Pokémonikers: A study of sound symbolism and Pokémon names

Authors

  • Stephanie S. Shih University of Southern California http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7426-4277
  • Jordan Ackerman University of California, Merced
  • Noah Hermalin University of California, Berkeley
  • Sharon Inkelas University of California, Berkeley
  • Darya Kavitskaya University of California, Berkeley

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v3i1.4335

Keywords:

sound symbolism, iconicity, names, onomastics, phonology, corpus linguistics, cognitive science

Abstract

Sound symbolism flouts the core assumption of the arbitrariness of the sign in human language. The cross-linguistic prevalence of sound symbolism raises key questions about the universality versus language-specificity of sound symbolic correspondences. One challenge to studying cross-linguistic sound symbolic patterns is the difficulty of holding constant real-world referents across cultures. In this study, we address the challenge of cross-linguistic comparison by utilising a rich, cross-linguistic dataset drawn from the Pokémon game franchise. Within this controlled universe, we compare the sound symbolisms of Japanese and English Pokémon names (pokemonikers). Our results show a tendency in both languages to encode the same attributes with sound symbolism, but also reveal key differences rooted in language-specific structural and lexical constraints.

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Published

2018-03-03

How to Cite

Shih, Stephanie S., Jordan Ackerman, Noah Hermalin, Sharon Inkelas, and Darya Kavitskaya. 2018. “Pokémonikers: A Study of Sound Symbolism and Pokémon Names”. Proceedings of the Linguistic Society of America 3 (1): 42:1–6. https://doi.org/10.3765/plsa.v3i1.4335.