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Dr. Bill Vicars Lifeprint.com

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1 Dr. Bill Vicars Lifeprint.com

2 ASL Linguistics: Semantics
Linguistics, 5th Edition, Unit 18, Page

3

4 What is the sign for NAME?

5 What is the sign for ROME?

6 LIS = Italian Sign Language Lingua dei Segni Italiana

7 Meaning is determined by…

8 … a specific community of users.

9 Determined = decided = agreed

10 Dictionary problem:

11 Same sign / different glosses

12 Can you think of any signs that have more than one English interpretation?

13 Lets discuss types of meaning…

14 3 types of meaning…

15 Referential Social Affective

16 Referential meaning…

17 idea, thing, state of affairs

18 CAT = 4 legs, tail, whiskers, etc.

19 The "cat" is a referent of the sign CAT.

20 REFER = NAME-(verb)

21 REFER = LABEL

22 -

23 Social Meaning…

24 Sign choices reveal social information

25 where from

26 male or female

27 African American or Caucasian

28 example: AWFUL

29 Affective Meaning…

30 Sign choices reflect your…

31 feelings, attitudes, opinions

32 Example: "fascinating research" vs…

33 "boring old project"

34 Shows your attitude

35 affective = feelings

36 Referential meaning = What

37 Social meaning = Who

38 Affective meaning = How feel

39 Referential meaning = denotation

40 Social and Affective meaning = Connotation

41 Example: “dEAF” = denotation

42 Example: DEAF = connotation

43 What is a lexicon?

44 A set of words known by users of a language.

45 Lexicon = Vocabulary set

46 What is a Lexical item?

47 A word (or sign).

48 The study of semantics includes considering…

49 Relationships of meaning between “lexical items” (words or signs)

50 Ways words are related in meaning

51 Will teach you six ways.

52 Consider: APPLE & CAR

53 APPLE & CAR Are not related

54 Consider:

55 BLUE RED YELLOW GREEN ORANGE PURPLE

56 …are types of what?

57 COLOR

58 BLUE, RED, etc. have a relationship with COLOR

59 That relationship is called:

60 1. Hyponymy

61 BLUE, RED, YELLOW, etc. are hyponyms

62 COLOR is a hypernym

63 Example:

64 Sign Language: ASL, LSF, LIS, LSQ

65 “hyper” means “over” or above.

66 Is "RED" a color?

67 Duh. I have a point.

68 Consider: HAND & ARM

69 Is a HAND an ARM?

70 No.

71 We are not discussing hyponymy.

72 New type of meaning…

73 The relationship between a hand and an arm is a:

74 2. Part/Whole Relationship

75 Another example:

76 PHONOLOGY and LINGUISTICS

77 Note…

78 RED is a type of color…

79 HAND is a part of an arm.

80 Phonology is not a type of linguistics.

81 Phonology is a part of linguistics.

82 So far we’ve talked about what two types of relationships between signs?

83 1. Hyponymy 2. Part/Whole

84 New relationship…

85 Consider: soda & pop

86 sofa & couch

87 Two words that mean the same thing are…

88 Synonyms

89 3. Synonymy

90 Consider however:

91 “Denotative Synonymy” means …

92 “Refer to the same thing.”

93 Two signs can denote (or refer to) the same thing but have a different connotation (social or affective meaning).

94 Can have different connotative meaning.

95 Connotatively not synonymous

96 Connotative = social and affective

97 Connotative = who & how feel

98 DEAF ("index" hand) & DEAF (A-5 hand) are denotatively similar (synonymy) but connotatively dissimilar.

99 DEAF ("index" hand) & DEAF (A-5 hand) both refer to the concept of “not hearing” but the two signs are different in terms of WHO uses them and HOW the user feels about being “Deaf.”

100 Are BED & #BED an example of Synonymy ????

101 Maybe at a basic referential level.

102 But they tend to be used differently in actual conversation.

103 BED & #BED are not synonymous at the sentence or conversation level.

104 That means not synonymous at the "discourse" level.

105 “Discourse" tends to mean the use of sentences or having a conversation.

106 Can you think of another pair of ASL lexicon that has sign version and a lexicalized fingerspelling version?

107 CAR and #CAR

108 BUSY and #BUSY

109 EARLY and #EARLY

110 So far we’ve talked about what three types of relationships between signs?

111

112 1. Hyponymy 2. Part/Whole 3. Synonymy

113 New relationship…

114 Consider: LARGE and SMALL

115 They are opposite in meaning.

116 4. Antonymy = opposites

117 There are two types of Antonymy

118 Gradable & Non-gradable

119 Gradable = levels, degrees, relative

120 Example: LARGER vs SMALLER

121 Non-gradable = one or the other but not both

122 Example: PREGNANT

123 ALIVE or DEAD

124 Gradable: English uses “-er"

125 Gradable: ASL often uses "depiction"

126 Example: "LIMO" vs V W Bug

127 THICK BOOK vs THICKER BOOK

128 ASL Gradation may also use…

129 Nonmanual signals ex: pursed lips / cha.

130 and structure changes, ex:

131 LIMO moves hands further.

132 Consider: GOOD & BAD

133 English GOOD/BAD phonological forms different

134 ASL GOOD/BAD phonological forms similar

135 Reversal of orientation for antonymy

136 Examples…

137 LIKE DON'T-LIKE

138 WANT DON'T-WANT

139 KNOW DON'T-KNOW

140

141 1. Hyponymy 2. Part/Whole 3. Synonymy 4. Antonymy

142 New Relationship…

143 Consider: WIFE & HUSBAND

144 TEACHER STUDENT

145 AUNT NIECE

146 5. Converseness

147 Converseness is sort of similar to antonymy

148 Converseness happens in pairs

149 often phonologically similar

150

151 1. Hyponymy 2. Part/Whole 3. Synonymy 4. Antonymy 5. Converseness

152 New relationship…

153 6. Metaphor

154 Metaphor = extension of meaning

155 Consider:

156 Orientational Metaphor example…

157 DEPRESSED

158 TIRED

159 THRILLED

160 HAPPY

161 Up = positive meaning

162 Down = negative meaning

163 Up = present (APPEAR)

164 Down = absent (DISAPPEAR)

165 -

166 Ontological means …

167 ... relating to or based upon being or existence.

168 The iconic nature of ASL …

169 is ontological

170 Signs (often) look-like what they are.

171 A sign often looks like…

172 …something that exists.

173 The sign ANALYSIS is …

174 mapped to the sign DIGGING…

175 which is mapped to …

176 the real life act of digging.

177 Ontological metaphors treat abstract…

178 entities states and events as if they were objects.

179 "Digging into your psyche."

180 "FALL-INTO an area of interest"

181 "HOLD-ONTO that idea"

182 -

183 Structural Metaphor:

184 Treat abstract concepts in terms of a more concrete concept.

185 "Time is money."

186 ASL ex: TIME-"run out of"

187 -

188 Metaphor: 1. Orientational 2. Ontological 3. Structural

189 4.

190 4. Families of signs

191 What signs can you do with an open-8 handshape?

192 FEEL

193 EXCITE

194 DEPRESS

195 PITY

196 SICK

197 SENSITIVE

198 …other example…

199 Can you think of some signs that seem related to “NOT”?

200 DENY

201 REFUSE

202 BLAME

203 SUFFER

204 Metaphor:

205 Metaphor: 1. Orientational 2. Ontological 3. Structural 4
Metaphor: 1. Orientational 2. Ontological 3. Structural 4. Sign Families

206 There are more types of meaning. Today we’ve discussed six.

207 What are the six types of word “meaning relationships”?

208 1. Hyponymy 2. Part/Whole 3. Synonymy

209 4. Antonymy 5. Converseness 6. Metaphor

210 Here is a way to remember those:

211 CHAMPS

212

213 Dr. Bill Vicars Lifeprint.com


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