0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views13 pages

lecture 1 what is semantics.pptx 2

The document is a lecture outline on semantics, covering its definition, conceptual versus associative meaning, and the distinction between lexical and sentential semantics. It also discusses semantic relations, the difference between semantics and pragmatics, and introduces truth-conditional semantics. Key concepts include tautologies, contradictions, and various lexical relations such as synonymy and antonymy.

Uploaded by

8qsk62gdtv
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
12 views13 pages

lecture 1 what is semantics.pptx 2

The document is a lecture outline on semantics, covering its definition, conceptual versus associative meaning, and the distinction between lexical and sentential semantics. It also discusses semantic relations, the difference between semantics and pragmatics, and introduces truth-conditional semantics. Key concepts include tautologies, contradictions, and various lexical relations such as synonymy and antonymy.

Uploaded by

8qsk62gdtv
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 13

Misurata University

Faculty of Languages and Translation


Department of English

Semantics

Lecture 1: What is “Semantics”?


Lecturer: Ms. Rudayna Elkhaldy
Outline

• What is semantics?
• Conceptual Meaning vs associative meaning
• Lexical semantics and sentential semantics
• Semantic relations
• Semantics vs Pragmatics
• Truth-conditional semantics / compositional semantics
• Tautologies and contradictions
The meaning of Language

• Why do we use language?


1. To convey information
2. Ask questions
3. Give commands
4. Express wishes
What is semantics?

• Semantics is the study of the meaning of words, phrases, and


sentences.

Conceptual
Meaning
Associative
Meaning
• Conceptual meaning covers those basic, essential
components of meaning that are conveyed by the literal use
of a word. It is the type of meaning that dictionaries are
designed to describe.

• Associative Meaning is the idea, and the connection of what


that specific word brings to you.
e.g needle : pain, doctor, illness,… etc
• Semantics:
The study of the linguistic meaning of morphemes, words, phrases, and
sentences.
It is the study of the meaning of words, phrases, and sentences.

• Lexical semantics:
Subfields of semantics that concerns with the internal semantic
structure of words and the semantics relations that occur within the
vocabulary.
• phrasal/ / sentential semantics:
Concerns with the meaning of syntactic units larger than the word.
• Internal semantics:
If the word has more than one meaning.

• Semantic relations:
Concerns with the lexical relations ( metaphor and metonymy).
▪ Metaphor: a substitution of one thing for another, directly refers to
one thing by mentioning another thing. E.g., Time is a thief.
▪ Metonymy: when a concept is referred to by the name of something
closely associated with that thing or concept. E.e., The White House
issued a statement.
Other Lexical Relations are;

Homophones Antonymy Hyponymy


and
homonyms

Synonymy Polysemy

Metonymy Collocation
Prototypes
Semantics vs Pragmatics

• Pragmatics is the
study of how context
affects meaning ( how
Semantics studies a sentence is
the linguistic interpreted).
meaning of a word Ex: It’s cold in here.
Which can be interpreted as
or a sentence. close the windows.
Semantics vs Pragmatics

Semantics Pragmatics
Study of words and their meanings in a Study of words and their meaning in a
language. language with concern to their context.
Focuses mainly on the significance of Additionally focuses on the meaning of
the meaning of words in a literal sense. words according to the context and
their inferred meanings as well.

Studies the literal meaning. Studies the intended or the inferred


meaning as well.
What do you know about meaning when you
know a language?
word meaningful meaningless

sentence meaningful meaningless

A word Two meanings

A sentence Two meanings

Two words Same meaning Opposite meanings

Two sentences Same meaning Opposite meanings


• Truth-conditional semantics / compositional semantics:

The meaning of a sentence is formulated from the meaning of


its words and the way the words combine syntactically.

The truth value of a sentence is calculates by composing, or


putting together, the meaning of smaller units.
Tautologies and contradictions

Tautologies
• Sentences are always true regardless of the circumstances.
Ex: Jack swims.
Contradictions
• Sentences are always false. A statement is logically contradictory. If one
is true, the other must be false.
Ex: circles are square.
Jach is alive contradicts Jack is dead.

You might also like