1 / 11

Semantics

Semantics. Semantics. Definition: The study of meaning in language. Referential Meaning = The labeling of objects, persons, events Cultural Meaning = reflection of attitudes, values, shared symbols Situational Relevance = differing forms for different social situations

zyta
Download Presentation

Semantics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Semantics

  2. Semantics Definition: The study of meaning in language.

  3. Referential Meaning = The labeling of objects, persons, events Cultural Meaning = reflection of attitudes, values, shared symbols Situational Relevance = differing forms for different social situations Interactional Meaning = defines the social status or relationship between speakers Affective Meaning = emotional tone of meaning Kinds of Meaning

  4. Semantic Properties Example: Nouns Semantic Features 1. Count/mass 2 cats but not 2 waters 2. Specific vs. generic Ann vs. girl 4. animate vs. inanimate cow vs. rock 5. Masculine vs. feminine cow vs. bull 6. Human vs. non-human man vs. dog 7. Definite vs. indefinite the cat vs. a cat

  5. Semantic Roles 1. Agent 6. Experiencer 2. Patient 7. Instrument 3. Source 8. Cause 4. Goal 9. Temporal 5. Location 10. Possessor Amy sent a letter from Paris to her friend in Iowa. 1 2 3 4 John’s refrigerator is leaking on the floor. 10 1 5

  6. Semantic Features Verbs • Actions Jane ran. • Processes The wood dried. • Action/process Jane dried the wood. • State The wood is dry.

  7. Semantic Concordance • Action verbs take agent subjects • Process verbs take patient subjects • Action/process verbs take agent subject and a patient object . • States take patient nouns.

  8. Reference vs. Sense Reference is the direct labeling of an object, person, event, etc. Intension Denotative meaning Sense is the meaning that is assumed around the reference. Extension Connotative meaning

  9. The “Nyms” Some examples: Homonyms – flower, flour Homographs – bank, bank Synonym Antonym relational opposite – buy, sell gradable – big, small marked vs. unmarked – man, woman complementary – dead, alive Metonyms – Rome, Catholic church Polysemous – sound investment, sound of music

  10. Truth Conditions in Sentences Paraphrase = two different sentences with the same truth conditions Thematic Roles Anomalous – deviates from the rules of sense Metaphorical – must use imagination to interpret an anomalous sentence. Idiom – sentence/phrase that has a semantic meaning other than the referential/sense meaning Ambiguous – Ex. The mother of the boy and the girl will arrive soon. (structural) She is good at catching flies. (Semantic)

  11. Pragmatics Situational Context Speech Acts Presuppositions

More Related