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Exercise: In the following sentences, does the first sentence entail the second? If it does, does it arise from meaning inclusion? (a) All cats have fleas My cat has fleas (b) Egbert killed Æthelbert Æthelbert is not alive (c) Egbert took a sheep Egbert stole a sheep (d) Harriet did not plant tulips Harriet did not plant flowers (f) A tall woman came in A tall person came in (g) I am wearing brown shoes I am wearing brown footwear incl (h) I ran to the beach I went to the beach incl incl incl LING 103 Introduction to English Linguistics 2016 Review Meaning is arbitrary There is no relationship between the sounds associated with a word and the physical object or action that the word signifies. Denotation: the literal meaning of a word; its dictionary definition. Connotation: Associations or the emotional suggestions related to a word Sense relations: In semantics we consider sense relations i.e. how the meanings of words and phrases relate to the meanings of other words and phrases. Synonymy Synonym: Two or more expressions share a similar meaning Testing for Synonymy The substitution test If two words are synonyms, then one should be able to replace the other in a sentence, without changing the sentence’s meaning. Leonardo looked / glanced / stared / gazed at the Mona Lisa Do synonyms have exactly the same meaning? The thief tried to hide / conceal the evidence Then he tried to hide *Then he tried to conceal Leonardo gazed at the Mona Lisa for an hour ?Leonardo glanced at the Mona Lisa for an hour Entailment The principle that under certain conditions the truth of one statement ensures the truth of a second statement. Synonymous: two–way entailment If I hide something, I conceal it Inclusive meaning: one–way entailment If I incinerate something, I destroy it but If I conceal something, I hide it. If I destroy something, I do not necessarily incinerate it. Words may have no entailment If I burn something, I do not necessarily destroy it If I destroy something, I do not necessarily burn it Inclusive meaning: one–way entailment Notice destroy is a general term (end the existence of something) incinerate is more specific (destroy by burning) In this context, incinerate and destroy display one–way entailment. incinerate is just one of many ways to destroy something e.g. blow up, melt down, incinerate, smash to pieces, level, raze etc Hyponymy When one word includes the meaning others, the relationship is referred to as hyponymy. We call the more specific term a hyponym of the more general term incinerate is a hyponym of destroy Exercise Arrange the following sets of words from general to more specific. (a) mouse, rodent, mammal, rat mammal > rodent > rat, mouse (b) house, building, bungalow, structure, cottage structure > building > house > cottage, bungalow (c) aunt, person, relative, female, cousin person > relative > female > aunt cousin Labelling and diagramming hyponymy The more general or more inclusive term = superordinate The more specific term = Two or more hyponyms of the same superordinate = co–hyponyms superordinate hyponym hyponym cat cheetah lion leopard tiger co-hyponyms All words can be either the superordinate or a (co)hyponym of another word or phrase domesticated animals cat dog horse Testing for hyponymy: The ‘is a type of’ test We can identify the superordinate term by using the ‘is a type of’ test pinot, sauvignon, wine, chardonnay Wine is a type of chardonnay / pinot / sauvignon? No Chardonnay / pinot/ sauvignon are types of wine? Yes superordinate co-hyponyms wine pinot Sauvignon Chardonnay Exercise Use the ‘is a type of’ test to identify the superordinate terms in the following lists: (a) beagle, poodle, dog, terrier, retriever (b) salmon, cod, snapper, fish, shark (c) diamond, ruby, gemstone, sapphire, granite, emerald, stone Draw a tree for (c) stone gemstone granite diamond ruby sapphire emerald Exercise Complete the following sentences using the same word for both Fred’s eyes recovered and he slowly regained his sight. Lake Wakatipu is a magnificent sight. Clearly, both uses of ‘sight’ derive from ‘see’. However, despite their clear semantic relationship to each other, they do not mean the same thing. a. ‘the faculty or power of seeing’ sight b. ‘places of interest in a city, town, or other place.’ Polysemy A single word with more than one meaning is polysemous. In the context above, ‘sight’ is polysemous. Identifying polysemy Polysemous words are easy to identify use the dictionary! music (n.) (i.) sound produced by means of instruments; kind of art form (ii.) particular style of that art form (e.g., baroque music) Exercise. Are the following polysemous? hand body part, clock, a round of applause, someone’s writing etc. wood stick, building timber, small group of trees child young person, an immature or inexperienced person of any age crane machine, bird (yes, they are related) Consider the highlighted words in the following sentences: (A) (B) a) The ships are listing badly. We are listing all members of the society. b) The statue is made of lead. The dog is on his lead c) Bus fares have just gone up. Bus fairs are where you buy buses. Are the highlighted words examples of synonymy? polysemy? They are neither! Although the (A) and (B) words look the same, sound the same or both They are not semantically related to each other They cannot be substituted for each other Homonymy Words that look and/or sound the same, but have no other semantic relationship, are said to be homonymous Homonymy Homonyms: the written and spoken forms are identical bank bank lie lie bat bat Homographs: only the written forms are identical lead = metal [led] lead = leather strip used when walking a dog [li:d] row [ɹou] [ɹau] use [ju:s] [ju:z] Homophones: only spoken forms are identical tail tale [teiɫ] to too two [tu:] flour flower [flauwə] Antonymy The semantic relation that holds when two words express opposite meanings Complementary opposites The presence of one quality or state signifies the absence of the other and vice versa. There is no halfway point. alive / dead present / absent married / single If A is true, then B cannot be true equally The tree is alive = The tree cannot be dead The tree is dead = The tree cannot be alive Note: ‘the tree is half dead’ = it is still alive Multiple complementary opposites A subcategory of complementaries which are found in sets days of the week, months of the year, signs of the Zodiac etc. Gradable opposites There is a gradual transition along a scale between to points hot ⇦ Other examples: warm tepid cool cold ⇨ big small heavy light fast slow Gradables can be marked for comaprative and superlative degrees bigger biggest more beautiful most beautiful Gradable opposition is relative to the object described e.g. a small elephant is bigger than a large mouse The use of gradable antonyms In each pair one of antonyms, one is the marked term and the other unmarked. one term of the opposition is the broader, dominant one. Unmarked How tall are you? How old are you? There is no implication in the questions that the you are particularly tall or old. The questions simply ask for the degree of the gradable quality. Marked How short are you? How young are you? On the other hand, these questions imply that the person is actually short or young. Relational opposites The opposition requires the context of a relationship between the two meanings. If A is B’s , then B must be A’s parent child employer employee If A ’s to / from B, then B must give receive buy sell borrow lend to / from A Semantic features What things (features) do these words share? female adult human canine feline aves vixen + + + - hen + + + What about: female male adult human married parent wife + + + + + husband + + + + + woman + + + - lioness + + + - girl + + - What semantic properties do the following words share? What properties distinguished (A) from (B)? (A) (B) bachelor, boy, man, pope, duke lion, drake, bull, tomcat (A) (B) chair, garden, lawn, house, cat rice, sugar, alcohol, butter, dirt (A) (B) notepad, church, hill, footpath, truck hope, insincerity, cowardice, sadness Noun-centred meaning Nouns are often 'modified' by other words. The meaning of a noun is built up of the meanings of the noun and its modifiers. two cars An adjective more closely delimits the kind of entity referred to by the noun cold water a false friend Semantic properties control the types of modifiers have a cat *have a toast *much cat much toast A number of cats *A number of toasts *The amount of cat The amount of toast The amount of cat in my hamburger was inadequate ?The amount of cats in Gareth Morgan's neighbourhood has decreased Verb-centred meaning Verbal features, like noun features, also have syntactic effects verbs: events, actions, states etc In English, ‘syntax’ says a noun is required before the verb, but optionally after the verb Cats eat mice The mouse worries. This is not a random, speaker choice; it is controlled by the properties of the verb *John resembles. *Mary disappeared the cat. John resembles the cat Mary disappeared Eventives eat, run, jump, fly, measure , give etc Statives know, like, be, seem, appear, resemble etc John eats alligator meat John is eating alligator meat John likes alligators ?John is liking alligators Alligator meat is often eaten by John Eat the alligator meat, John! ?Alligators are like by John ?Like alligators, John! Other verb features *John thinks that he will ever eat alligator again John does not think that he will ever eat alligator again John despairs that he will ever eat alligator again John doubts that he will ever eat alligator again This suggests that some verbs have ‘built in’ negation features and do not require the presence of not Verb control The cat eats Subject Verb the mouse Object Verbs typically require that the subject refer to a particular kind of entity to laugh The woman ?The ghost laughs *The brick There is a semantic relationship between the kinds of noun that a verb requires and the verb itself. We call the semantic relationship the thematic role a verb assigns to a noun. Thematic roles ( Ɵ-roles ) 1. If an entity performs the action denoted by the verb AND the entity has volition (the ability to decide to do the action or not) = agent Joan /the girl / she sang agent Are the following highlighted phrases agents? The concrete cracked The apple was eaten by the boy. 2. If an entity undergoes or is affected by the action denoted by the verb = theme The girl moved the toy / the chess piece / the chair agent theme Are the following highlighted phrases themes? The painting was done by the old artist Mary sent her friend an apple NOTE: Thematic roles DO NOT depend on a phrase’s position The toy was moved by the girl theme agent Other thematic roles Goal the place to which an event is directed I shifted the chair to the wall. Location the place where an event takes place: He is working in the kitchen. Source the place where an event originates: She drove up from Wellington. Instrument The means by which an action is performed Brian’s clone hit his car with a rock. Experiencer an animate entity that perceives something, is aware of something, psychologically or emotionally She worries a lot. Stimulus that which causes an entity to perceive something, be aware of something, psychologically or emotionally The spider frightened the girl. Causative a natural force that causes an event to happen The cyclone destroyed the village. Possessor an entity that owns or has another entity in its possession Bill's best friend has gone away. If two sentences are paraphrases of each other, that is, if they have the same meaning, the corresponding noun phrases have the same thematic relations The dog chased Jane vs. Jane was chased by the dog agent theme theme agent Sentences that are not paraphrases can be thematically similar, even though the meanings are not the same The boy opened the door with the key agent theme instrument The key opened the door instrument theme The door opened theme Notice English uses prepositions to indicate certain thematic roles: in, on, at to from with to talk about locations to indicate goals to indicate sources to indicate instruments, possession Restrictions on thematic roles (the theta-criterion) As we saw, once a role is assigned it cannot be changed, but also note that no role can be assigned more than once in a sentence *I opened the door with the key with the crowbar *The girl the boy played the piano the violin Exercise: In the following sentences, identify the thematic role of each NP Roles: agent, theme, causative, experiencer, stimulus, source, goal, location, instrument agent theme source instrument Example: The boy took the newspapers from the paper shop with a handcart a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. The aardvark found some ants in the mound of dirt Alligators run from the river to the wading pool for lunch He unlocked all the cabinets with a paper clip John melted the ice The sun melted the ice The blowtorch melted the ice The ice melted The students were terrified by the wild pig Sense and reference Reference: words, phrases and sentences may refer to something in the real world Mark Todd is noted for his horse riding. Notice that we can substitute The New Zealand horseman is noted for his horse riding. He is noted for his horse riding. But what about No horseman is noted at all. Who or what do the following refer to in the real world? The present King of France unicorn Humpty Dumpty Are they meaningless? Sense: the meaning of an expression Mark Todd is noted for his horse riding. Harry Potter is at Hogwarts. The present King of France is bald. sense and reference sense but no reference