lecture 1 what is semantics.pptx 2
lecture 1 what is semantics.pptx 2
Semantics
• 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
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.
• 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;
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.
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.