polyseemisen
Polyseemisen is a theoretical construct in cognitive linguistics describing a pattern of polysemy in which a single lexical form bears multiple related senses that are organized into interconnected semantic families. The term blends the ideas of many senses (polysemy) with a focus on semantic units that can be traced across contexts. Polyseemisen is often framed as a mechanism by which language users systematically extend core meanings through metaphor and metonymy, yielding predictable networks of related senses rather than isolated extensions.
Core ideas include the existence of a semantic anchor or core concept from which related senses radiate;
Examples commonly cited in discussions of Polyseemisen involve everyday polysemous words such as branch, leg, or
Origins and reception: Polyseemisen appears primarily in speculative or pedagogical contexts and has not become an