Skripta Week 1 To Week 4 Semantika Zic-Fuchs
Skripta Week 1 To Week 4 Semantika Zic-Fuchs
Skripta Week 1 To Week 4 Semantika Zic-Fuchs
(Week 1)
In its pre-scientific period (before it became a science), semantics dealt with three issues:
Linguistics is the SCIENTIFIC study of language. The question is; how scientific semantics can
be?
We first find meaning in words; languages may change its phonology, syntax, but they never
lose meaning.
Phonetics
Phonology
Morphology
SEMANTIKA
Syntax
Lexis
Phonetics is more concerned with voice/sound and not language so much. That is why it is
divided.
Lexis can be replaced with lexicology, which deals with words and the structure of
vocabulary (semantics in the narrow sense!).
1
Lexeme is also a technical term. Lexicology also deals with lexemes which can have only one
meaning (the term is used to avoid ambiguity of what word can mean).
This traditional list has changed, instead of lexis now theres semantics both on the list and
on the side, but its the same discipline.
The one on the list is the one dealing with the 3 topics from the top (the meaning of the
word, the structure of the vocabulary, semantics and grammar).
The one on the side deals with meaning in relation to other branches on the list (there is an
interrelationship between meaning and various other linguistic disciplines).
THE MEANING
-phonology: the meaning is established through minimal pairs. It is necessary to prove what
a phoneme is.
Bound morphemes have a very active relationship with the nouns they appear with.
Morphology is very much connected with meaning because without it the distinction is
impossible.
the pencil/ a pencil what are a and the ? They DO mean something so they cannot be
The dog bit the postman. / The postman bit the dog.
The subject position is the doer of anything that follows. English is morphologically
poor and has a fixed word order. Meaning is off if the word order is wrong, whereas
WO in Croatian is quite free.
2
Chomsky and his TG (transformational generative grammar) introduce major
changes into syntax.
1957- Syntactic structures: this is where it all began; Chomsky comes up with a vision
of how syntax in English functions but he excluded meaning from syntactic
structures.
(Fun fact he could not find a publisher for his book in the USA and eventually
found it Netherlands; Europe made a fortune out of him; a huge number of reprints
of the book)
1965. Aspects of the Theory of Syntax: he tried to incorporate meaning but came up
with surface and deep structures and performance and competence/ competence
and performance.
You cannot have syntax without a content and semantics. Form does not exist
without content!
Chomsky based all his theoretical thinking on English which is rapidly approaching analytical
languages. Chinese is, for example, an analytic language without morphology- they
communicate by tones.
BEGINNINGS:
He realised the importance of meaning. He claims that a new science should be set up
semasiology which is a precursor of semantics.
Michel Bral first coined the term smantiquie in 1883 (from Greek semainein to mean,
to signify)
He is the father of semantics because he coined the term. He does not do semantic analysis,
he just says it should be done.
Ogden and Richards (1923), The Meaning of Meaning, analytical rigour (the most important
contribution)
3
They werent linguists, they were semiologists (analyse sings of all kinds). They introduced
the notion that meaning can be analysed from scientific perspective (semantics must
become scientific!).
Semantics is central to the study of the human mind and semantics is central to the study of
human communication.
Etymology belongs to the times of philology, but has also become different because it
analyses the meaning of the word. It deals with the origin of words, in the past it dealt with
how the form developed through time and it was the predecessor of historical linguistics.
Its contemporary approach is analysing the changes in the meaning. Today it analyses
change both in form and meaning.
-philology dealt with the scholarship of TEXTS, can be studied in more language-
oriented view.
Lexicology is the part of linguistics which studies words. This may include their nature and
function as symbols,[1] their meaning, and the rules of their composition from smaller
elements (morphemes and phonemes as basic sound units).
Lexicography is very related to semantics. It is the art and science of dictionary making.
Bilingual dictionaries dont usually provide additional details, just the translation of a word.
Conceptual dictionaries (for example Rogets Thesaurus) work on the base of concepts. They
are specialized dictionaries. For one entry they provide the whole concept of it, and they are
not structured alphabetically like mono and bilingual dictionaries.
4
There is also a difference between historical and encyclopaedic approach to making
dictionaries.
A historical dictionary... ?
The Anglo-American term is discourse analysis, and the European term is text linguistics.
Spoken is much more analysed in Anglo-American world and less in continental Europe.
Language is a system and we have to know how, when and where to use it.
Lexeme definition: Lexemes are vocabulary words which may take on different forms
depending on the context they find themselves in. (Lyons 1977). It is one meaning of a
certain word.
to run (one verb) all its meanings are lexemes of the word run. Lexemes, not words!!!
5
Primary (conceptual) meaning is fundamental for communication.
Capable of speech, prone to tears, gentle, compassionate, skirt or dress wearing, cowardly,
emotional, irrational, able to speak (!)...
Contemporary definition: female (biological), human, adult, has the capacity to give birth
Conceptual meaning - the knowledge of the world that defines a concept can change
radically and concepts change from age to age.
Concepts are never ending lists of elements, but despite that open endlessness, conceptual
meaning is still the basic one.
For example: dogs were working animals in the past (used for hunting and guarding) but
today they are pets. The word is the same, the animal is the same but the concept has
changed.
Language provides different words that we use in different contexts and we have to know
the rules. Different contexts and registers dictate the choice of words. Language provides
different words with different connotations.
Something colloquial can become amazingly widespread and can become a standard.
Dialectal forms can enter the standard language if it doesnt have an adequate word for it.
6
Affective meaning: what is communicated of the feelings and attitudes of the
speaker/writer; we use different intonation for the same words and it can change the
meaning completely.
You can pronounce this utterance (=izriaj) in an angry or sarcastic way, but the utterance is
the same.
Reflected (not reflective!!!!) meaning: has to do with when one sense of a particular word
affects the understanding and usage of all the other senses of the word
The Comforter vs The Holy Ghost- part of its meaning was reflected through
The Comforter
Taboo words reflect meanings that are not socially accepted and are generally avoided
intercourse: it used to mean to speak but it became sexually tainted, the meaning
is reflected into sexual sphere
erection: used to mean building zdanje
ejaculation: used to mean pushing something out, but it had to be something liquid
From a completely innocent meaning (to speak, building, push out...) you get words that
became taboos.
7
-religious examples can have different connotation depending on when and where they are
used;
Collocative meaning:
Cows can wander, but cannot stroll. People stroll because they decide to do it. Cows dont
decide to do it. Collocative meaning works on a sentence-level, it is a wider term than
collocation!
(tremble quiver) You tremble from fear, because you are afraid and you quiver out of
excitement or pleasure.
Snarl words: words whose conceptual meaning becomes irrelevant because whoever is
using them is capitalizing on their unfavourable connotations in order to give forceful
expression to his own hostility
8
Leech:
Conceptual and secondary meanings are prone to social and diachronical changes, they are
highly dynamic, culture-depending and socially affected, they can change overnight and
depend on the cultural factors.
(Week 2)
1. Informational function
It is related to conceptual meaning which is a primary type of meaning and second hand
version, especially in LEECH, is the notion that the language conveys information.
2. Expressive function
We use language to express our feelings and attitudes. It correlates with the effective
meaning.
3. Directive function
It is very important. Leech portraits Jakobsons thoughts: we use it in order to influence the
behaviour and the attitude of others.
How do we do this? Natural assumption: we have imperatives, but we use them very rarely
because we use more polite options such as requests, questions, etc.
9
Its hot in here meaning Open the windows.
This politeness is social factor in this function.
Speech acts, however, are complicated with children. You learn them later as you grow up.
Children cannot recognize it. (Razgovor na telefonu: Je li ti mama doma? Odgovor: Da. Ali
dijete nee pozvati mamu jer ne prepoznaje da pitanjem Je li ti mama doma zapravo
elimo da nam proslijedi mamu na telefon.)
We influence people in a very roundabout way, we dont transfer just information.
4. Aesthetic function
Jakobson wrote a lot about it. It has the effect of art and is the least important one for our
purposes.
This function is the most fascinating one; Jakobson took it over from an anthropologist
Bronislaw Malinowski who lived with people on Trobriand Islands at the end of the 19th and
the beginning of the 20th century.
He wrote papers about linguistic specific nature of these islands.
A: Hi!
B: Hi!
A: Warm enough for you?
B: Sure is. Looks like rain though.
A: Well, take care.
B: Ill be seeing you.
A: So long.
B: So long
10
If a communication line breaks (a fight), it is very difficult to start again.
Ogden and Richardson were right- the meaning is central for communication.
END OF DAY 1
Saussurean dichotomies
Ferdinand de Saussure made first steps toward making linguistics a scientific science of
language. He is the father of structuralism. Structuralism appears wherever theres
structure.
His book Course in General Linguistics came out in 1916. It was a work of his students and
is fundamental for understanding language as a system and the way a structure works.
The third term he uses is LANGUAGE. This is the term for both langue & parole, the
whole language phenomena. The language is an unity of both language and parole
and it should always be looked at as a whole. Language is what keeps all the stuff
together and is extremely important.
form
11
content
HOMONYMY
Meanings are not related in any way! this is the traditional definition of true homonymy
Absolute homonymy appears between two lexemes/words that are not related in meaning,
and they have to conform to the following three criteria:
12
-there is no relatedness
-the notion of flatness is what they have in common not the best example of absolute
homonymy
Partial homonymy
They found hospitals and charitable institutions. ambiguous because they have the same
form here
POLYSEMY
Usually called multiple meaning, i.e. single word (form) with several meanings
neck part of the body / of a bottle / of a shirt / a narrow piece of land (a neck of land
between a lake and the sea)
They are related in meaning which is not the case in homonymy (the existence of
relatedness!). The meanings are related according to the principle called metaphorical
extension. This relatedness is simple. Metaphors are important in the way humans think and
conceptualise.
We recognize it on the basis of popular etymology (a native speaker can vouch for the
relatedness of meaning).
SYNONYMY
Traditional definitions: expressions with the same meaning; one meaning but different
forms.
13
absolute (istoznanice) vs. partial synonymy (bliskoznanice)
1. Synonyms are fully synonymous if and only if all their meanings are identical.
2. Synonyms are totally synonymous if and only if they are synonymous in all contexts.
3. Synonyms are completely synonymous if and only if they are identical in all relevant
dimensions of meaning.
radio vs. wireless In Australia, there is a difference of meaning. They were the
absolute synonyms during the WWII. However, languages are economical systems
and absolute synonyms are actually useless. In this example, there is a denotational
difference in meaning.
airfield (not commercial, can be rough, military use them, have no facilities) vs.
airport (has a lot of facilities) vs. aerodrome (technical term used in military
textbooks, stylistically marked and not used on regular basis)
pneumonia vs. inflammation of the lungs (descriptive synonymy)
(bachelor unmarried man: you cannot call the Pope a bachelor; there is a range of
applicability)
There is a discrepancy of usage.
Not only phonological system has rules that prevents you from doing what you want,
semantic system has them too.
- a big house vs. a large house (bigger in space) there is a semantic difference
- my big sister vs. my large sister shed be offended, it doesnt work
a big mistake vs. a large mistake? (unusual, collocational range both these
adjectives have a range of nouns they can appear with legitimately!)
-overlap of meaning, but you wouldnt use them with same things/words
14
Flaw/blemish/defect dont denote just physical but also psychological
These adjectives are restricted by their collocational range. They show a larger quantity of
expressive meanings than big and large.
Conclusion: it is very delicate and complex to talk about synonyms, but this might be our
essay question.
Week 3
Anglo-American approach: the word science used to pertain to natural sciences, then to
medical and technical and then to social sciences and humanities. The division of the last
two differs from country to country.
15
If it werent for the unity of mental images, we wouldnt be able to communicate.
Science can be EMPIRICAL and based on research on concrete data through observation,
corpora, and in mental domain: interviews, surveys.
Lyons, 1977: empirical implies that you are dealing with a certain subject matter not on the
basis of speculation and intuition but are operating with publicly verifiable data obtained by
observation and experiment (=corpora).
The subject matter can be accessed on the basis of speculation, intuition and observable
context.
The first corpus ever compiled was in 1967 Brown Corpus (Francis and Kuera) they
worked out a methodology how to produce a corpus and it had a million words.
Croatian corpuses:
1. Marko Tadi: Croatian National Corpus (1990) printed matter, we do not have a
corpus of spoken language
2. Institute of Croatian language and linguistics: Riznica hrvatskog jezika
4 requirements (criteria) that we could call the ideal for a theory of language:
1. EXPLICITNESS (self-evident)
2. OBJECTIVITY
3. SIMPLICITY OF EXPLANATION
4. COMPLETENESS OF DESCRIPTION
Types of context:
J.R. Firth stuck to the distinction between the first two contexts.
16
L. Bloomfield 1933, Language
Before his book, scientists had a psychological approach to language.
He was Sapirs student and was influenced by Weiss (behavioural psychologist).
Because of behaviourism, people were regarded as intuitive beings just like animals, and
as having no emotions. According to Weiss, linguistics function in the same way on the
principles of physical, emotional and intellectual stimuli.
Linguistics had to attain to analytical rigour.
For Bloomfield (the father of American structuralism), MEANING only comes from
natural sciences, not from anything that is mentalistic. His famous example is NaCl
sodium chloride as the definition of salt.
According to Bloomfield, the definition of salt is NaCl. But what about people who dont
know the chemical formula for salt and still use it every day? People are able to describe
salt even though they dont know the formula.
He stressed that abstract notions such as love and hate cannot be defined according to
analytical rigour.
He thought meaning was unattainable and destroyed the study of meaning, for 30 years
anthropologists were the only people who studied meaning.
Chomsky, Syntactic Structure, 1933-1957: meaning was not dealt with in mainstream
linguistics; it went to the field of anthropology.
-recent work in semantics has returned to mentalism against which Firth, Bloomfield
and their contemporaries reacted.
17
Meaning is often predictable by context:
SPLASH! UPSIDE DOWN! Newspaper titles that mean nothing without the context
ITS OFF
JANET! DONKEYS!
1. Context eliminates ambiguities or multiple meanings (ex. page- boy attendant vs. a
piece of paper)
2. Context indicates referents of certain words we call DIECTIC words ex. here (where
the speaker is), there (anything away from the speaker), this, that, now, then, hrv.
Evo, eto, eno, taj, ovaj, onaj; other expressions of definite meaning, ex. him (personal
pronouns), John, it
Deixis is a phenomenon which cannot be explained without context, either sentential
context or the meaning of situation. Every context possible is needed for the analysis
of the deictic words. These kinds of words change relatively often.
Spatial deixis: yonder (ondje) in literature and some dialectal forms.
Hrv. Ovdje (place of the speaker), tu (relatively close, where your listener is), ondje
(far away from both the speaker and the hearer) based on the contextual situation
of the speaker and the listener and give information about the distance.
Ondje is used less in big cities because of the urban dialects (rural tokavian speakers
use it).
The urban speeches are very powerful and with media, they make the mechanism
behind changes.
3. Context supplies information which the speaker has omitted through ELLIPSIS (that
are very important in SPOKEN language).
Spoken language abounds in ellipsis. We usually leave out the last part of the
utterance. This doesnt hinder communication because we retrieve the information
from the situational context. Context is extremely important for multitude of
reasons.
18
Mentalism is used as a cover term for the whole thing. It refers to any scientific attempt
which relies on introspection (systematically going through knowledge of the world).
Mentalism is an alternative to contextualism.
Noam Chomsky supports mentalistic approach and claims that data about language can be
supplied by direct resort to intuition of the native speaker which means that a theory can be
based on the judgment a native speaker can make on the language (s)he speaks.
Bloomfield had that animalistic approach, but Chomsky reintroduced the human and
cognitive capabilities that humans have. Chomsky sees language as one of the centres of
the left hemisphere which has the capacity to enable you to use language and is completely
independent of all other human cognitive capabilities like learning, memory, perception in
the most general way possible. So, there is one centre for language in the brain, but it is
disconnected of all other parts.
Its indebted to Noam Chomsky, but the difference from his approach is that cognitive
linguistics puts language as an integral part of the human cognitive capability.
In order to use language effectively, you have to have the knowledge of the world and one
without the other does not function.
Triangles of meaning
SYMBOL REFERENT
This is a triangle of meaning by Ogden and Richards (The Meaning of Meaning) who
introduced the term analytical rigor. The triangle represents a mentalistic approach.
The most important relationship is that between SYMBOL and THOUGHT. It is the dominant
relationship.
REFERENT is an entity outside of human being, the real world around us.
19
THOUGHT or REFERENCE is actually the mental concept.
Ogden and Richards were semioticians. They claimed that the meaning doesnt reside only in
language.
IC FUCHS 1991 (the triangle on the right; she has better terminology)
He tried to argue the previous triangle. Even though the relationships are pretty much the
same, names are, however, worse! He changed the terminology. In his mind, the
relationship between NAME and SENSE is the most important. Instead of SYMBOL, he uses
NAME. However, NAME evokes a personal name, its not exact. Instead of REFERENT he
uses THING, but not all referents are things; it is too concrete. Because of this he was widely
criticized.
20
Even de Saussures
form
(linguistic sign) implies MENTALISM.
content
(sad u handoutima pogledajte onaj Milenin trokut, ne mogu ga sad crtat, ivot e mi proi!)
ic Fuchs uses leksiki koncept instead of thought. Koncept is the key word because it
relates to lexemes in question. People within a specific linguistic community share concepts.
She uses lexeme instead of word because word is ambiguous and lexeme is more
specfic.
She uses denotatum (technical term from Latin) instead of thing because a referent can
be abstract. This has to do with the knowledge of the world it refers to. This term avoids
concrete objects (can also mean something abstract, does not have to be physical). Its
important for triggering a concept and giving it a name.
Meaning is a process and an activation of 2 kinds knowledge (the language and the
knowledge of the world). This process is instantaneous.
Week 4
21
Mentalism vs. the notion of analytical rigour- how do you balance these two?
The first attempts of serious rigorous analysis of meaning started around 1950s in Europe.
Two big theoretical events were generative -Chomsky (US)- and cognitive linguistics (US).
US military force after WWII invested huge amounts of money in cognitive science for
military purposes.
Cognitive science is interdisciplinary.
COMPONENTIAL ANALYSIS
Def: the analysis of word meanings is often seen as a process of breaking down the sense of
a word into its minimal distinctive features, i.e. into components which contrast with other
components.
22
S4 doesnt really have a point since all the examples have + (steady plus, it is unnecessary to
put it as a separate component).
These examples provide analytical rigour for semantics in a reductionist manner and make it
more scientific.
However, they dont provide true definition or what one has to know about these examples.
It doesnt provide the knowledge of the world.
This kind of analysis is very close to Bloomfield (NaCl for salt).
Despite the lack of what meaning is, the componential analysis exists as a methodology.
There has to be the minimum of 2 lexemes involved because it functions on the basis of
contrast/opposition.
MAN
DOG
woman
bitch - provides metaphorical terms with different meaning
-marked terms
COW bull
DUCK- drake without relatedness of meaning, there is no componential analysis.
Nida- 1975 his claim that componential analysis shows different kind of relationships into
which lexemes can enter.
23
Bitch cocker spaniel etc.
-without the bitch the example would be much better (not a good fit)
They are not identical in meaning, but they do overlap in that they can be
substituted one for the other in at least certain contexts without significant changes
in the conceptual content of an utterance.
-absolute synonymy
-the diagrams can differ in the quantity of overlapping the degree of overlap varies!
Give vs. bestow : you bestow honours is there some kind of inclusion?
Possess vs. own : possess refers physical and psychological world.
Ill vs. sick : the difference is in duration, intensity
Answer vs. reply: physical difference reply; answer is more informal
3. COMPLEMENTATION
Meanings complementary to each other involve a number of shared features of
meaning but show marked contrasts and often opposite meanings
(nacrtajte dijagram!!)
24
High low : opposite
Beautiful ugly : opposite
Buy sell : contrast (they belong to the same scene)
Lend borrow: contrast (they are not the same thing)
4. CONTIGUITY
(dijagram )
These relations can be found between closely related meanings occupying a well
defined, restricted semantic domain and exhibiting certain well marked contrasts.
-a bunch of lexemes belong to the same domain.
COLORS
Violet-blue-green-yellow-red etc. they share a semantic domain
Walk-jump-hop... they are connected in a loose way, they are verbs of
motion (remember: marked contrast!) and the
relationships between walk, amble and stroll are much
closer; they are related in meaning
25
Doesnt belong to any theoretical circle, shes an individual brought up in European
structuralism.
Her book from 1985 is called Lexicography and conceptual analysis.
She thought about the knowledge of the world and claimed that it depends on specialised
knowledge (potato-plant).
What comprises the meaning of any lexeme? What comprises the knowledge of the world?
(What do we have to know?)
She is referring to the knowledge that life brings, her examples are ordinary implements.
When describing these things, we go into minute details.
Descriptive components componential analysis goes into minute details for the purpose of
the usage of a particular word.
There is no end to components, her analysis shows that analytical rigour is not + and -, it is
going into minute details.
Her minute analysis of cups and mugs shows that lexemes are interrelated.
People later used the same examples because it is easier to show differences in opinions on
the same examples.
She doesnt consider herself to be a cognitive semanticist.
The difference between her examples and the others is that she doesnt use + and but
high level descriptive components minute descriptions.
The main feature of the components is that every single component is interlinked.
However, these objects are identical neither in appearance nor in purpose.
The difference stems from physical appearance and usage to social concepts.
26
Componential analysis has to reflect the knowledge of the world in minute details and this is
done by very detailed components for the purpose of establishing what knowledge of the
world is necessary or is not that necessary in using a particular word.
The list of components is never-ending. Meaning is a list of never-ending list of things!
This analysis is very progressive: the term analytical rigour changed its meaning.
Because of its precision, the term analytical rigour became even more rigorous.
27