Department of English: Part Ii-Chapter 12
Department of English: Part Ii-Chapter 12
UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
APPLIED LINGUISTICS
lion Dog cow Sparrow eagle Trout eel shark Snake lizard newt
ostrich
• lion, dog, cow, etc. are co-hyponyms of the superordinate animal, which, along
with bird, fish and reptile, is a co hyponym of creature. 5
• For Verbs: consider the pairs of examples in here (145) and (146).
(145) a. X borrowed/stole/found/bought Y
b. X got Y
(146) a. X walked/ran/staggered/crawled to Z
b. X moved to Z
In both of these cases, the various sentences in (a) entail the sentence in (b).
Get
(147) 6
(148) Move
• We also say that arm is a meronym of body and that arm, leg, etc.
body
arm leg
• We have the entailments here (159) which make explicit that these are
indeed semantic opposites.
(159) a. ‘X is tall´ entails ‘X is not short’
b. ‘X is short’ entails ‘X is not tall´
Language is arbitrary in the sense that there is no inherent relation between the
words of a language and their meanings.
Semantic Extending
13
- Even when a word is retained in a language, its meaning will often
change over time. Often social change- people change how it’s used.
Here, words get a more general meaning than they once had.
WORDS OLD MEANING NEW MEANING
We should first note that the oddness of these sentences does not derive from their syntactic
structure. According to the syntactic rules for forming English sentences we have well-performed
structure.
NP V NP
The hamburger ate the boy
Semantic Features (cont.…)
15
Since the sentence The boy ate the hamburger is perfectly acceptable, we may be
able to identify the source of the problem.
The kind of noun that can be the subject of the verb ate must denote an entity
that is capable of “eating.” The noun hamburger does not have this property and
the noun boy does.
Semantic Features (cont.…) 16
This simple example is an illustration of a procedure for analyzing
meaning in terms of semantic features.
animate
+ + + +
human
+ + + +
female __ __ + +
adult __ + __ +
• The word girl involves the elements [+human, female, -adult ]
• Syntactic analysis + semantic features
• The _________________ ate the hamburger.
N [+ human ]
Prototype Theory 18
Prototype theory, in linguistics, provides an explanation for the way word
meanings are organized in the mind.
For example, a prototypical bird has feathers, wings, a beak, the ability to
fly and so on.
Given clothing, people recognize shirts quicker than shoes, and given
vegetable, they accept carrot before potato or tomato.