Transcript 语义学

English Linguistics: An Introduction
Chapter 6 Semantics
Chapter 6 Semantics
0. Warm-up Questions
1. Definition
2. Meanings of Meaning
3. Types of Meaning
4. Word Meaning
5. Sentence Meaning
0. Warm-up Questions
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What is the meaning of meaning?
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What is the relationship among meaning, word and the
referent?
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What are the different relations between words in terms
of meaning?
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What are the affecting factors of a sentence meaning?
1. Definition
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The subject concerning the study of meaning is called
semantics. More specifically, semantics is the study of
meaning of linguistic units, words and sentences in
particular. (p93)
2. Meanings of Meaning
2.1 Nominalism
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Words are just names or labels for things.
2.2 Conceptualism
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Language and the real world are linked through the
mediation of concepts (semantic triangle).
2.3 Contextualism
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Meaning can be derived from observable contexts.
2.4 Behaviorism
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Meaning consists in the relation between speech and
physical entities and events. (S-r-s-R figure)
3 Types of Meaning
3.1 The traditional approach (Fries 1952)
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Lexical: “meaningful” parts of speech (n. v. a. adv.)
Structural: other parts of speech, grammatical functions
(SVOC), grammatical categories (tense, mood, etc)
3.2 The functional approach (Leech 1981)
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Conceptual: logical, cognitive, or denotative content /
basic, criterial (The word woman has three criterial
semantic features: +human, +adult, -male.)
Connotative: by virtue of what language refers to /
referent (additional and non-criterial properties of
WOMEN: skirt wearing, sensitive, emotional, etc)
3 Types of Meaning
3.2 The functional approach (Leech 1981)
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Social: of the social contexts of language use / stylistic
(father, dad, daddy)
Affective: of the feelings and attitudes of the
speaker/writer / emotive, evaluative (statesman and
politician, collaborator and accomplice)
Reflected: through association with another sense of
the same expression / associative (Comforter, Holy
Spirit, Rooster/cock)
3 Types of Meaning
3.2 The functional approach (Leech 1981)
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Collocative: through association with co-occurrent
words / collocational (rotten tomatoes, addled eggs,
rancid butter and sour milk)
Thematic: through the message organization in terms
of order and emphasis / organizational (This book I
have not read. I and you, you and I)
3 Types of Meaning
3.3 The pragmatic approach
(Palmer 1976 and Lyons 1977)
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Sentence meaning: the conventional content or literal
meaning of a sentence
Utterance meaning: the realization of the sentence
meaning in a context
4. Word Meaning
4.1 Sense vs. reference (Gottlob Frege 1892)
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Sense: the inherent, abstract and decontextualized
meaning of words, including all their features. For
example, a dog is a domesticated canine mammal,
occurring in many breeds that show a great variety in
size and form.
Reference: what a linguistic form refers to in the real
physical world. The word dog in “The dog is barking”
refers to a dog known to both the speaker and the
listener.
4. Word Meaning
4.1 Sense vs. Reference (Gottlob Frege 1892)
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Relations between the two
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Sense means the abstract properties of an entity; Reference
means the concrete entities with such properties.
Every word has a sense, but not every word has a reference.
(prep, art, etc)
Linguistic forms having the same sense may have different
references in different situations. (This book is easier than
that book.)
Linguistic forms with the same reference may differ in sense.
(Morning star and evening star, 总书记、国家主席和军委主席)
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4. Word Meaning
4.2 Sense Relations
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Synonymy: sameness or close similarity of meaning
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dialectal synonyms: Autumn/fall, lift/elevator, lorry/truck
stylistic synonyms: Daddy/father, start/commence, die/pass
away
emotive/evaluative synonyms: Collaborator/accomplice,
statesman/politician
collocational synonyms: Rotten tomatoes, addled eggs and
rancid butter
semantic synonyms: Amaze/astound/surprise
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4. Word Meaning
4.2 Sense Relations
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Antonymy: contrast or oppositeness of meaning
gradable/comparative antonyms: Old/young, hot/cold
complementary/absolute antonyms: Alive/dead,
male/female
relational/converse antonyms: Husband/wife,
teacher/student, buy/sell
4. Word Meaning
4.2 Sense Relations
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Hyponymy: meaning inclusion
Hyponymy is a matter of class membership. The upper
term, i.e. the class name, is called superordinate, and
the lower terms, the members, hyponyms. The
members of the same class are co-hyponyms. Both a
superordinate and hyponyms may be missing, e.g.
beard, moustache and whiskers lack a superordinate,
and uncles (伯伯、叔叔、舅舅、姑父、姨父) and rice
(稻、谷、米、 饭).
4. Word Meaning
4.2 Sense Relations
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Polysemy: the same one word with more than one
meaning
The English language has an interesting history. (Kind)
BASIC is the language most programmers learn first.
(Variety)
A dictionary is an invaluable aid in learning a new
language. (System)
4. Word Meaning
4.2 Sense Relations
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Homonymy: different words identical in sound or
spelling, or in both
homophones: night/knight, rain/reign, piece/peace,
leak/leek
homographs: bow (v. /n.), tear (v. /n.), lead (v. /n.)
complete homonyms: fast 快速的/禁食, scale 鳞/刻度
5. Sentence Meaning
5.1 Grammaticality and Meaningfulness
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Grammaticality: grammatical/structural meaning,
governed by grammatical rules
Meaningfulness: semantic meaning, governed by
selectional restrictions
5.2 Principle of Compositionality
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Meanings of sentence components
Structural meaning (word order, hierarchical structure)
Thematic meaning
5. Sentence Meaning
5.3 Sense Relations
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X is synonymous with Y.
X: He was a bachelor all his life.
Y: He never married all his life.
X is inconsistent with Y.
X: John is married.
Y: John is a bachelor.
X entails Y. (Y is an entailment of X)
X: He has been to France.
Y: He has been to Europe.
5. Sentence Meaning
5.3 Sense Relations
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X presupposes Y. (Y is a prerequisite of X)
X: John’s bike needs repairing.
Y: John has a bike.
X is a contradiction.
X: My unmarried sister is married.
X is semantically anomalous.
X: The table has bad intentions.
X is a tautology.
X: The orphan has no father.