What is meant by identity of a word

The object of lexicology. Branches of
lexicology. Contrastive lexicology. Theoretical and practical value
of English lexicology. Types of lexical units. Definition of the
term ‘word’.
The problem of the sign nature of the word.
Nomination. Onomasiology. Motivation of a linguistic sign. The
size-of-unit problem. The identity-of-unit
problem.

Test Questions

  1. What
    does lexicology study?

  2. What
    is the theoretical and practical value of English lexicology?

  3. What
    types of lexical units do you know?

  4. What
    is meant by ‘separability’ and ‘separateness’ of a word?

  5. What
    is meant by identity of a word?

  6. What
    are the properties of a linguistic sign?

  7. What
    are the main stages of the process of naming?

  8. What
    is the phonetical motivation?

  9. What
    is implied by the term ‘morphological motivation’?

  10. What
    does the semantic motivation mean?

Tasks
and assignments

    1. What phonetical variants do the following words have:

lieutenant,
luxurious, hotel, secretary, and, research, direct, necessary,
interesting, entrepreneur, Asian, Persia, Vietnam, fascism, dance,
fast, often, forehead, schedule, zygote, Mercian, Celtic, car,
marquis, issue, duke, tube, news, music, enthusiasm, negotiate,
resume (v), social, sure, heart, year, usage, ceramic, elastic,
hovel, current, expiration, adult, controversial, hegemony, either?

2. Link the variants below with the-identity-of-unit problem.

Bandits
– banditti, mathematic – mathematical, minimum – minimal,
efficient – effectual – efficacious, damp down – dampen down,
woken³ – waked³, bade² – bid², dived² – dove², spilt²˒³
– spilled²˒³, wove² – weaved², shown³ – showed³, shrove²
– shrived², shrank² – shrunk², hewed³ – hewn³, born³ –
borne³.

3. What problem (the sign nature of the word, the size-of-unit, the identity-of unit problems) do we deal with when we ask questions like:

  1. Are
    custom
    and customs
    different words or grammatical forms of the same word?

  2. Are
    the lexical units high
    (e
    .g.
    high building)

    and high
    (=
    drunk)

    different meanings of the same word or homonyms?

  3. Are
    the words opposite
    and
    reverse
    synonyms?

  4. Is
    first
    night

    one word or a word combination?

  5. How
    can one distinguish words in the flow of speech?

  6. How
    can one discriminate between a morpheme and a word?

  7. What
    is the link between the sound form of the word gargle
    and its meaning?

g)
What kinds of lexical variation do you know?

4.
Define the status of the following lingual units in terms of the
size-of-unit problem. Most words are characterized by positional
mobility, morphological uninterruptability (indivisibility), semantic
integrity and
graphic,
phonological and grammatical whole-formedness
.

a
live concert performance, to stay alive;
place-name, name of place, the place; to by-pass the law, by pass
road, to pass by in silence; although, altogether, all right; each
other, one another, others people money; I’m just a fill-in, to
fill in a form; to have ups and downs in life, to go down the street,
to have a nervous breakdown, you will break down if you work too
hard; never mind, nevertheless; as
far as I know, far and away, to be far away from smb.; to put off the
light, to put off the goods; to ask for a handout,
to
hand out medicine, to put one’s hand out trying to rise, to eat out
of one’s hand, to get out of hand;
behind-the-scenes politics, on stage and behind the scenes.

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Meaning and Use

The notion of meaning and use are closely interrelated. It means that the meaning of a word can’t be entirely separated from it’s use in speech.

What are relations between them:

Leach: the lexical meaning is meaning in abstraction and use is meaning in situation.

The difference between:

Meaning Use

1. Found in dictionaries 1. Found in actual use

2. Denotative 2. Conotative

3. Isolated 3. Deriving from context

4. Conventionalized by authority 4. Creative

5. Regulated by authority 5. Negotiated between users

6. Base meaning 6. Extended meaning (расширенное)

7. Predictable 7. Unpredictable

8. Generalized 8. Particular

The nature of meaning is best described with reference to functions of language in human communications.

R. Jacobson ( formulated these functions)

The process of communication includes:

1. The speaker

  1. The Addressee
  2. The Code
  3. The Message ( is what the speaker says in the code)
  4. The Context (the things, qualities, actions that the speaker wants to talk about)
  5. The Contact ( the relations between the speaker and the addressee)

6 functions of the language:

  1. The Emotive (speaker related)

The speaker tries to express his feelings by using emotive language.

type writer (only referential meaning, it serves as a name of a particular object)

America (besides it’s referential meaning, emotive meaning it evokes some attitudes with the

name of the country)

fascist

American life, American English, American Dream

Fascist- the emotive meaning matters much more than the referential meaning.

The larger is the emotive component within the words meaning, the smaller is the significance of it’s referential meaning.

  1. Conative (функция усвоения)

(addressee related)

  1. patterns of speech are chosen with regard to parameters of the situation.
  2. We make the message more listener friendly.
  1. The Metalinguistic (oriented towards language itself)

Every language is a code used to communicate smth.

Languages presents a set of conventions, it means that in actual speech certain words are not our free choice.

A flock of birds we can observe the restricting function of lang.code

A herd of cows

A school of fish

A pride of lions

A swarm of flies, bees

  1. The Poetic (message related)

Some scholars consider language to be the dress of thought (Quirk)

The Poetic function turns language into a deliberately well- tailored dress of thought.

  1. The Referential (context related)

The main function of the language to convey information.

  1. The Phatic (contact related-контактноустанавливающая)

The speaker wants to establish a social bond with a listener, he uses a lot of words which do not convey meaning, but have a purely interactive function.

Nice to see U formula of politeness

How are U?

Talk about the weather

The Identity-Unit_Problem

(проблема тождества слова)

The size- of-unit (проблема отдельности слова) considers words as separate units in the flow of speech (where one word ends and the other word begins).

The identity-of-unit-problem establishes where one word ends and another begins on the dictionary level.

Custom (обычай) different or one word?

Customs (таможня)

In the Longman dictionary- one word despite various.

In the Cambridge dictionary there are free different entries ( the case of “custom” is a homonym)

Speaking about different types of relationship between expression and content.

We should bear in mind one to one correspondence between them is very rare in natural human languages.

For example: polycemy means singleness of form and multiplicity of content.

It’s an instance of the violation the law of the sign which prescribes the direct correspondence of expression of content.

But it’s not typical of the vocabulary of natural language.

Other examples of the violation of the law of the sign.

Homonymy and Synonymy

Identity of expression singleness of content

Difference of context variability of expression

hair-hare

But the law of the sign is not always violated, there are cases of smaller disagreement between expression and content.

Variants of one and the same word.(phonetic, morphologic, semantic are discusses under the title of the identity-of-unit-problem)

The expression plane or content plane of the word may vary. But these variations may not be significant enough to split the word up into different units.

Phonetic Variations.

3 cases:

1.Modifications of the pronunciation of a word depending on the context or it’s position of a word depending on the context or it’s position of an utterance and now and that

King and Queen

The conjunction is reduced in these combinations.

2. Accentual variation- different coexisting stress patterns of one and the same word.

Br. teritory Am. teritory

dictionary dictionary

3.Emic variation- multiple pronunciation of one and the same word.

[i] [i]

explain begin

[e] [e]

ceramic [si`ramic]

[ki`ramic]

[a:]

drastic

[a]

Morphological variation.

It takes place when different derivational morphemes are used without changing the words meaning.

Academic, academical

Morphologic, morphological

But not: historic are not morphologic variants, but synonyms.

Historical

Historic- memorable in history associated with past time.

A historic event.

Historical- belonging to history (real not imaginative) or dealing with real events in history.

A historical novel

Historical events (реальные)

This is a historic and historical place.

Рус.: обклеить бычий

оклеить бычачий

ананасовый

ананасный

Lexical Variation.

Is determined by different registers

formal/ informal

spoken/ written

laboratory/ lab

examination/ exam

television/ tele

often/ oft (poetic)

Semantic Variation.

Is the most significant type of variation within the word.

Is the modification of it’s content plane.

A number of meanings of a given word are called lexical semantic variants.

The majority of words in any language have more than one meaning.

This is how the principle of language economy is manifested.

Vinogradov: the meaning of a word can be:

1. Nominative.

2. Nominative- derivative

3.Collegationally and collocationally conditioned.

4. Phraseologically bound.

  1. Nominative is the basic meaning of a word which refers to objects of extra linguistic reality in a direct way and reflects their actual relations.
  2. Nominative-Derivative meaning comes into being when the word is “stretched out”semantically to cover new facts and extra linguistic phenomena.

When the speaker uses the word metaphorically he extends it’s content.

The metaphorical use is based on certain similarities observed by the speaker.

Sweet not only taste, but pleasant, attractive

Sweet face, voice, little baby.

Here we speak

Different meaning- the identity of the word remains intact, because the difference in meaning is not great enough to split the word into 2 different units.

When the speaker observes similarities between the objects, the semantic content of a word is made elastic to be stretched out and cover new bits of reality.

Metaphoric meanings are registered in dictionaries.

Such meanings are often poetically present in the semantic structure of the word.

Some words (adj-s) are characterized by broad meaningness, it allows them to develop new meanings.

cool, chilly, frozen, hot

eyes were frozen with terror

For parts of the body:

Hand- рука,стрелка часов face-лицо, циферблат часов (of a clock)

Foot- нога,подножие горы leg- нога, ножка стула

Tongue-язык, языки пламени eye-глаз, ушко иголки (~of a needle)

If nominative meaning is a direct meaning: Nominative-Derivative meaning is a transfered meaning.

Collegiationally and collocationally conditioned meanings are not free, but bound.

  1. Collegationally conditioned meaning is determined by morphosyntactic combinability of words. Some meanings are realized only without a given morphosyntactic pattern (collegation)

to tell- рассказать, сказать

In passive constructions means to order/to direct

You must do what you’re told.

To carry- нести

In passive construction= to accept

The amendment to the bill was carried.

  1. Collocationally conditioned meaning is determined by lexical- phraseological combinality of words.

There are meaning which depend on the word association with other words (collocation)

A herd of cows, a flock of sheep

Collocation is used here as a typical behaviour of a word in speech.

Firth: U shall know a virt by the company he keeps.

Mccarthy: Collocation is a marriage contract between words, some words are more firmly married to each other than others.

Certain meanings belong only to a given collocation, q word is habitually associated with another word to form a natural sounding combinations.

4. Phraseologically bound meaning.

Collocations should be distinguished from idioms and phraseological units.

Idioms and phraseological units are devoid of referential meanings.

The meanings of the individual words can’t be summed together to produce the meaning of the idiomatic expression.

to kick the bucket = to die

This idiom is opaque (непрозрачный)

Word Meaning Lecture # 6 Grigoryeva M.

Word Meaning Lecture # 6 Grigoryeva M.

Word Meaning Approaches to word meaning Meaning and Notion (понятие) Types of word meaning

Word Meaning Approaches to word meaning Meaning and Notion (понятие) Types of word meaning Types of morpheme meaning Motivation

Each word has two aspects: the outer aspect ( its sound form) cat the

Each word has two aspects: the outer aspect ( its sound form) cat the inner aspect (its meaning) long-legged, fury animal with sharp teeth and claws

Sound and meaning do not always constitute a constant unit even in the same

Sound and meaning do not always constitute a constant unit even in the same language EX a temple a part of a human head a large church

Semantics (Semasiology) Is a branch of lexicology which studies the meaning of words and

Semantics (Semasiology) Is a branch of lexicology which studies the meaning of words and word equivalents

Approaches to Word Meaning The Referential (analytical) approach The Functional (contextual) approach Operational (information-oriented)

Approaches to Word Meaning The Referential (analytical) approach The Functional (contextual) approach Operational (information-oriented) approach

The Referential (analytical) approach formulates the essence of meaning by establishing the interdependence between

The Referential (analytical) approach formulates the essence of meaning by establishing the interdependence between words and things or concepts they denote distinguishes between three components closely connected with meaning: the sound-form of the linguistic sign, the concept the actual referent

Basic Triangle concept – flower concept (thought, reference) – the thought of the object

Basic Triangle concept – flower concept (thought, reference) – the thought of the object that singles out its essential features referent – object denoted by the word, part of reality sound-form (symbol, sign) – linguistic sign sound-form [rәuz] referent

In what way does meaning correlate with each element of the triangle ? •

In what way does meaning correlate with each element of the triangle ? • In what relation does meaning stand to each of them? •

Meaning and Sound-form are not identical different EX. dove - [dΛv] English [golub’] Russian

Meaning and Sound-form are not identical different EX. dove — [dΛv] English [golub’] Russian [taube] German sound-forms BUT the same meaning

Meaning and Sound-form nearly identical sound-forms have different meanings in different languages EX. [kot]

Meaning and Sound-form nearly identical sound-forms have different meanings in different languages EX. [kot] Russian – a male cat [kot] English – a small bed for a child identical sound-forms have different meanings (‘homonyms) EX. knight [nait]

Meaning and Sound-form even considerable changes in sound-form do not affect the meaning EX

Meaning and Sound-form even considerable changes in sound-form do not affect the meaning EX Old English lufian [luvian] – love [l Λ v]

Meaning and Concept concept is a category of human cognition concept is abstract and

Meaning and Concept concept is a category of human cognition concept is abstract and reflects the most common and typical features of different objects and phenomena in the world meanings of words are different in different languages

Meaning and Concept identical concepts may have different semantic structures in different languages EX.

Meaning and Concept identical concepts may have different semantic structures in different languages EX. concept “a building for human habitation” – English Russian HOUSE ДОМ + in Russian ДОМ “fixed residence of family or household” In English HOME

Meaning and Referent one and the same object (referent) may be denoted by more

Meaning and Referent one and the same object (referent) may be denoted by more than one word of a different meaning cat pussy animal tiger

Meaning is not identical with any of the three points of the triangle –

Meaning is not identical with any of the three points of the triangle – the sound form, the concept the referent BUT is closely connected with them.

Functional Approach studies the functions of a word in speech meaning of a word

Functional Approach studies the functions of a word in speech meaning of a word is studied through relations of it with other linguistic units EX. to move (we move, move a chair) movement (movement of smth, slow movement) The distriution ( the position of the word in relation to others) of the verb to move and a noun movement is different as they belong to different classes of words and their meanings are different

Operational approach is centered on defining meaning through its role in the process of

Operational approach is centered on defining meaning through its role in the process of communication EX John came at 6 Beside the direct meaning the sentence may imply that: He was late He failed to keep his promise He was punctual as usual He came but he didn’t want to The implication depends on the concrete situation

Lexical Meaning and Notion denotes the Lexical meaning is reflection in the realization of

Lexical Meaning and Notion denotes the Lexical meaning is reflection in the realization of a mind of real objects notion by means of a definite language system Notion is a unit of Word is a language thinking unit

Lexical Meaning and Notions are Meanings are internationally limited especially with the nations of

Lexical Meaning and Notions are Meanings are internationally limited especially with the nations of the same EX GO (E) —- ИДТИ(R) cultural level “To move” BUT !!! To GO by bus (E) ЕХАТЬ (R) EX Man -мужчина, человек Она – хороший человек (R) She is a good person (E)

Types of Meaning Types grammatical meaning of meaning lexico-grammatical meaning lexical meaning denotational connotational

Types of Meaning Types grammatical meaning of meaning lexico-grammatical meaning lexical meaning denotational connotational

Grammatical Meaning component of meaning recurrent in identical sets of individual forms of different

Grammatical Meaning component of meaning recurrent in identical sets of individual forms of different words EX. girls, winters, toys, tables – grammatical meaning of plurality asked, thought, walked – meaning of past tense

Lexico-grammatical meaning (part –of- speech meaning) is revealed in the classification of lexical items

Lexico-grammatical meaning (part –of- speech meaning) is revealed in the classification of lexical items into: major word classes (N, V, Adj, Adv) minor ones (artc, prep, conj) words of one lexico-grammatical class have the same paradigm

Lexical Meaning is the meaning proper to the given linguistic unit in all its

Lexical Meaning is the meaning proper to the given linguistic unit in all its forms and distributions EX. Go – goes — went lexical meaning – process of movement

PRACTICE Group the words into 3 column according to the grammatical, lexical or part-of

PRACTICE Group the words into 3 column according to the grammatical, lexical or part-of –speech meaning • • Boy’s, nearest, at, beautiful, think, man, drift, wrote, tremendous, ship’s, the most beautiful, table, near, for, went, friend’s, handsome, thinking, boy, nearer, thought, boys, lamp, go, during.

 • Grammatical 1. The case of nouns: boy’s, ship’s, friend’s 2. The degree

• Grammatical 1. The case of nouns: boy’s, ship’s, friend’s 2. The degree of comparison of adj: nearest, the most beautiful 3. The tense of verbs: wrote, went, thought • Lexical 1. Think, thinking, thought 2. Went, go 3. Boy’s, boys 4. Nearest, nearer 5. At, for, during (“time”) 6. Beautiful, the most beautiful • Part-of-speech Nouns—verbs—adj—-prep

Aspects of Lexical meaning The denotational aspect The connotational aspect The pragmatic aspect

Aspects of Lexical meaning The denotational aspect The connotational aspect The pragmatic aspect

Denotational Meaning “denote” – to be a sign of, stand as a symbol for”

Denotational Meaning “denote” – to be a sign of, stand as a symbol for” establishes the correlation between the name and the object makes communication possible EX booklet “a small thin book that gives info about smth”

PRACTICE Explain denotational meaning • • A lion-hunter To have a heart like a

PRACTICE Explain denotational meaning • • A lion-hunter To have a heart like a lion To feel like a lion To roar like a lion To be thrown to the lions The lion’s share To put your head in lion’s mouth

PRACTICE • A lion-hunter A host that seeks out celebrities to impress guests •

PRACTICE • A lion-hunter A host that seeks out celebrities to impress guests • To have a heart like a lion To have great courage • To feel like a lion To be in the best of health • To roar like a lion To shout very loudly • To be thrown to the lions To be criticized strongly or treated badly • The lion’s share Much more than one’s share • To put your head in lion’s mouth

Connotational Meaning reflects the attitude of the speaker towards what he speaks about it

Connotational Meaning reflects the attitude of the speaker towards what he speaks about it is optional – a word either has it or not Connotation gives additional information and includes: The emotive charge EX Daddy (for father) Intensity EX to adore (for to love) Imagery EX to wade through a book “ to walk with an effort”

PRACTICE Give possible interpretation of the sentences • She failed to buy it and

PRACTICE Give possible interpretation of the sentences • She failed to buy it and felt a strange pang. • Don’t be afraid of that woman! It’s just barking! • He got up from his chair moving slowly, like an old man. • The girl went to her father and pulled his sleeve. • He was longing to begin to be generous. • She was a woman with shiny red hands and workswollen finger knuckles.

PRACTICE Give possible interpretation of the sentences • She failed to buy it and

PRACTICE Give possible interpretation of the sentences • She failed to buy it and felt a strange pang. (pain—dissatisfaction that makes her suffer) • Don’t be afraid of that woman! It’s just barking! (make loud sharp sound—-the behavior that implies that the person is frightened) • He got up from his chair moving slowly, like an old man. (to go at slow speed—was suffering or was ill) • The girl went to her father and pulled his sleeve. (to move smth towards oneself— to try to attract smb’s attention) • He was longing to begin to be generous. (to start doing— hadn’t been generous before) • She was a woman with shiny red hands and work-swollen finger knuckles. (colour— a labourer involved into physical work , constant contact with water)

The pragmatic aspect of lexical meaning the situation in which the word is uttered,

The pragmatic aspect of lexical meaning the situation in which the word is uttered, the social circumstances (formal, informal, etc. ), social relationships between the interlocutors (polite, rough, etc. ), the type and purpose of communication (poetic, official, etc. ) EX horse (neutral) steed (poetic) nag (slang) gee-gee (baby language)

PRACTICE State what image underline the meaning • I heard what she said but

PRACTICE State what image underline the meaning • I heard what she said but it didn’t sink into my mind. • You should be ashamed of yourself, crawling to the director like that. • They seized on the idea. • Bill, chasing some skirt again? • I saw him dive into a small pub. • Why are you trying to pin the blame on me? • He only married her for her dough.

PRACTICE State what image underline the meaning • I heard what she said but

PRACTICE State what image underline the meaning • I heard what she said but it didn’t sink into my mind. • (to understand completely) • You should be ashamed of yourself, crawling to the director like that. (to behave humbly in order to win favour) • They seized on the idea. (to be eager to take and use) • Bill, chasing some skirt again? (a girl) • I saw him dive into a small pub. (to enter suddenly) • Why are you trying to pin the blame on me? (to blame smb unfairly) • He only married her for her dough. (money)

Types of Morpheme Meaning lexical differential functional distributional

Types of Morpheme Meaning lexical differential functional distributional

Lexical Meaning in Morphemes root-morphemes that are homonymous to words possess lexical meaning EX.

Lexical Meaning in Morphemes root-morphemes that are homonymous to words possess lexical meaning EX. boy – boyhood – boyish affixes have lexical meaning of a more generalized character EX. –er “agent, doer of an action”

Lexical Meaning in Morphemes has denotational and connotational components EX. –ly, -like, -ish –

Lexical Meaning in Morphemes has denotational and connotational components EX. –ly, -like, -ish – denotational meaning of similiarity womanly , womanish connotational component – -ly (positive evaluation), -ish (deragotary) женственный женоподобный

Differential Meaning a semantic component that serves to distinguish one word from all others

Differential Meaning a semantic component that serves to distinguish one word from all others containing identical morphemes EX. cranberry, blackberry, gooseberry

Functional Meaning found only in derivational affixes a semantic component which serves to refer

Functional Meaning found only in derivational affixes a semantic component which serves to refer the word to the certain part of speech EX. just, adj. – justice, n.

Distributional Meaning the meaning of the order and the arrangement of morphemes making up

Distributional Meaning the meaning of the order and the arrangement of morphemes making up the word found in words containing more than one morpheme different arrangement of the same morphemes would make the word meaningless EX. sing- + -er =singer, -er + sing- = ?

Motivation denotes the relationship between the phonetic or morphemic composition and structural pattern of

Motivation denotes the relationship between the phonetic or morphemic composition and structural pattern of the word on the one hand, and its meaning on the other can be phonetical morphological semantic

Phonetical Motivation when there is a certain similarity between the sounds that make up

Phonetical Motivation when there is a certain similarity between the sounds that make up the word and those produced by animals, objects, etc. EX. sizzle, boom, splash, cuckoo

Morphological Motivation when there is a direct connection between the structure of a word

Morphological Motivation when there is a direct connection between the structure of a word and its meaning EX. finger-ring – ring-finger, A direct connection between the lexical meaning of the component morphemes EX think –rethink “thinking again”

Semantic Motivation based on co-existence of direct and figurative meanings of the same word

Semantic Motivation based on co-existence of direct and figurative meanings of the same word EX a watchdog – ”a dog kept for watching property” a watchdog – “a watchful human guardian” (semantic motivation)

 • PRACTICE

• PRACTICE

Analyze the meaning of the words. Define the type of motivation a) morphologically motivated

Analyze the meaning of the words. Define the type of motivation a) morphologically motivated b) semantically motivated • Driver • Leg • Horse • Wall • Hand-made • Careless • piggish

Analyze the meaning of the words. Define the type of motivation a) morphologically motivated

Analyze the meaning of the words. Define the type of motivation a) morphologically motivated b) semantically motivated • Driver Someone who drives a vehicle morphologically motivated • Leg The part of a piece of furniture such as a table semantically motivated • Horse A piece of equipment shaped like a box, used in gymnastics semantically motivated

 • Wall Emotions or behavior preventing people from feeling close semantically motivated •

• Wall Emotions or behavior preventing people from feeling close semantically motivated • Hand-made Made by hand, not machine morphologically motivated • Careless Not taking enough care morphologically motivated • Piggish Selfish semantically motivated

what she said but it didn’t sink in my mind “do down to the

what she said but it didn’t sink in my mind “do down to the bottom” ‘to be accepted by mind” semantic motivation I heard Why are you trying to pin the blame on me? “fasten smth somewhere using a pin” – ”to blame smb” semantic motivation I was following the man when he dived into a pub. “jump into deep water” – ”to enter into suddenly” semantic motivation You should be ashamed of yourself, crawling to the director like that “to move along on hands and knees close to the ground” – “to behave very humbly in order to win favor” semantic motivation

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