Name of The Presenters:: 1. Andreana Puji Fatmala (0203521020) 2. Novia Setyana Khusnul K (0203521015)
Name of The Presenters:: 1. Andreana Puji Fatmala (0203521020) 2. Novia Setyana Khusnul K (0203521015)
Name of The Presenters:: 1. Andreana Puji Fatmala (0203521020) 2. Novia Setyana Khusnul K (0203521015)
Analytical
Synthetic
Contradictory
Analytic Sentence
An analytic sentence is one that is necessarily true, as a
result of the senses of the words in it
Therefore, analytic sentence reflects an unspoken
agreement by speakers of the language about the sense of
the words in it
Examples:
1. Elephants are animals
2. Cats are not fish
3. My brother is male
Synthetic Sentence
A synthetic sentence is one which is not analytic, but may
be either true or false, depending on the way the world is.
In other words, synthetic sentences can be sometimes true,
sometimes false, depending on the circumstances.
Examples:
1. John’s brother is nine years old
2. My Brother is tall
3. Alice is Ken’s sister
Practice
Here are some more sentences. Circle A for analytic, or S for
synthetic, as appropriate. For some, you will have to imagine
relevant situations.
(1) John’s brother is nine years old A/S
(2) John’s nine-year-old brother is a boy A/S
(3) Sam’s wife is married A/S
(4) Sam’s wife is not German A/S
(5) My watch is slow A/S
(6) My watch is a device for telling the time A/S
Contradiction
A contradiction is a sentence that is necessarily false, as a
result of the sense of the words in it.
Thus, a contradiction is in a way the opposite of an analytic
sentence.
Example:
1. This animal is a vegetable
2. The man is a woman
Circle the following sentences A for analytic, S for synthetic
or C for contradiction, as appropriate. For some you will
have to imagine relevant situations.
(1)That girl is her own mother’s mother A/S/C
(2) The boy is his own father’s son A/S/C
(3) Alice is Ken’s sister A/S/C
(4) Some typewriters are dusty A/S/C
(5) If it breaks, it breaks A/S/C
(6) John killed Bill, who remained alive for many years after
A/S/C
Stereotypes
Here we would say that kids and children have the same sense,
although clearly they differ in style, or formality.
For example:
• hide1 could be the intransitive verb, as in Let’s hide from Mummy
• hide2 could be the transitive verb, as in Hide your sweeties under
the pillow
• hide3 could be the noun, as in We watched the birds from a hide
• hide4 could be the noun, as in The hide of an ox weighs 200 lbs.
PARAPHRASE
Example:
The meaning of red is included in the meaning of scarlet.
Red is the superordinate term; scarlet is a hyponym of red (scarlet is a
kind of red).
ENTAILMENT
Example:
• John ate all the kippers (X) entails Someone ate something (Y).
• John killed Bill (X) entails Bill died (Y).
SUMMARY