Word Semantics, Sentence Semantics and Utterance Semantics
Word Semantics, Sentence Semantics and Utterance Semantics
Word Semantics, Sentence Semantics and Utterance Semantics
REFERENTIAL APPROACH
The main question and the focus of semantics is the relations between words
and things, actions, events and relations they denote. How is the word connected
with its referent?
Let us locate reference within the overall field of semantics. Within
semantics three main branches are distinguished: word semantics, sentence
semantics and utterance semantics. Word semantics seeks to explain the
phenomenon of meaning in a natural language by means of defining the nature
of word meaning. There are two ways of looking at word meaning resulting in two
branches: reference / referential semantics and sense / lexical semantics. Reference
is the definition of the relations between words and objects. Reference is
concerned with designating things, actions, activities, properties, and so on in the
outside world by means of linguistic items. (J. Handke
https://youtu.be/_NtVeofqUKA) The relation between the word and the class of
entities it stands for is called DENOTATION.
Some scholars distinguish between denotation and reference. Denotation is
the relation between a linguistic expression and a class of entities in the world.
REFERENCE labels out the activity of picking out precise things of reference in
the world on some specific occasion (meaning in context).
Types of reference: definite, indefinite, generic reference. E.g. The doctor
sent it to her. Definite determiners: the, our; pronoun: I, she; names: Paul, Mexico;
locative adverbs: here and there; temporal adverbs: now, yesterday. A doctor sent
it to her. Indefinite determiners: a, many; indefinite pronouns: anyone, anywhere;
Generic reference: The computer is a valuable tool./A computer is a valuable
tool. / Computers are valuable tools. – Collective reading. The computer is
obsolete. / Distributive reading: A computer is obsolete / A computer has a
monitor.
How can we define these types of reference? One of the oldest views is
Plato’s dialogue crativus, so called ‘naming view’. It takes supposition that the
word refers to a particular object that is meaning is reference. However, there
some difficulties in the naming view reference, that is abstract words such as
‘love’, extinct objects, such as ‘dinosau’, which do not have the referent anymore;
an object of the real world that have more than one name, such as planet Venus /
Morning Star / Evening Star. Opaque contexts, such as John knows that Bill wants
to kiss Mary. So we need more sophisticated view to determine the meaning.
Modern semantics has adopted a more complex perspective in which
reference is only one dimension of meaning. The other dimension is referred to as
sense. The German logician Gotlieb Frege (1848-1925) was the first to mention
two dimensions of our semantic knowledge of expression – sense & reference
(Sinn & Bedeutung). The modern solution to the problem of explaining the nature
of word meaning is to define the meaning in terms to a concept in the speaker’s
mind. This relationship can be best illustrated by the semantic triangle as
introduced by Charles Ogden and I. V. Richards. The idea is that words and
objects can be related in several ways.
One way is ONOMOTOPOEIA – a relationship between a linguistic sign
and an object via its phonetic shape, i.e. sounds and objects. It works well with
items like ‘cow’ (moo in all languages – German, Russian, French), but it works
less well with ‘dogs’ (English: bow-wow; German wow-wow, Russian: gav-gav)
and it works even less comprehensive with a cock (German: ki-kirikiki, English:
cokudoodle-do, Russian – ku-ka-re-ku). You can clearly see that onomatopoeia
affects only a number of items, that is why the bottom line is not a straight line but
dashed. ……TRIANGLE рисунок
Englishmen Charles Kay Ogden and Ivor Armstrong Richards wrote the
book “The Meaning of Meaning: A Study of the Influence of Language upon
Thought and of the Science of Symbolism” (1923), and the semantic triangle was
the means they used to explain that understanding comes from within the people
rather than from the words they just interpret or, as the saying goes, words don’t
mean; people mean. In their book they presented three theories: The Meaning
Theory (There is not a single “correct” meaning associated with each and every
word because each word means something different to each person); the Definition
Theory (In order to avoid this ambiguity we need to define terms or concepts) and
the Symbol Theory (words evoke images and personal meaning is based on
experience). Communication breaks when people attempt to communicate through
the use of arbitrary words. Words have no exact or clear meaning, and meaning
depends on context.
You will find different triangles with different terminology, so we mention
here the most common ones: The Sign or Symbol or Term (Representation) is the
actual word, term, or sign; the mental image or idea that the person has of this
representation is the Thought or Reference or Concept. If the Thought is adequate,
the hearer is able to connect it to the Referent or Object.
All meaning is elicited through symbols, or is arrived at through personal
interpretation. The meaning does not go with the word, it emerges by the person
hearing it, thinking about it and ultimately arriving at meaning.
Richards and Ogden’s triangle has been challenged over the years by other
semioticians, such as Umberto Eco, who maintain it is overly simplistic. According
to Sue Ellen Wright, “One of the major deterrents (inhibitions) to using the
triangle is its numerous interpretations and the variable of terminology associated
with the nodes of the triangle”, but then she adds that the triangle is useful
“particularly for non-linguists approaching terminology practice for the first time”.
And even in more advanced terminology work and studies, the semiotic triangle
has proven to be useful as a basis for further research in different terminological
systems, such as logic, semiotics, sociocognitive terminology.
Terminological data must be handled efficiently and effectively through
careful terminology planning and analysis as we constantly process specialized and
complex information on how objects are perceived, how we come up with concepts
for new or existing terms, and how these perceptions are represented and
described. So just by looking at the terminology works mentioned above it is more
than evident that understanding the semantic triangle is a relevant topic for
terminologists.
The Semantic triangle is also known as Triangle of Semantics, Triangle of
reference, the Semiotic Triangle, the Referent Triangle, Triangle of Meaning, the
Ogden-Richards Triangle, and the Meaning of Meaning Model.
SEMINAR 2.