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Semantics: DR Muhammad Yousaf

The document discusses various types of lexical (word) relations in semantics, including: 1) Synonymy - Words with closely related meanings that can substitute for each other. 2) Antonymy - Words with opposite meanings, divided into gradable (tall/short) and non-gradable (alive/dead) types. 3) Hyponymy - A hierarchical relationship where a word (hypernym) includes another more specific word (hyponym), like animal includes horse. 4) Other relations discussed are polysemy, metonymy, homonymy, and collocation. These describe how words can have multiple related meanings, be closely associated based on experience, have

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
84 views21 pages

Semantics: DR Muhammad Yousaf

The document discusses various types of lexical (word) relations in semantics, including: 1) Synonymy - Words with closely related meanings that can substitute for each other. 2) Antonymy - Words with opposite meanings, divided into gradable (tall/short) and non-gradable (alive/dead) types. 3) Hyponymy - A hierarchical relationship where a word (hypernym) includes another more specific word (hyponym), like animal includes horse. 4) Other relations discussed are polysemy, metonymy, homonymy, and collocation. These describe how words can have multiple related meanings, be closely associated based on experience, have

Uploaded by

Muhammad Mustafa
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Semantics

Dr Muhammad Yousaf
Lexical relations
• Not only can words be treated as “containers” of meaning,, they can also
have “relationships” with each other.
• explain the meanings of words in terms of their relationships.
• If we’re asked the meaning of the word conceal, for example, we might simply say, “It’s the
same as hide,”
• or give the meaning of shallow as “the opposite of deep,”
• or the meaning of daffodil as “a kind of flower.”
• This approach is used in the semantic description of language and treated as the analysis of
lexical relations.
Synonymy
• Two or more words with very closely related meanings are called synonyms.
• They can often, though not always, be substituted for each other in sentences.
• We should keep in mind that the idea of “sameness” of meaning used in discussing
synonymy is not necessarily “total sameness.”
• There are many occasions when one word is appropriate in a sentence, but its
synonym would be odd.
• For example, whereas the word answer fits in the sentence ‘Sandy had only one
answer correct on the test’, the word reply would sound odd.
• examples of synonyms are the pairs:
• almost/nearly,
• big/large,
• broad/wide,
• buy/purchase,
• cab/taxi,
• car/automobile,
• couch/sofa,
• freedom/liberty.
Antonymy
• Two forms with opposite meanings are called antonyms.
• Antonyms are usually divided into two main types, “gradable” and “non-gradable”.
• Gradable antonyms can be used in comparative constructions.
• For example: tall, taller, tallest.
• Also, the negative of one member of a gradable pair does not necessarily imply the
other.
• For example, the sentence ‘My car isn’t old’, doesn’t necessarily mean My car is new.
• With non-gradable antonyms (also called “complementary pairs”), comparative
constructions are not normally used.
• We don’t typically describe someone as deader or more dead than another.
• Also, the negative of one member of a non-gradable pair does imply the other
member.
• That is, ‘My grandparents aren’t alive’ does indeed mean My grandparents are dead.
• Other non-gradable antonyms in the earlier list are the pairs: male/female,
married/single and true/false.
• Some common examples are
• alive/dead, big/small, fast/slow, happy/sad, hot/cold, long/short,
male/female, married/single, old/new, rich/poor, true/false.
• Some of the antonyms mean “do the reverse”.
• Antonyms of this type are called reversives.
• Examples are:
• enter/exit,
• pack/unpack,
• lengthen/shorten,
• raise/lower,
• tie/untie.
Hyponymy
• When the meaning of one form is included in the meaning of another, the
relationship is described as hyponymy.
• The concept of “inclusion” involved in this relationship is the idea that if an
object is a rose, then it is necessarily a flower, so the meaning of flower is
included in the meaning of rose.
• Or, rose is a hyponym of flower.
• Looking at the diagram, we can say that “horse is a hyponym of animal” or
“cockroach is a hyponym of insect.”
• In these two examples, animal and insect are called the superordinate terms.
• We can also say that two or more words that share the same superordinate
term are co-hyponyms.
• So, dog and horse are co-hyponyms and the superordinate term is animal.
Prototype
• While the words canary, cormorant, dove, duck, flamingo, parrot, pelican and robin are all
equally co-hyponyms of the superordinate bird, they are not all considered to be equally good
examples of the category “bird.”
• According to some researchers, the most characteristic instance of the category “bird” is robin.
• The idea of “the characteristic instance” of a category is known as the prototype.
• The concept of a prototype helps explain the meaning of certain words, like bird, not in terms
of component features (e.g. “has feathers,” “has wings”), but in terms of resemblance to the
clearest example.
• Thus, even native speakers of English might wonder if ostrich or penguin should be hyponyms
of bird, but have no trouble deciding about sparrow or pigeon.
Homophones and homonyms
• When two or more different forms have the same pronunciation, they are described as homophones.
• Common examples are:
• bare/bear, meat/meet, flour/flower, pail/pale, right/write, sew/so and to/too/two.
• We use the term homonyms when one form has two or more unrelated meanings, as in these examples:
• bank (of a river) – bank (financial institution)
• bat (flying creature) – bat (used in sports)
• mole (on skin) – mole (small animal)
• pupil (at school) – pupil (in the eye)
• race (contest of speed) – race (ethnic group)
• The temptation is to think that the two types of bank must be related in
meaning. They are not.
• Homonyms are words that have separate histories and meanings, but have
accidentally come to have exactly the same form.
Polysemy
• When we encounter two or more words with the same form and related
meanings, we have what is technically known as polysemy.
• Polysemy can be defined as one form (written or spoken) having multiple
meanings that are all related by extension.
• Examples are the word ‘head’, used to refer to the object on top of your body,
froth on top of a glass of beer, person at the top of a company or department,
and many other things.
• Other examples of polysemy are foot (of person, of bed, of mountain) or
run (person does, water does, colors do).
• If we aren’t sure whether different uses of a single word are examples of
homonymy or polysemy, we can check in a dictionary.
• If the word has multiple meanings (i.e. it’s polysemous), then there will be a
single entry, with a numbered list of the different meanings of that word.
• If two words are treated as homonyms, they will typically have two separate
entries.
Word play
• These last three lexical relations are the basis of a lot of word play, usually
for humorous effect.
• We make sense of the riddle Why are trees often mistaken for dogs? by
recognizing the homonymy in the answer: Because of their bark.
• And if you are asked the following question: Why is 6 afraid of 7?,
• You can understand why the answer is funny (Because789) by identifying the
homophones.
Metonymy
• The relatedness of meaning found in polysemy is essentially based on similarity.
• The head of a company is similar to the head of a person on top of and controlling
the body.
• There is another type of relationship between words, based simply on a close
connection in everyday experience.
• That close connection can be based on a container–contents relation (bottle/water,
can/juice), a whole–part relation (car/wheels, house/roof) or a representative–
symbol relationship (king/crown, the President/the White House).
• Using one of these words to refer to the other is an example of metonymy.
Collocation
• A relationship between words that frequently occur together (e.g. salt and pepper)
• One way we seem to organize our knowledge of words is simply on the basis of
collocation , or frequently occurring together.
• In recent years, the study of such words that occur together and their frequency of
cooccurrence has received a lot more attention in corpus linguistics.
• Yule, G. (2010). The study of language. Cambridge university press.
Thank You

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