Language and Lewis Carroll |
Contents
Introduction | 13 |
Carrolls Use of Language as a Vehicle for Play | 21 |
Lewis Carroll and the Study of Language 222 2 | 29 |
Copyright | |
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affective connotations Alice Alice's Adventures Anglo-Saxon association-object attributes aware called Carroll's Carroll's interest Chapter classification communication attempt context of association conventional usage convey denote designate Diaries discourse Dodgson Dumpty's Edgar Atheling Edward Lear English equivocal example expression function function words given humorous Humpty Dumpty idiomatic import illustrations informative connotations intended import intended meaning interest in language interpreter interpreter's Jabberwocky label Letters to Child-Friends Lewis Carroll lexical definitions linguistic signs literal import literary logical import logicians Looking-Glass Looking-Glass Land mathematical merely mind misunderstanding morpheme Mouse nature non-understanding nonsense object occurs Oxford passage phrase play poem portmanteau possess possible potential principles Professor proper names puns readers refer Roger Lancelyn Green sense sign-processes sign-vehicle signification Snark sound speaker specific speech statement stipulative definition Sylvie and Bruno Symbolic Logic syntactic syntactic ambiguity syntax Tangled Tale thing thought tion utterance vague verbs Wonderland words writing