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Sense Relations Between Words

The document discusses four types of sense relations between words: 1) Synonymy, which is when two predicates have the same sense, 2) Hyponymy, where the meaning of one predicate is included in the other, 3) Antonymy, where predicates have opposite meanings, and 4) Homonymy and Polysemy, which deal with ambiguous words that have multiple unrelated or related senses. Examples are provided to illustrate each sense relation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
151 views

Sense Relations Between Words

The document discusses four types of sense relations between words: 1) Synonymy, which is when two predicates have the same sense, 2) Hyponymy, where the meaning of one predicate is included in the other, 3) Antonymy, where predicates have opposite meanings, and 4) Homonymy and Polysemy, which deal with ambiguous words that have multiple unrelated or related senses. Examples are provided to illustrate each sense relation.

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Le Tuyet Nhi
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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SENSE RELATIONS BETWEEN

WORDS
1. Synonymy

2. Hyponymy
WHAT TO
STUDY?
3. Antonymy

4. Homonymy and Polysemy


Definition: SYNONYMY is the
relationship between two predicates
that have the same sense.
Example:
1. SYNONYMY • In most dialects of English, stubborn
and obstinate are synonyms.
• In many dialects, brigand and bandit
are synonyms.
• In many dialects, mercury and
quicksilver are synonyms.
In considering the sense of a
word, we abstract away from any
stylistic, social, or dialectal
associations the word may have.
We concentrate on what has been
NOTES called the cognitive or conceptual
meaning of a word.
Examples:
How many kids have you got?
How many children have you got?
SAME OR DIFFERENT?
A word may have many
different senses => each distinct
sense of a word (of the kind we
are dealing with) is a predicate.
NOTES

Synonymy is a relation between


predicates, and not between
words.
Run1
Run2
Run3
Run4
Run5
Run6
Run7
PRACTICE
Synonymy occurs among words
of the same part of speech
Ex: big (a) and large (a)
NOTES Synonymy also occurs between
words of different parts of
speech.
Ex: sleeping (v) and asleep (a)
HYPONYMY is a sense relation
between predicates (or sometimes
longer phrases) such that the
meaning of one predicate (or phrase)
is included in the meaning of the
other.
2. HYPONYMY
Example:
The meaning of red is included in the
meaning of scarlet.
Red is the superordinate term; scarlet
is a hyponym of red (scarlet is a kind
of red).
piglet boar

oak pine

generosity wisdom

sorrow love

kick hit punch

cool yummy tasty


NOTE
PRACTICE
PRACTICE
PRACTICE
PRACTICE
ANSWER
3. ANTONYMY

Do the following entry test


ANTONYMY
Binary
antonyms Converses

4 TYPES OF
ANTONYMY
Multiple
Gradable
incompatibilit
antonyms
y
BINARY ANTONYMS are
predicates which come in pairs and
between them exhaust all the
BINARY relevant possibilities. If the one
ANTONYMS
predicate is applicable, then the
other cannot be, and vice versa.
Ex: true - false
SUGGESTED ANSWER
If a predicate describes a
relationship between two things (or
people) and some other predicate
describes the same relationship
CONVERSES when the two things (or people) are
mentioned in the opposite order,
then the two predicates are
CONVERSES of each other.
Ex: parent - child
(a)all the terms in a
given system are
M U LT I P L E I N C O M PAT I B I L I T Y
mutually incompatible
(b)together, the members
of a system cover all
the relevant area.
Season system

Physical-state system

3
NOTES

• There are large numbers of open-ended systems of


multiple incompatibility
• Ex: the vehicle system, the plant system, the
material system, etc.
• Two predicates are GRADABLE
antonyms if they are at opposite
ends of a continuous scale of
GRADABLE values (a scale which typically
ANTONYMS
varies according to the context of
use).
• Ex: Hot and cold
PRACTICE
TEST

=> Add: very, very much, how much, …


Let’s try with:
• Near
• Cheap
• Beautiful
• Electrical
• Triangular
PRACTICE
AMBIGUOUS WORDS

• A word or sentence is AMBIGUOUS when it has more


than one sense.
• In the case of words and phrases, a word or phrase is
AMBIGUOUS if it has two (or more) SYNONYMS that
are not themselves synonyms of each other.
HOMONYMY AND
POLYSEMY
• A case of HOMONYMY is one of
an ambiguous word whose
different senses are far apart from
each other and not obviously
HOMONYMY
related to each other in any way
with respect to a native speaker’s
intuition.
• Ex: bank - bank
A case of POLYSEMY is one
where a word has several very
closely related senses. In other
words, a native speaker of the
POLYSEMY
language has clear intuitions that
the different senses are related to
each other in some way.
Ex: mouth, eye,…

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