1 Analysing and teaching meaning SSIS Lazio - Lesson 1 prof. Hugo Bowles January 2007.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Unit 10 Sense Relations (1)
Advertisements

Chapter 5 Meaning 5.1 What is semantics
Topic 5: sense Introduction to Semantics. Definition The sense of an expression is its indispensable hard core of meaning. The sum of sense properties.
Semantics Chapter 5.
Word Relations, Sense Relations and Doublets
Reference & Denotation Connotation Sense Relations
The Dimensions of Meaning
Term 2 Week 4. SynonymyAntonymyHyponymyPrototypes.
1 Word meaning and equivalence M.A. Literary Translation- Lesson 1 prof. Hugo Bowles January
Teaching Vocabulary to advanced students:
Unit 8 Teaching Vocabulary Teaching objectives :  1. know the meaning of knowing a word  2. grasp ways of presenting vocabulary  3. grasp ways of.
1 MODULE 2 Meaning and discourse in English LEXICAL RELATIONS Lesson 2.
Semantics: The Analysis of Meaning
ANTONYMS.
Semantics. Semantics-concerned with the investigation of meaning in a language without any reference to the context of situation The study of linguistic.
LEXICAL RELATION (2) TRUTH CONDITIONAL SEMANTICS:
Session 8 Lexical Semantic
It’s just a matter of…. SEMANTICS. Words can “contain” 2 types of meaning – Conceptual Basic, essential components of meaning conveyed by the literal.
ANALYZE the MEANING of LEXICAL ITEMS Thee are three ways of doing it, looking at : 1.The components of meaning of lexical items, 2.The meaning of lexical.
5.3 Wording Meaning The Third Week.
Semantics.
Teaching vocabulary. Introduction  the average native speaker uses around only 5000 words in everyday speech  your students won't need to produce every.
V. SEMANTICS. 1. Semantics—the study of meaning 2. Some views on semantics 2.1 Naming things: Words are names of things, as held by Aristotle. 2.2 Concepts.
Unit Five Semantics, Study of Meaning
Outline of Chapter 2 Howard Jackson, Lexicography: An Introduction  Brief History of English  Mechanisms for creating new vocabulary Coining Borrowing.
Meaning. Semantics (the study of meaning) Semantics: the study of meaning, or to be more specific, the study of the meaning of linguistic units, words.
Semantics and Pragmatics. Semantics Definition: The study of meaning in language. Pragmatics The study of how context contributes to meaning in language.
Teaching Vocabulary What is vocabulary ? Vocabulary can be defined as the words we teach in the foreign language. Vocabulary is the glue that holds stories,
How Do You Guess The Meaning Of An Unfamiliar Word? There are words or phrases (or CONTEXT CLUES) around an unfamiliar word that can help you understand.
Semantics Continued… Meaning Relationships Entailments Maxims of Conversation.
Semantic/ meaning Fields and Components of Meaning.
Meaning of words in situations or in context.  Do you recognize it?  Do you know its dictionary definition(s)?  Do you know the connotation(s) for.
Wordnet - A lexical database for the English Language.
SEMANTICS An Introduction to Linguistics. What does semantics study? Semantics studies the meaning of language.
Type a sentence using the word.
Teaching vocabulary.
Semantics Nuha Alwadaani. Semantics Semantics is the study of the meaning of words, phrases and sentences. Conceptual meaning: covers those basic, essential.
Starter: consider these sentences
An Approach to English Translation of Islamic Texts 1 Cohesion.
Semantics Lecture 5. Semantics Language uses a system of linguistic signs, each of which is a combination of meaning and phonological and/or orthographic.
SEMANTICS Chapter 10 Ms. Abrar Mujaddidi. What is semantics?  Semantics is the study of the conventional meaning conveyed by the use of words, phrases.
In this lecture, we will learn about: Translation.
Sense relation: Paradigmatic relation Prepared by: Narmin Abdullrahman
Lexical Semantics Team members: 陈俊 许佳莹 朱煜佳 俞金晶 李明霞 包佳鑫.
King Faisal University جامعة الملك فيصل Deanship of E-Learning and Distance Education عمادة التعلم الإلكتروني والتعليم عن بعد ] 1 [ [ ] 1 جامعة الملك فيصل.
Chapter 3 Word Meaning.
King Faisal University جامعة الملك فيصل Deanship of E-Learning and Distance Education عمادة التعلم الإلكتروني والتعليم عن بعد [ ] 1 King Faisal University.
English Morphology and Lexicology
English Lexical Semantics
Entry Test analytic/synthetic/contradiction synonymy/hyponymy
Semantics: The Analysis of Meaning
Semantics: The Analysis of Meaning
How we analysis meaning
Semantics.
Lesson 11 Lexical semantics 1
2. Lexical equivalence and non-equivalence
Lesson 14 Lexical semantics 2 Semantic change
Vaeta Mwatilange Natalia Bachelor of English Honours
ArtsSemNet: From Bilingual Dictionary To Bilingual Semantic Network
What is Linguistics? The scientific study of human language
An Introduction to Linguistics
The study of linguistic meaning
Dr. Bill Vicars Lifeprint.com
Lesson 11 Lexical semantics 1
Reference & Denotation Connotation Sense Relations
Word Map Word Maps are DUE on Friday.
Denotative meaning and translation issues
Outlines of the presentation
INTRODUCTION TO SEMANTICS DEPARTMENT OF LANGUAGES
Presentation transcript:

1 Analysing and teaching meaning SSIS Lazio - Lesson 1 prof. Hugo Bowles January 2007

2 Lesson 1 - part 1 Analysing word meaning

3 PARADIGMATIC & SYNTAGMATIC RELATIONS Horizontal relationships are syntagmatic Vertical relationships are paradigmatic So semantic relationships are paradigmatic

4 Lexical relations - Hyponymy Flower daffodil tulip pansy rose Sheep ram ewe lamb In this model one lexeme can substitute another: “X is a kind of Y”. This relation is called HYPONYMY

5 Do these pairs mean the same thing? enough sufficient insane mad rancid rotten autumn fall die kick the bucket deep profound fraternal brotherly sodium chloride freedom liberty endless everlasting purchase buy regal kingly

6 Lexical relations - SYNONYMY Synonyms are lexemes which have the same meaning English has a lot of synonyms because its vocabulary comes from different sources (Anglo-Saxon, Latin, Greek, French) But is it possible to have true synonyms, i.e. words with exactly the same meaning?

7 Distinguishing meanings Some words only occur in particular contexts (e.g. dialect words, autumn-fall) Some words only occur in certain styles (die and kick the bucket) Some words only occur in certain collocations (deep water but not profound water Some words are emotionally stronger (e.g. freedom, not liberty) Some words overlap in meaning but are not identical (e.g. govern and direct)

8 Why is synonymy important for teachers? Because students will often ask you “why do you say “x and not y” when x and y are very similar and you need to be able to explain this. You will often find the answers in dictionaries or in concordances (see lesson 2 - collocation)

9 Are these pairs the same kind of opposite? alive dead big little buy sell clumsy dexterous dry wet first last happy sad husband wife large small married single over under hot cold

10 Lexical relations - Antonymy Gradable antonyms - these are capable fo comparison (e.g. wetter, very wet) Complementary antonyms - if one applies the other does not (e.g. alive/dead) Converse antonyms - these are mutually dependent; you cannot have one without the other (e.g. wife/husband)

11 How do we know antonyms? By intuition. The antonym of little is big and the antonym of large is small. Large is not the antonym of little even though they are conceptual opposites.

12 Lexical relations - polysemy Eye “Eye” is classified as one word with two different meanings. This happens when the difference in meaning is predictable or regular. There is a core meaning from which the other meanings (“eye” of a needle, “eye” of a tornado) can be predicted. Metaphors are often ploysemous

13 Lexical relations -homonymy Bank The word “bank” in “river bank” and “Lloyd’s bank” are classified as two different words with separate meanings even though they have the same form. This is because the meaning of one form is not predictable from the meaning of another.

14 Implications for teachers Leaning groups of hyponyms is easier for students than learning words separately It is important to know how to distinguish the meaning of synonyms especially at advanced levels Polysemous words are easier for students to understand than homonyms. Polysemous and metaphorical meanings can be taught with “core” meanings.

15 Lesson 1 - part 2 Deciding what word meanings to teach

16 A word is easier to understand when … It is a cognate The morphology is recognised The context is understood (so students can make a good guess at the meaning) There is no interference from the L1 SO … there is no point in choosing a word for a vocabulary comprehension exercise when none of these factors are present because the student will have NO CHANCE of understanding it!

17 Didattica Web Elenco corsi Lingua Inglese 3 LLEM (prof. Bowles) Deposito file

18 Exercises Definition Gap-filling Cloze test Make a new sentence Use word/expression in another context (also verbal) Word buildin Find the word in the text Match definition with word