faculty of english language and literature g. togia section ΠΗ-Ω 10/14/2009 introduction to...
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FACULTY OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
G. TOGIA
SECTION ΠΗ-Ω
10/14/2009
Introduction to linguistics II
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Reading material2
1. Dirven, R. & M. Verspoor (1998). Cognitive Exploration of Language and Linguistics. Amsterdam/Philadelphia: John Benjamins. Chapters 2, 7, and 8.
2. Yule, G. (2006) (3rd edition). The Study of Language. Cambridge: Cambridge Press. Chapters 10, 11, 12, 18 and 19.
3. Handouts.
4. Self-assessment tests.
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Aim of the course3
To become familiar with issues relating to:
the study of linguistic meaning, comprising semantic, pragmatic and textual parameters in the production and understanding of utterances in discourse.
the study of language in its regional and social dimensions.
CONCEPTUAL AND ASSOCIATIVE MEANING
SEMANTIC FEATURES
SEMANTIC/THEMATIC ROLES
PROTOTYPES
LEXICAL RELATIONS
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Part 1: Semantics4
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Today’s topics
Conceptual and associative meaningSemantic featuresSemantic/thematic roles
You can study these topics in: George Yule:
Chapter 10.
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Semantics6
Semantics is the study of the meaning of Natural Language expressions: Expressions include words, phrases, and sentences.
What is the goal of such study? Provide a definition of meaning. Explain semantic relations between expressions.
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What is meaning? an example7
Mare – stallion
Heavy – light
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How can we define meaning?
Is it the dictionary definition of a word?
Problem: circularity e.g.
pride: the belief that you are better or more important than other people .
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What is meaning? Dictionary definitions?
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So, we need to find a way of viewing meaning independent of language.
Is meaning the mental image conjured up by a word (e.g. Parthenon, Big Ben)?
What is meaning? Mental images?
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Is meaning the thing a word points to in the world, that is, its referent?
What is meaning? Reference?
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What is meaning?
Meaning is something that speakers of a language know.
Linguistic vs. encyclopedic knowledge
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Conceptual and associative meaning
Words do not have single, simple meanings.
Conceptual meaning: the basic elements conveyed by the literal meaning of
a word.
Associative meaning (or connotation): the associations (emotional or otherwise) a word
evokes.
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Conceptual and associative meaning: example
Take the words apple or organic .
Or, the words woman and chick.
Or, the words innocent and genuine.
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SEMANTIC FEATURES
Semantics
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Why is conceptual meaning helpful?
It allows us to account for the oddity of sentences such as:
?The apple ate the hay. ?The dog read the newspaper. ?Definiteness melted in the sun.
Syntactically good, but semantically odd. Why?
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Semantic features: definition
A procedure for analysing meaning into its crucial elements or features. Helps us to differentiate the meaning of one word
from another.
Words are composed of smaller meaning components, which are combined to form different words.
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Semantic features: examples17
Woman: [+animate], [+human], [+female], [+adult]
Boy: [+animate], [+human], [-female], [-adult]
Horse: [+animate], [-human], [-female], [+adult], [+equine]
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Semantic features: examples18
The same feature may be part of the meaning of many words: “human” : helps us to define, bachelor, parent, child, etc.
Woman, maiden in comparison with doctor, parent.
Child in comparison with doctor, parent.
Think of the words father and uncle.
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Semantic features: problem19
There are many words in a language that cannot be defined in terms of their semantic features. E.g. advice, threat, warning.
Exercises 1 - 4
SEMANTIC/THEMATIC ROLES
Semantics
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Semantic/thematic roles
Semantic features approach: Words are thought of as ‘containers’ of meaning.
Semantic roles approach: Another way to analyse meaning:
words can be thought of in terms of the ‘roles’ they fulfill in the situation described in a sentence.
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Semantic/thematic roles
An example:
The cat chased the mouse
2 entities in specific roles: The entity which carries out the action The entity which is affected by the action
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The number of semantic roles
There is a small number of semantic roles: Agent and theme. Instrument and experiencer. Location, source and goal.
Role assigners are mostly verbs and prepositions.
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Agent and theme 1
The boy kicked the ball.
The boy: Agent
The ball: Theme
Theme can also be an entity described: • My dress is red.
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Agent and theme 2
The wind opened the door.The earthquake destroyed the city.The dog bit the girl.The girl cut herself.
Agents and themes can be human and non-human.
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Instrument and experiencer
The boy cut the rope with a knife.A knife:
Instrument
The girl feels sad.Did you hear that noise?
The girl, you: Experiencer
E.g. See, hear, enjoy, know.
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Location
The ball is under the bed.
The bed: Location
Examples: on the table, in the house, etc.
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Source, goal
She moved from Greece to England.Greece:
Source
England: Goal/recipient
Examples: She borrowed a magazine from George. Source She handed the magazine back to George. Goal
Exercises 5 - 9
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Summary29
Semantics is: the study of words, phrases and sentences.
When discussing meaning some linguists are interested mainly in conceptual meaning, others in both conceptual and associative meaning. In this course, we will focus on conceptual meaning.
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Summary30
We can think of the conceptual meaning of words as:
The crucial features that differentiate the meaning of words.
The roles words fulfil in the situation described by a sentence.
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Next week...31
Polysemy. Homonymy. Homophony. Prototypes. Metonymy and metaphor.