Prose Fiction
title_sort dual meaning potential of prepositional grammatical metaphor in prose fiction
publisher Islamic Azad University, Tabriz Branch
series Journal of English Language Pedagogy and Practice
issn 2645-3576
2645-3584
publishDate 2018-08-01
description From a Systemic Functional perspective, Grammatical Metaphor (GM) as is taken to be a chief driving force in the discourse of different genres, an important adult language machinery for ideational meanings to be semantically cross-mapped and realized through a different form in the stratum of the lexico-grammar, in order to convey changed meanings and tinker with the discursive flow and development of text in real time, mainly through nominalization of adjectives and verbs. Using a number of established works of the English novel as data, this study draws upon the author’s previous model for the categories of GM used in modern prose fiction, with the main focus placed on one of the six categories, Prepositional GM (PGM). PGM figures with a very high frequency in fiction and occurs when a GM is preceded by a preposition. This study finds that the language of prose fiction in English deploys some of these PGMsin either of two different meaning sof the adverbial, varying according to context. Again, as seen to be the hallmark of GM by many, GM is found to open up vast ideational meaning potentials in the semantics stratum, from which the lexico-grammar makes choices according to context and intended meaning. As argued elsewhere in the literature and here, and as backed up by the author’s own experience of the advanced teaching of writing and reading, broadened understanding of GM is a critically important component to writing instruction and its effectiveness, as seen in the large-scale horizons and agendas for effective teaching of English as a Foreign Language in Iran and beyond.
topic Systemic functional linguistics
grammatical metaphor
prose fiction
prepositional grammatical metaphor
advanced reading and writing instruction
url http://jal.iaut.ac.ir/article_541069_6fa460c5c02ce75fe47aeb617de55dcf.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT yaserhadidi thedualmeaningpotentialofprepositionalgrammaticalmetaphorinprosefiction
AT yaserhadidi dualmeaningpotentialofprepositionalgrammaticalmetaphorinprosefiction
_version_ 1725205469351378944