SEMANTIC
How are you bloggers? I
hope you always keep healthy and enjoy with our life. Keep spirit and always
still study to be better human. Before, I have to posted about linguistics,
although not more deeply, and in this opportunity I want to describe about
semantics, the branch of linguistic. Well everybody, please still read my blog…
a. What is Semantic?
Semantics is the study of linguistic
meaning of morphemes, words, phrases and sentences.
b. Subfields of Semantics are:
⤇Lexical Semantics is concerned with the meaning of words, and the meaning relationships among words.
b. Subfields of Semantics are:
⤇Lexical Semantics is concerned with the meaning of words, and the meaning relationships among words.
⤇ Phrasal or Sentential Semantics
is concerned with the meaning of syntactic units larger than the word.
⤇Pragmatics
is the study of how context and situation affect meaning.
c. What is Meaning?
⤇ Conceptual Meaning: Conceptual meaning covers those basic, essential components of meaning that are conveyed by the literal use of a word.
⤇ Conceptual Meaning: Conceptual meaning covers those basic, essential components of meaning that are conveyed by the literal use of a word.
⤇Associative Meaning
is the type of meaning that people might connect with the use of words. The associative meaning of an expression
has to do with individual mental understandings of the
speaker.
D. TAUTOLOGIES (ANALYTIC SENTENCES)
Tautology is
a sentence that is true in all situations; a sentence true from the meaning of
its words alone. These sentences are always true regardless of the
circumstances.
E.
CONTRADICTIONS
Contradiction
describes a sentence that is false by virtue of its meaning alone,
irrespective of context.
F.
SYNTHETIC SENTENCES
A synthetic statement is one which is not analytic
or contradictory, but which may be true or false depending on the context.
Synthetic sentences are based on our sensory data and experience
The truth value of a synthetic statement can’t be
figured out solely by logic. Examples;
ð My
oldest cousin is female.
G.AMBUGITY
Our semantic knowledge tells us when
words, phrases or sentences have more than one meaning, that is, when they are
ambiguous. In structural ambiguity
the same sequence of words has two or more meanings. The boy saw the man with a
telescope is an instance of structural ambiguity. It is ambiguous because it
can mean that the boy saw the man by using a telescope or that the boy saw the
man who was holding a telescope. The sentence is structurally ambiguous because
it is associated with two different phrase structures, each corresponding to a
different meaning. Lexical ambiguity
arises when at least one word in a phrase has more than one meaning. For example
the sentence “The fisherman went to the bank” is ambiguous; because the word "bank" has
distinct lexical definitions, including "financial institution"
and "edge of a river".
ð Our
knowledge of lexical and structural ambiguities reveals that the meaning of a
linguistic expression is built both on the words it contains and its syntactic
structure.
H.
IDIOMS
An idiom is an expression whose meaning does
not conform to the principle of compositionality, that is, may be unrelated to
the meaning of its parts.
J.
SYNONYMY
Synonymy is used to
mean sameness of meaning. Synonyms are words with the same or similar meanings.
Words that are synonyms are said to be synonymous, and the state of
being a synonym is called synonymy. Synonyms can often, though not
always, be substituted for each other in sentences.
K. PROTOTYPES
Prototype is the most characteristic instance of a category. While the
words canary, cormorant, dove, duck, flamingo, parrot, pelican and robin are all
equally co-hyponyms of the superordinate bird, they are not all considered to
be equally good examples of the category “bird.” According to some researchers,
the most characteristic instance of the category “bird” is robin. The concept
of a prototype helps explain the meaning of certain words, like bird, not in
terms of component features (e.g. “has feathers,” “has wings”), but in terms of
resemblance to the clearest example. Given the category label furniture, we are
quick to recognize chair as a better example than bench or stool. Given
clothing, people recognize shirts quicker than shoes, and given vegetable, they
accept carrot before potato or tomato. It is clear that there is some general
pattern to the categorization process involved in prototypes and that it
determines our interpretation of word meaning.
CONCLUSION:
Based on my opinion from the explanation above semantic is the brances of linguistic that study of meaning in sentences more deeply like euphemism, synonym, idioms, ambiguity and other brances of semantic.
Based on my opinion from the explanation above semantic is the brances of linguistic that study of meaning in sentences more deeply like euphemism, synonym, idioms, ambiguity and other brances of semantic.
It looks like a summary than a review of an article. Would you mind to make the demography, streghtness and also the weakness of the article ? Thankyou !
BalasHapus
HapusThanks nabila his advice and the next post I will fix again
You have to take the strengthness and weakness in your review, so It will be clear to understand for what this article is.
BalasHapus
HapusThanksIndah his advice and the next post I will fix again
It is nice summary 😊😊😊
BalasHapus
HapusThanks dela for visiting my blog....
You can add more explanation in own words about your comment start from demography( the title, how many the pages, who is the author/post by, where he/she comes from,etc) and add the strengthness or the weakness.. nice blog
BalasHapus
HapusThanks her advice and her suggestions and criticism will build my passion for better in the next post
your example is not komplit, please add the example in the each part of semantic
BalasHapus
HapusThanks rumi advice and the next post may I explain more complete and trimakasih have been visited on my blog
please check in google how to make review of article kak,hahaha thank you
BalasHapus