Introduction To Linguistic Semantics: By: Group 7
Introduction To Linguistic Semantics: By: Group 7
Introduction To Linguistic Semantics: By: Group 7
SEMANTICS
By: Group 7
ENGLISH LITERATURE
FACULTY OF LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
STATE UNIVERSITY OF MAKASSAR
➢ Definition
Semantic is the study of meaning of words, phrases, and sentences. In semantic
analysis, there is always an attempt to focus on what the words convetionally
mean, rather than on what an individual speaker (like George Carlin) might want
them to mean on a particular occasion.
➢ Two types of meaning:
1. Conceptual meaning: In semantics, conceptual meaning is the literal or core
sense of a word. There is nothing read into the term, no subtext; it's just the
straightforward, literal, dictionary definition of the word.
2. Associative meaning: In semantics, associative meaning refers to the
particular qualities or characteristics beyond the denotative meaning that
people commonly think of (correctly or incorrectly) in relation to a word or
phrase. Also known as expressive meaning and stylistic meaning.
➢ The two main areas of word meaning
1. Lexical semantics: Concerned with the analysis of word meaning and
relations between them.
Lexical relations
• Synonym: it is the semantic relationship that exists between
two or more words that have the same or nearly the same
meaning and belong to the same part of speech, but spelled
differently.
Example:
Tall = high
Big = large
To begin = to start
Example:
we can save money in the bank
Example:
Foot : 1- part of body
2- lower part of something
Example: bright: ‘shiny’ ; ‘intelligent’
Example:
My sister’s memory is a camera that remembers everything we
see.
• Collocation: When two words go well with each other, such as
deliver and speech, formulate and policy, and interesting and
proposition. These are found by looking at statistics in a corpus,
or a collection of language in use.
For example:
Example:
My friends is in the court
b. Sense: the sense of an expression isnits plaxe in a system of semantic
relationship with other expression in the language.
➢ Semantic features
It is a national method which can be used to express the existance or non-existance
of pre-established semantic properties by using plus and minus signs.
For example:
Man is [+human], [+male], [+adult].
Woman is [+human], [-male], [+adult].
Boy is [+human], [+male], [-adult].
• Agent: The 'doer' of an action, like the cat in The cat scratched the sofa.
• Theme or Patient: The 'receiver' of the action, like the sofa in The cat
scratched the sofa.
• Experiencer: Someone or something that 'experiences' the situation, like the
child in The child saw the cat scratching the sofa.
• Instrument: Something that the agent uses to do something, like its paws in
The cat scratched the sofa with its paws.
• Recipient: Something or someone that receives something, like the cat in The
child gave the cat its food.
• Time: Surprisingly enough, that is the time when an action is done, such as
midnight in The cat scratch the sofa at midnight.