vergingmet
Vergingmet is a term used in linguistic and cognitive science discussions to describe a class of expressions whose interpretation can simultaneously be literal and figurative, with context determining which reading becomes dominant. The phenomenon highlights a transitional zone in meaning, where denotation and figurative extension may co-occur and gradually converge or diverge as discourse unfolds.
Etymology: Coined from verge and metaphor, vergingmet signals a marginal state between literal denotation and metaphorical
Characteristics: Vergingmet readings are sensitive to context, prosody, and discourse structure. They often display graded salience,
Examples: One example is the sentence "The committee crossed the line with its decision." It can be
Applications and research: Vergingmet informs metaphor detection, sense disambiguation, and natural language understanding by highlighting frames
History and reception: The term has appeared in theoretical discussions since the early 2010s and remains a