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I<br />

iamb (n.) A traditional term in metrics for a unit of poetic rhythm comprising<br />

a single pair of unstressed + stressed syllables (as in believe); also called an<br />

iambic foot. In metrical phonology, the notion is used as an informal name<br />

for bounded right-dominant feet, which display this rhythmical structure.<br />

See also trochee.<br />

iambic reversal<br />

see reversal<br />

iconicity (n.) (1) A suggested defining property of some semiotic systems,<br />

but not language, to refer to signals whose physical form closely corresponds<br />

to characteristics of the situations to which they refer. This is the normal state<br />

of affairs in animal communication, for example, where a call expressing fear<br />

is used only in a fear-producing context. In language, only a small number of<br />

items could be argued to possess such directly symbolic (iconic) properties, e.g.<br />

onomatopoeic expressions such as cuckoo, growl.<br />

(2) In linguistics, iconicity identifies the extent to which a relationship between<br />

semantic notions is directly represented in a language’s formal expression.<br />

For example, the semantic relation of a verb to its direct object (I see a cat) is<br />

closer than that of a verb to its adverbial (I see a cat every evening), and in so<br />

far as a language would reflect this difference in closeness formally (e.g. through<br />

morphology or through word-order) one could talk of an iconic correspondence.<br />

This pair of examples would support the notion, in that the normal<br />

word-order is as given, and not *I see every evening a cat). Iconicity is especially<br />

notable in morphology, where increased formal markedness typically corresponds<br />

to increased semantic markedness.<br />

idealization (n.) A term used in linguistics to refer to the degree to which<br />

linguists ignore certain aspects of the variability in their raw <strong>data</strong>, in order to<br />

arrive at an analysis that is as generally applicable as possible. Idealization is<br />

a major assumption of generative linguistics, as it underlies the notion of<br />

competence. A main aim of linguistics, in this view, is to account for the<br />

language of an ideal (or idealized) speaker-hearer in an ideal (i.e. homogeneous)<br />

speech community, who knows the language perfectly, and is unaffected by<br />

memory limitations, distractions, errors, etc., in actually using the language.<br />

A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics 6th Edition. David Crystal<br />

© 2008 David Crystal. ISBN: 978-1-405-15296-9

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