COGNITIVE MECHANISMS UNDERLYING POLYSEMY FORMATION IN TERMINOLOGY

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Western European Studies

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This article investigates the cognitive underpinnings of polysemy in specialized terminology. Drawing on foundational work in cognitive semantics and terminology theory (Apresjan, 1974; Cabré, 1999; Cruse, 2000), it analyzes how metaphorical extension, metonymic shift, domain blending, and category restructuring drive the emergence of multiple related senses for single terms. Through a systematic review of key studies and illustrative examples from engineering, medical, and information‐science vocabularies, the study proposes a unified framework for mapping sense‐relations in terminological networks. Implications for lexicography, knowledge representation, and automated term‐disambiguation systems are discussed, offering practical guidelines for terminology management in professional and academic contexts

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