Semantics - Unit One Basic Ideas in Semantics
Semantics - Unit One Basic Ideas in Semantics
(3) What is understood as the subject of the verb mean in line 12?
(4) list all the instances (by line number) where mean, means, or meant
has a personal subject, e.g. I or you. (Include instances already listed
in the questions above.)
(5) List all the instances (by line number) in which mean, or means, or
meant is understood as having as subject something linguistic, e.g. a
word, or words. (Include instances mentioned in questions above.)
Words can have a stable meaning or meanings
Words can also have particular meaning as determined by the speaker
Semantics aims to explain and clarify the nature of words and their meaning.
Practice 2
(1) Do the following two English sentences mean (approximately) the same thing?
I’ll be back later and I will return after some time
(2) Is the answer to the previous question obvious to a normal speaker of English?
(3) In the light of your reply to (2), if I ask "What did John mean when he said he'd be
back later?", would you be giving the helpful kind of answer that I probably
want if you said "He meant that he would return after some time"?.
(4) In asking "What did John mean when he said he'd be back later?" is the questioner
primarily asking
(a) what the SENTENCE I’ll be back later means, or
(b) what JOHN meant in saying it?
(5) A dictionary can be thought of as a list of the meanings of words, of what words
mean. Could one make a list of what speakers (e.g. John, you, or I) mean?
(6) Do you understand this question?
2 Definitions of Meaning