Lexical semantics: Difference between revisions
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A question asked is if meaning is established by looking at the neighbourhood in the semantic net a word is part of and by looking at the other words it occurs with in natural sentences or if the meaning is already locally contained in a word. Another question is how words map to concepts. As tools, [[lexical relation]]s like [[synonym]]y, [[antonym]]y (opposites), [[hyponym]]y and [[hypernym]]y are used in this field. | A question asked is if meaning is established by looking at the neighbourhood in the semantic net a word is part of and by looking at the other words it occurs with in natural sentences or if the meaning is already locally contained in a word. Another question is how words map to concepts. As tools, [[lexical relation]]s like [[synonym]]y, [[antonym]]y (opposites), [[hyponym]]y and [[hypernym]]y are used in this field. | ||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 20:35, 21 June 2012
Lexical semantics is a subfield of linguistics. It is the study of how and what the words of a language denote (Pustejovsky, 1995). Words may either be taken to denote things in the world, or concepts, depending on the particular approach to lexical semantics.
Lexical units are the words so lexical semantics involves the meaning of each individual word. Lexical semantics is the one area of linguistics to which we can continually add throughout our lives, as we are always learning new words and their meanings whereas we can only learn the rules of our native language during the critical period when we are young.
It covers theories of the classification and decomposition of word meaning, the differences and similarities in lexical semantic structure between different languages, and the relationship of word meaning to sentence meaning and syntax.
A question asked is if meaning is established by looking at the neighbourhood in the semantic net a word is part of and by looking at the other words it occurs with in natural sentences or if the meaning is already locally contained in a word. Another question is how words map to concepts. As tools, lexical relations like synonymy, antonymy (opposites), hyponymy and hypernymy are used in this field.
External links
- Lexical Semantics and Linking in the Hierarchical Lexicon - Dissertation by Tony Davis
- Philip Edmonds on near-synonyms (Chapter 4.1 Lexical semantics)
- Bibliography of linguistics papers dealing with lexical semantics
- The Lexical Semantics of a Machine Translation Interlingua by Rick Morneau
References
- Lexical Semantics by D.A. Cruse. Cambridge University Press, 1986. ISBN 0-521-27643-8
- Pustejovsky, James, The Generative Lexicon, 1995, MIT Press; presents a theory of lexical semantics.