Across
- 3. This type of domain is the domain being described.
- 4. This mental space provides abstract information common to both input spaces (Two Words).
- 7. The conceptual structures of two unrelated mental spaces (input spaces) linked by means of a generic space, on the basis of common elements projected onto a new mental space (a blend), which generates a new emergent structure that distinguishes the blend from the inputs (Two Words).
- 9. This type of metaphor is regarded as a cognitive mechanism, a specific way of conceptualizing information based on the mental process of analogy and knowledge transfer from one conceptual field into another.
- 11. This type of metaphor relates to "ways of viewing events, activities, emotions, ideas, etc., as entities and substances.
- 12. This mental space contains selected aspects of structure from each input spaces (Two Words).
- 13. One of the pioneers of Blending theory who developed this theory in order to account for the role of language in meaning construction, particularly its “creative aspect”.
- 14. This type of metaphor refers to the metaphorical and structural organization of one concept (often an abstract one) in terms of another (often a more concrete one).
Down
- 1. This type of metaphor refers to communication and operates whenever the adresser inserts his mental ideas, (feelings, thoughts, etc. ) into words, phrases, sentences, etc.
- 2. The type of metaphor which “organizes a whole system of concepts with respect to one another” and is concerned with spatial orientations.
- 5. New meanings appearing as a consequence of the integration of the two domains – the target and source domains (Two Words).
- 6. This type of domain is imagistic in nature, it is analogue representation deriving from experience (Two Words).
- 8. This type of domain is the domain in terms of which the target is described.
- 9. The type of metaphor which reflects body-based experience, human-being relationships, orientation in time and space, etc.
- 10. The discipline within which metaphor was originally studied, which was first established in Ancient Greece.
