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Antonymy Antonymy is a standard technical term used for oppositeness of meaning between lexemes.

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Presentation on theme: "Antonymy Antonymy is a standard technical term used for oppositeness of meaning between lexemes."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 Antonymy

3 Antonymy is a standard technical term used for oppositeness of meaning between lexemes.

4 A) gradable opposites ( contraries) a. They will show different degrees of a given quality.

5 poorrich 0 25 50 75 100...

6 b. They can be qualified by adverbials of degree.

7 C. Their meanings are relative to each other. One meaning is determined in reference to the meaning of the other.

8 Since contraries are gradable, the semantic contrast in a contrary pair is relative; i.e. there are often intermediate terms between the two opposites.

9 Thus we have not just rich and poor, but there are such gradations as rich,well-to-do, well-off, moderately wealthy, comfortably off, hard up, poor.

10 d. Since they show different degrees of a given quality, they will allow a middle ground between them. poorrich 0 50 100...

11 e. The negation of one does not mean the assertion of the other. “ He is not rich” does not mean “he is poor.”

12 They can be used in the structure “ neither…nor: for example: I am neither rich nor poor.

13 F. This kind of antonyms can be analysed in terms of markedness ( 标记)

14 Now the terms “marked” and “unmarked” have been widely used in the analysis of meaning. A word is unmarked if it is semantically inclusive, or broader in meaning while a word is marked if it is semantically narrower.

15 Unmarked ( long) Marked(short) Unmarked (long) Length of the scale

16 well, badly A. How well do you speak English? B. Very well C. Very poorly D. Like a native. Very often this kind of antonyms are not symmetric in meaning.

17 well, badly A. How badly do you speak English? B. Very well C. Very poorly D. Like a native.

18 old/young heavy/light Wide /narrow deep/shallow far/near long/short

19 Complementarity Antonyms which can not be compared to determine whether they have the same degree of a certain property are called ungradable opposites. Complementarities are very often ungradable opposites.

20 The negation of one is the assertion of the other. For example: alive/dead “ He is not alive” means “ He is dead”.

21 They can not be used in the structure “ neither…nor” because they do not allow possibilities between them: for example: I am neither alive nor dead.

22 More examples: male/female married/single boy/girl brother/sister

23 Relational opposites ( Conversives) 换位反义词 They express the reversal of a relationship between items or a contrast of directions.

24 Usually there is an independence of meaning. One member of the pair presupposes the other member.Therefore they form a unity of opposites.

25 If A sells a watch to B, B buys a watch from A. If A gives a pen to B, B receives a pen from A. If A lends money to B, B borrows money from A.

26 husband/wife fiance/fiancee parent/child above/below debtor/creditor More examples?

27 Very often a word is polysemous in nature, therefore, a word may have different corresponding antonyms, for example: Fresh bread/stale bread fresh air/stuffy air fresh flowers/faded flowers

28 Polysemy and homonymy

29 Homonymy In the English language, there are many pairs or groups of words, which, though different in meaning, are pronounced alike or spelled alike, or both. Such words are called homonyms

30 A. Types of homonyms English homonyms are classified as follows: 1. Perfect homonyms: words identical in sound and spelling but different in meaning are called perfect homonyms;

31 lie vi make a statement that one knows to be untrue; lie vi be, put oneself flat on a horizontal surface or in a resting position; page n. one side of a leaf of paper in a book, periodical, etc.; page n. boy servant, usu. in uniform, in a hotel, club, etc.;

32 base n. the thing or part on which something rests; base adj. having or showing little or no honour, courage or decency;

33 2. Homophones: Words identical in sound but different in spelling and meaning are called homophones.

34 air, heir; bear, bare;

35 pair, pear; son, sun;

36 compliment, complement; principal, principle; stationary, stationery,

37 3. Homographs: Words identical in spelling but different in sound and meaning are called homographs: e.g.: lead /li:d/ v. guide or take, esp. by going in front, etc. lead /led/ v. easily melted metal of a dull bluish-grey colour

38 Polysemy

39 The word Polysemy is of Greek origin (GK polys, much + sema, meaning). It has been defined as "...A term used in semantic analysis to refer to a lexical item which has a range of different meanings ( Crystal 1980:274)."

40 The ability of one word to denote several senses is one of the basic peculiarities of human speech. A glance at any English dictionary will give you an idea of how frequent polysemy is. One - meaning words (monosemic words) are very rare. They are very often scientific terms (e.g. oxygen, moonwalk, and earthrise).

41 fair: (of attitude, behavior ) just and honest ( of results ) average, quite good ( of the weather ) clear and sunny ( of amount ) satisfactory, abundant ( of the skin, hair ) pair; light in colour

42 Sources of polysemy A. Shifts in application Words have a number of different aspects according to the contexts in which they are used.

43 The adjective " handsome", for example, has been used, in the course of its history, in the following sense, grouped according to the noun to which they refer:

44 Persons: a) apt, skilled, clever b) proper, fitting, decent c) beautiful with dignity Concretes: a) easy to handle b) of fair size c) beautiful with dignity d) proper, fitting ( of dress )

45 Action, speech: a) appropriate, apt, clever Conduct: a) fitting, seemly b) gallant, brave c) generous, magnanimous

46 Sizes, sums: a) fair, moderately large b) ample, liberal, munificent

47 B. Specialization in a social milieu Polysemy often arises through a kind of verbal shorthand. For a lawyer, "action" will naturally mean legal action; for the soldier it will mean a military operation, without any need for a qualifying epithet.

48 C. Figurative language Many inanimate objects are compared to the parts of the human body.

49 the eye of a needle 针眼 the eye of a potato 马铃薯的芽眼 the eye of the hurricane 风眼 the eye of a flower 花心 the eye of a peacock’s tail 孔雀翎斑 the eye of the revolution 革命中心

50 An ass: a stupid foolish person A pig:a dirty, greedy or ill- mannered person

51 A mouse: a person, esp. A woman, who is quiet and timid A goose: a silly person, esp. female

52 A cat: a nasty person A rat: a low worthless disloyal man

53 An ape: a person who copies the behaviour of others A monkey: a child who is full of annoying playfulness and trick

54 A parrot: a person who repeats, often without understanding, the words or actions of another


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