
- •Table of Contents
- •Lexicology as a Science. The Object of Lexicology The main lexicological units. Their similarity and distinctive functions
- •Questions:
- •Types of Lexicology. Approaches to Language Study
- •Questions:
- •The Aims and Tasks of the Course of Modern English Lexicology
- •Questions
- •Links of Lexicology with Other Branches of Linguistics
- •Questions:
- •Semasiology Meaning as a Linguistic Notion. Approaches to Meaning Study
- •Questions:
- •The Semantic Triangle. The Interrelation of Meaning with Sound-form, Referent and Concept.
- •Questions:
- •Types of Meaning
- •Questions:
- •Semantic Structure of Words. Componential Analysis
- •Questions:
- •Aspects of Lexical Meaning
- •Questions:
- •Word-Meaning and Motivation
- •Questions:
- •Polysemy and Homonymy Diachronic and Synchronic Approaches to Polysemy
- •Questions:
- •Polysemy and Context. Types of Context
- •Questions:
- •Two Processes of the Semantic Development of a Word
- •Questions:
- •Homonymy Sources of Homonyms
- •Questions:
- •Classification of Homonyms
- •Questions:
- •Polysemy and Homonymy: Etymological and Semantic Criteria
- •Questions:
- •Change of Meaning Causes of Semantic Change
- •Questions
- •Nature of Semantic Change. Metaphor, Metonymy and Other Minor Types
- •Questions:
- •Results of Semantic Change
- •Questions:
- •Historical Changeability of Semantic Structure
- •Questions:
- •Lexical Paradigmatics English Vocabulary as a System
- •Questions:
- •Types of Semantic Relations of Words
- •Questions:
- •Different Groupings of Words Morphological Groupings
- •Questions:
- •Semantic Groupings Synonyms
- •Questions:
- •Antonyms
- •Questions:
- •Syntagmatic Relations of Words Lexical and Grammatical Valency
- •Questions:
- •Types of Word-Groups
- •Questions:
- •Phraseology Criteria of phraseological units
- •Questions:
- •Classification of Phraseological Units
- •Questions:
- •The Ways of Forming Phraseological Units
- •Questions:
- •Proverbs and Sayings
- •Questions:
- •Morphological Structure of English Words and Word-Formation Morphemes, Their Definition. Allomorphs
- •Questions:
- •Classification of Morphemes
- •Questions:
- •Morphemic and Derivational Analyses
- •Questions:
- •Productive Ways of Word-Building Affixation. Synonymity, homonymity and polysemy of affixes
- •Questions:
- •Conversion. Approaches to Conversion. Synchronic and Diachronic Treatment of Conversion. Types of Relations between Converted Pairs
- •I. Verbs converted from nouns (denominal verbs).
- •II. Nouns converted from verbs (deverbal substantives).
- •Questions:
- •Compounding
- •Questions:
- •Shortening and Other Minor Types
- •Questions:
- •Questions:
- •Historical Changeability of Word-Structure
- •Questions:
- •Etymology Words of Native Origin
- •Questions:
- •Borrowings Causes and Ways of Borrowing. Criteria of Borrowings
- •Questions:
- •Assimilation of Borrowings
- •Questions:
- •Influence of Borrowings
- •Influence on semantics
- •Influence on lexical territorial divergence
- •Questions:
- •Etymological Doublets
- •Questions:
- •International Words
- •Questions:
- •Lexicological analysis of the text
- •11.Etymology.
- •Example analysis:
- •Mind-map of lexicology terms
- •Definitions Seminar 1. Lexicology as a science. The object of lexicology.
- •Seminar 2. Semasiology.
- •Seminar 3. Polysemy and Homonymy.
- •Seminar 4. Change of Meaning.
- •Seminar 6. Syntagmatic relations o words.
- •Examination Questions
Questions:
What are the three apexes of the semantic triangle? How are they connected?
Prove that meaning does not coincide with sound-form.
Prove that meaning does not coincide with referent.
Prove that the relationship between meaning and concept varies.
Prove that meaning does not coincide with concept because concept is emotionally neutral.
Prove that meaning does not coincide with concept because concept has no ties with any stylistic sphere.
Prove that meaning does not coincide with concept because concept is not of linguistic nature.
Prove that concepts are grouped differently than meanings.
Prove that concepts are universal for all humans while meanings are peculiar to each language.
Types of Meaning
I.V. Arnold, The English Word, §3.1. Definitions, [pp. 38-40]
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Complexity of the word meaning
he complexity of the word meaning is manifold. The four most important types of semantic complexity may be roughly described as follows:Firstly, every word combines lexical and grammatical meanings.
E.g.: Father is a personal noun.
Secondly, many words not only refer to some object but have an aura of associations expressing the attitude of the speaker. They have not only denotationalbut connotational meaning as well.
E.g.: Daddy is a colloquial term of endearment.
Thirdly, the denotational meaning is segmented into semantic components orsemes.
E. g.: Father is a male parent.
Fourthly, a word may be polysemantic, that is it may have several meanings, all interconnected and forming its semantic structure
E. g.: Father may mean: 'male parent', 'an ancestor', 'a founder or leader', 'a priest'.
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Grammatical meaning
t will be useful to remind the reader that the grammatical meaning is defined as an expression in speech of relationships betweenwordsbased on contrastive features of arrangements in which they occur. The grammatical meaningis more abstract and more generalized than the lexical meaning, it unites words into big groups such as parts of speech or lexico-grammatical classes. It is recurrent in identical sets of individual forms of different words. E. g. parents, books, intentions, whose common element is the grammatical meaning of plurality. […]T
Lexico-grammatical meaning
helexico-grammatical meaning is the commondenominator of all the meanings of words belonging to a lexico-grammatical class of words, it is the feature according to which they are grouped together.Words in which abstraction and generalization are so great that they can be lexical representatives of lexico-grammatical meanings and substitute any word of their class are called generic terms. For example the word matter is a generic term for material nouns, the word group — for collective nouns, the word person — for personal nouns.Words belonging to one lexico-grammatical class are characterized by a common system of forms in which the grammatical categories inherent in them are expressed. They are also substituted by the same prop-words and possess some characteristic formulas of semantic and morphological structure and a characteristic set of derivational affixes. See tables on word-formation in: R. Quirk et al., “A Grammar of Contemporary English”. The common features of semantic structure may be observed in their dictionary definitions:
management — a group of persons in charge of some enterprise,
chorus — a group of singers,
team — a group of persons acting together in work or in a game.
The degree and character of abstraction and generalization in lexico-grammatical meanings and the generic terms that represent them are intermediate between those characteristic of grammatical categories and those observed on the lexical level — hence the term lexico-grammatical.
R.S. Ginzburg, A Course in Modern English Lexicology, §5. Grammatical Meaning, §6. Lexical Meaning, §7. Part-of-Speech Meaning [pp.18-20]
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Components of word-meaning
t is more or less universally recognized that word-meaning is not homogeneous but is made up of various components the combination and the interrelation of which determine to a great extent the inner facet of the word. These components are usually described as types of meaning. The two main types of meaning that are readily observed are the grammatical and the lexical meanings to be found in words and word-forms.We notice, e.g., that word-forms, such asgirls, winters, joys, tables, etc. though denoting widely different objects of reality have something in common. This common element is the grammatical meaning of plurality which can be found in all of them.
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Grammatical meaning
hus grammatical meaning may be defined as the component of meaning recurrent in identical sets of individual forms of different words, as, e.g., the tense meaning in the word-forms of verbs(asked, thought, walked, etc.) or the case meaning in the word-forms of various nouns (girl's, boy's, night's, etc.).I
Functional and referential meaning
n a broad sense it may be argued that linguists who make a distinction between lexical and grammatical meaning are, in fact, making a distinction between the functional (linguistic) meaning which operates at various levels as the interrelation of various linguistic units and referential (conceptual) meaning as the interrelation of linguistic units and referents (or concepts).In modern linguistic science it is commonly held that some elements of grammatical meaning can be identified by the position of the linguistic unit in relation to other linguistic units, i.e. by its distribution. Word- formsspeaks, reads, writes have one and the same grammatical meaning as they can all be found in identical distribution, e.g. only after the pronounshe, she, it and before adverbs likewell, badly, to-day, etc.
It follows that a certain component of the meaning of a word is described when you identify it as a part of speech, since different parts of speech are distributionally different (cf.my work andI work).
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Lexical meaning
omparing word-forms of one and the same word we observe that besides grammatical meaning, there is another component of meaning to be found in them. Unlike the grammatical meaning this component is identical in all the forms of the word. Thus, e.g. the word-formsgo, goes, went, going, gone possess different grammatical meanings of tense, person and so on, but in each of these forms we find one and the same semantic component denoting the process of movement. This is the lexical meaning of the word which may be described as the component of meaning proper to the word as a linguistic unit, i.e. recurrent in all the forms of this word.The difference between the lexical and the grammatical components of meaning is not to be sought in the difference of the concepts underlying the two types of meaning, but rather in the way are conveyed. The concept of plurality, e.g., may be expressed by the lexical meaning of the worldplurality; it may also be expressed in the forms of various words irrespective of their lexical meaning, e.g.boys, girls, joys, etc. The concept of relation may be expressed by the lexical meaning of the wordrelation and also by any of the prepositions, e.g.in, on, behind,etc. (cf.the book is in/on, behind the table).
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Difference between lexical and grammatical components of meaning
t follows that by lexical meaning we designate the meaning proper to the given linguistic unit in all its forms and distributions, while by grammatical meaning we designate the meaningproperto sets of word-forms common toall words of a certain class. Both the lexical and the grammatical meaning make up the word-meaning as neither can exist without the other. That can be also observed in the semantic analysis of correlated words in different languages. E.g. the Russian wordсведенияis not semantically identical with the English equivalentinformationbecause unlike the Russianсведения, the English word does not possess the grammatical meaning of plurality which is part of the semantic structure of the Russian word.I
Interrelation of lexical and grammatical meaning
t is usual to classify lexical items into major word-classes (nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs) and minor word-classes (articles, prepositions, conjunctions, etc.).A
Part-of-speech meaning
ll members of a major word-class share a distinguishing semantic component which though very abstract may be viewed as the lexical component of part-of-speech meaning. For example, the meaning of 'thingness' or substantiality may be found in all the nouns e.g.table, love, sugar, though they possess different grammatical meanings of number, case, etc. It should be noted, however, that, the grammatical aspect of the part-of-speech meanings is conveyed as a rule by a set of forms. If we describe the word as a noun we mean to say that it is bound to possess a set of forms expressing the grammatical meaning of number (cf.table— tables), case (cf.boy, boy's) and so on. A verb is understood to possess sets of forms expressing, e.g., tense meaning (worked—works), mood meaning (work!—(I)work), etc.The part-of-speech meaning of the words that possess only one form, e.g. prepositions, some adverbs, etc., is observed only in their distribution (cf.to come in (here, there) andin (on, under) the table).
One of the levels at which grammatical meaning operates is that of minor word classes like articles, pronouns, etc.
Members of these word classes are generally listed in dictionaries just as other vocabulary items, that belong to major word-classes of lexical items proper (e.g. nouns, verbs, etc.).
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Distinguishing between grammatical and lexical items
ne criterion for distinguishing these grammatical items from lexical items is in terms of closed and open sets. Grammatical items form closed sets of units usually of small membership (e.g. the set of modern English pronouns, articles, etc.). New items are practically never added.Lexical items proper belong to open sets which have indeterminately large membership; new lexical items which are constantly coined to fulfil the needs of the speech community are added to these open sets.
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Correlation between lexical and grammatical meaning in different parts of speech
he interrelation of the lexical and the grammatical meaning and the role played by each varies in different word-classes and even in different groups of words within one and the same class. In some parts of speech the prevailing component is the grammatical type of meaning. The lexical meaning of prepositions for example is, as a rule, relatively vague(independent of smb, one of the students, the roof of the house).The lexical meaning of some prepositions, however, may be comparatively distinct (cf.in/on, under the table). In verbs the lexical meaning usually comes to the fore although in some of them, the verbto be, e.g., the grammatical meaning of a linking element prevails (cf.he works as a teacher andhe is a teacher).