Semantics Class Handout
Semantics Class Handout
Semantics the study of the linguistic meaning of morphemes, words, phrases and sentences
meaning refers, very generally, to the content of an utterance
(1) Semantic relations determining the semantic relations that exist among words, phrases and
sentences constitutes one of the basic analytic tools available for evaluating meaning
a. relations between words
synonyms two words that have similar meanings, e.g. filbert / hazelnut
antonyms two words that have opposite meanings, e.g. hot / cold
polysems (homonyms) one word that has two or more related meanings, e.g. bright
(shining or intelligent)
homophones two words with the same form (i.e. pronunciation) but two distinct
meanings, e.g. pen (a writing instrument or an enclosure)
b. relations between sentences
paraphrases two sentences that have different forms but the same meaning, e.g.
The cat ate the mouse vs. The mouse was eaten by the cat
entailment two sentences in which the truth of the first implies the truth of the
second, but the truth of the second does not necessarily imply the truth of the first,
e.g. George killed the spider vs. The spider is dead
contradiction two sentences such that if one is true, the second must be false, e.g.
Dodo is extinct vs. A hunter has just shot a dodo
Ex.1. Identify the semantic relations for each of the following words or phrases
1. bug (insect)
bug (microphone)
____________________
2. Sam is a widower
Sams wife is alive
____________________
____________________
____________________
5. hungry
famished
____________________
Ambiguity - practice
2
Ex.2. Suggest two (or more) distinct paraphrases for the following structurally ambiguous
sentences:
1. He watched them eating dinner.
2. After the cat caught the mouse, it died.
3. Everyone says that he can marry her.
4. He decided on the train.
5. The professors appointment was shocking.
6. Visiting professors can be interesting.
7. Its a miracle that the old magician was able to work.
8. Hell be staying here next month.
9. The road may be blocked.
10. I found her an entertaining partner.
11. I enjoy Indian summer holidays.
12. They called Susan a waitress.
13. How much do you want to cut the grass?
(3) Thematic roles to interpret any sentence, we need to know who is doing the action, what is
undergoing the action, the starting point of the action, etc. Thematic, or theta, roles capture the
relation between a sentence and the event it describes. There are three important properties of
thematic roles.
a. common thematic roles (only some)
Agent (actor) the entity performing an action
Theme the entity undergoing an action
Source the starting point of a movement
Goal the end pint of a movement
Location the place where an action occurs
b. thematic role assignment thematic roles are assigned to noun phrases based on their position
within the sentence. Typically, verbs and prepositions assign thematic roles
Verbs
assign the agent role (if it has one) to its subject noun phrase
assign the theme role (if it has one) to its complement noun phrase
Prepositions assign a thematic role (the specific one depends on the preposition) to its
complement noun phrase
Example: John drove the car to Portland. the verb drove assigns the agent role <ag> to the noun
phrase John and the theme role <th> to the noun phrase the car, while the preposition to assigns the
goal role <gl> to the noun phrase Portland.
John
drove
<ag, th>
the car
to
<gl>
Portland
Knowledge of the thematic roles that verbs and prepositions assign is stored in our mental lexicon
(similar to subcategorisation in syntax).
c. thematic roles and deep structure thematic roles are assigned at deep structure. E.g. the wh
question What did George lose? has the deep structure George lost what. So, the verb lost assigns
the agent role to George and the theme role to what. What retains this role even after the Move
operation changes its position in the structure.
Ex.3. Identify thematic roles in the following way to the sentences below.
e.g. Sally mailed her nephew a parcel
3
NP
Thematic role
Assigned by
Sally
a parcel
her nephew
agent
theme
goal
mailed
mailed
mailed
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
(4) Pragmatics besides the structure of a sentence and the thematic roles assigned to the noun
phrases within a sentence, there are many other factors involved in sentence interpretation.
Pragmatics is the study of the role other necessary information has in sentence interpretation.
Beliefs and attitudes, e.g. in The city council denied the demonstrators a permit
because they advocated violence the pronoun they refers to....:-)
Presupposition refers to assumption or belief implied by the use of a particular
word. e.g. see the different implication that verbs admitted / said carry in: John
admitted / said that the soccer team had cheated
Deictics (deixis) the form and interpretation of some words depend on the location of
the speaker and listener within a particular setting, e.g. here / there, this / that
Discourse / topic many sentences can only be interpreted in reference to information
contained in preceding sentences. Discourse describes the connected series of
utterances that are produced during a conversation, lecture, story, or other type of
speech act. Topic is what a sentence or discourse is all about.
Example:
Statement
The door is open'
Meaning
You forgot to lock it again, idiot!
What a relief! Don't have to sit out here,
waiting for some-one to come home.
No wonder I'm bloody freezing!
Shut the door.
Please come in.
Come and see me anytime
Context
A bank manager to a clerk standing in front of
the safe first thing in the morning.
Person arrives home without a key, no one
there, the person tries the door and opens it.
A person sitting in a draughty room
Two people in an office. It's very noisy next
door and one person wants the door shut.
Receptionist to someone who's just knocked.
A boss to an employee
Meaning
Context
Mum to young son dressed only in shorts and T-shirt who is going outside.
Farmer to harvesters.
Noah to his wife.
Man dying of thirst at sea in a small boat.
Driver with broken wipers to passenger on dark road.
4
Ex.5. Fill in the context column.
Statement
Meaning
Context
Meaning
Context