The sensory world: Ideophones in Africa and elsewhere. Ideophones and sound symbolism in Atlantic Creoles. Erhard Voeltz & Christa Kilian-Hatz (eds.), Ideophones, 9–14. Ideophones in interaction with intonation and the expression of new information in some indigenous languages of Australia. Toward a frame-semantic definition of sound-symbolic words: A collocational analysis of Japanese mimetics. A grammar of sound-symbolic words in Japanese: Theoretical approaches to iconic and lexical properties of Japanese mimetics. After a publishing delay due to circumstances beyond the control of the author, it has been updated in early 2016 to incorporate some references to work that appeared since. This paper incorporates and revises some work reported in an unpublished dissertation by the author. Funding has come from the Max Planck Society for the Advancement of Science, the European Research Council (grant 240853), and the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (Veni 016.154.087). Wurapa, Ɔdimɛ Kanairo, and the wider Mawu community of Akpafu-Mempeasem, Ghana, for supporting this research. I am grateful to Nick Enfield, Kimi Akita, Steve Levinson, Lila San Roque, Felix Ameka, Eva van Lier, and an anonymous reviewer for helpful comments on earlier versions.
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