Semantics is the study of meaning. There
are two types of meaning: conceptual meaning and associative meaning. The
conceptual meaning of the word sea is something that is large,
filled with saltwater, and so on. This meaning is true for everyone. The
associative meaning might be pirates, shipwreck, storms, battle and so on.
These associations vary from person to person. The conceptual meaning of concise is expressed
in few words, but concise being a good thing
is part of the associative meaning.
Reference and Sense]
Reference refers to what an expression refers
to in the real world. For example, Wikibooks refers to the
website where you can find this book. Barack Obama refers to
the first black president of the United States. In the sentence Jimmy
Wales, who founded Wikipedia, is an intelligent man, who refers
to Jimmy Wales.
Constant reference occurs when an expression always
refers to the same thing, regardless of context. The Democratic
People's Republic of Korea usually has constant reference, as does Noam
Chomsky. Smith, Mary and the dog do
not have constant reference.
Sense is different from reference in that
sense does not take care of objects in the real world. When you look in a
dictionary, most of the definitions you get tell you the senses of the words.
Consider this extract from Wiktionary's entry on plane:
1. An airplane; an aeroplane.
2. A level or flat surface.
3. A level of existence or development.
None of these are related to actual aero
planes or surfaces in the real world. They are senses.
Semantic Features
To express meaning, we use semantic
features. For example, castle is something that with the features [+large,
+building, +fortified]. A house that is easy to attack wouldn't be a castle
because it does not necessarily have the [+fortified] feature. We can even list
semantic features as a table:
large
|
building
|
fortified
|
|
castle
|
+
|
+
|
+
|
palace
|
+
|
+
|
-
|
planet
|
+
|
-
|
-
|
fort
|
-
|
+
|
+
|
Sometimes, a sentence is syntactically
correct, by semantically meaningless. Let's revisit Chomsky's example:
(1a) Colourless green ideas sleep
furiously.
Obviously, this sentence doesn't make sense
to us at all. We can often determine what words can fit into a sentence by
using semantic features. Consider this example:
(1b) The N[+living] was killed.
This would prevent us from saying 'the
homework was killed' or 'the building was killed'.
Lexical Relations
A lexical relation is the
relationships between the meanings of words. Here are some important lexical
relations:
·
Homophony: When two words
have the same pronunciation, but are written differently and mean different
things, such as bare and bear.
·
Homonymy: When two words
have the same pronunciation and spelling, but mean different things, such as
the verb bear and the noun bear.
·
Polysemy: When a single
word has multiple meanings. For example, the verb bear can
mean tolerate, but also bring (he bore gifts)
or have (they bear a certain resemblance).
·
Synonymy: When two words
are close in meaning, such as the synonyms insinuate and suggest.
Although they are similar, they are not identical.
·
Antonymy: When two words
have opposite meanings, such as the unmarked pair of antonyms happy and sad or
the marked pair of antonyms unhappy and happy.
There are two types of antonyms:
·
Gradable antonyms: These are words with various degrees, such as happy and sad. Not
happy is not the same as sad.
·
Non-gradable antonyms: These are words without degrees; it's either one way or the other, such
as on and off. Your computer is either one or the
other: it is not onindicates it is off.
·
Reversives: Sometimes,
with a pair of antonyms X and Y, not X does
not imply Y. For example, I did not close the windows does
not imply I opened the windows. These are reversives.
·
Converse or Reciprocal
antonym: If A happened before B, then B must have happened after A.
If A is B's husband, then B is A's wife, assuming they
are not a gay couple. This relationship is called converse.
·
Hyponymy: When one word
indicates a category of things that is a subset of the category of things
indicated by another word. For example, child is a hyponym of human,
which is a superordinate of child. Child and adult are
called cohyponyms.
·
Prototype: Sometimes, a
certain hyponym is more representative of the superordinate than most. For
example, when you hear the word 'fish', you probably don't think about weird
fish like seahorses or swordfish. You are more likely to think of, say, salmon,
which is said to be the prototype of the hyponymy.
·
Metonymy: When a word is
used in place of another related word. For example, you can say he
found solace in the bottle if you want to express the idea that he
drank alcohol to comfort himself. Using bottle instead of alcohol is
metonymy.
·
Synecdoche: It is a type
of metonymy when you're substituting a word for a part of it, e.g. farm
hands.
·
Metaphor: When a word is
replaced with another because of similar attributes. For example, the Chinese
word for communication, goutong, originally meant 'to merge two
river channels into one by dreding'.
·
Transferred epithet: It is when a word, usually an adjective, describes another word, but
actually describes a third concept. For example, happy in a
happy morningdescribes not the morning, but the mood of the speaker during
the morning.
·
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.
Semantic Roles
The role played by a word in expressing
meaning is called the semantic role or thematic role.
Here are some common ones:
·
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 catin 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.
Propositions
A proposition is something
that can either be true or false. Consider these examples:
(2a) Xi Jinping is the President of China.
(2b) Tomatoes are blood-sucking mammoths.
(2c) Is Wikibooks a city in Canada?
(2d) Get out of my house!
(2b) Tomatoes are blood-sucking mammoths.
(2c) Is Wikibooks a city in Canada?
(2d) Get out of my house!
All of these are propositions. The first
two are statements in which the truth value of the propositions are asserted to
be true, although the speaker of (2b) was clearly mistaken. The third and
fourth are a question and a command respectively; they are both propositions,
even though the speaker did not assert their truth values.
These sentences all have the same
proposition:
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