LIN1180/LIN5082 Semantics: Albert Gatt
LIN1180/LIN5082 Semantics: Albert Gatt
Lecture 1
Albert Gatt
Logistics…
Course tutor:
Albert Gatt
[email protected]
Semantics -- LIN1180
Course website
http://staff.um.edu.mt/albert.gatt/home/
teaching/semantics.html
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Textbook and readings
Course text
This course will largely
follow this book:
Saeed, J. (2003).
Semantics. Oxford:
Blackwell
Several readings to be
made available along the
way.
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What you can expect from me
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What is expected of you
Check the website regularly for updates!
Participate in lectures!!!
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Questions…
?
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Part 1
What is semantics?
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Some things we know
These sentences describe the same
situation:
The small blue circle is in front of
the square.
The square is behind the small blue
circle.
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Some things we know
We know that the following sentence can mean more than
one thing (it is ambiguous):
She drove past the bank.
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Some things we know
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Semantics
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Grammar
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Semantics as part of grammar
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Knowledge of language is productive
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The problem of knowledge
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The problem of knowledge
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Katz and Fodor (1963)
an early attempt to characterise what is required of a
semantic theory
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Language and the world
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Knowledge of language and the world
semantics
How do we account for
the relationship between
words and concepts?
concepts/ things
How do we decode the thoughts &
meaning of complex situations
sentences?
How is linguistic meaning
related to the world?
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Knowledge of language and the world
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The problem of knowledge
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Compositionality
The guiding principle to explaining the productivity of
meaning is the Principle of Compositionality
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Part 2
Semantics in relation to other components of grammar
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Meaning and grammar (I)
In some theories, such as Generative grammar, the language
faculty is divided into modules:
phonology syntax semantics
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Is this view tenable?
It seems clear that some grammatical facts must take meaning
into account.
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Meaning and grammar (II)
An alternative view, found for example in Cognitive Grammar,
argues that meaning is inseparable from the other components.
In this framework, people often argue also that linguistic
knowledge and encyclopaedic knowledge cannot be separated.
phonology syntax
semantics
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Part 3
What should a semantic theory look like?
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An example situation
You made
great black
coffee.
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Requirements for our theory (I)
Word meaning:
black, coffee, great, make
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Requirements for the theory (II)
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A first attempt
The task:
Design a theory that will explain a speaker’s semantic
knowledge, i.e.
Word meaning
Sentence meaning
…
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Problem 1: Circularity
Knowing the meaning of a word = knowing the definition
E.g. coffee = a beverage consisting of an infusion of ground
coffee beans
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Problem 2: World knowledge vs. Linguistic
Knowledge
Suppose you think of coffee as:
black, hot, bitter…
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Problem 3: Individual differences
Suppose we agree that coffee is typically black.
We might not agree precisely on the true meaning of the word
black:
How dark must something be to qualify?
When does black become dark brown?
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The need for a metalanguage
To meet these problems, we need to characterise linguistic
meaning independently of words:
This involves using a semantic metalanguage
A way of “translating” meaning into a form that is
language-neutral.
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Problem 4: Context
The phrase you made great black coffee seems to acquire new
shades of meaning in different contexts:
You’re a hopeless cook, but at least, the coffee was OK…
You completely failed to impress me…
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Semantics vs. pragmatics
Many linguists make a distinction between
Literal/conventionalised meaning
“core meaning”, independent of context
This belongs to semantics proper
Speaker meaning & context
What a speaker means when they say something, over and above the
literal meaning.
This and other “contextual” effects belong to pragmatics
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Summary
Semantics is part of linguistic knowledge
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Next lecture
Mainly introducing some of the core concepts that
semanticists use in their analysis:
Utterances vs sentences vs propositions
Sense and reference
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Questions
?
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