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Лекция 9 Омонимы синонимы антонимы гипонимы холонимы меронимы

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Presentation on theme: "Лекция 9 Омонимы синонимы антонимы гипонимы холонимы меронимы"— Presentation transcript:

1 Лекция 9 Омонимы синонимы антонимы гипонимы холонимы меронимы
The play-wright on my right thinks it right that some conventional rite should symbolize the right of every man to write as he pleases

2 Лекция 9 Омонимы синонимы антонимы гипонимы холонимы меронимы
The play-wright on my right thinks it right that some conventional rite should symbolize the right of every man to write as he pleases

3 The problem of differentiating between polysemy and homonymy
spring is represented as two homonyms in V.K. Müller’s and Hornby’s dictionaries: I. a season of the year, II. a) the act of springing, a leap, b) a place where a stream of water comes up out of the earth. as three homonyms in V.D. Arakin’s dictionary.

4 Homonyms Homonyms (Gr. homos “similar” + onoma “name”) are words which have identical sound form and/or spelling but are different in their meaning. E.g. bank (n) – a shore (of the river); bank (n) – an institution for receiving, lending, exchanging and safeguarding money

5 Classification of homonyms (1)
Homonyms proper (собственно омонимы): E.g. ball (мяч) – ball (бал); bank (банк) – bank (берег); light, adj. (легкий) – light, n. (свет). Homophones: E.g. piece – peace; air - heir; knight – night; rose (flower) – rose (Past form of rise). Homographs: E.g. bow [bəu] (лук) – bow [bau] (поклон); lead [liːd] (лидерство) – lead [led] (свинец); row [rəu] (ряд) – row [rau] (ссора).

6 Classification of homonyms (2)
The criterion: whether homonyms belong to the same or to different parts of speech. Lexical Lexico-grammatical Grammatical

7 Lexical homonyms fair (ярмарка) – fare (плата за проезд);
Belong to the same part of speech. The difference is confined to the lexical meaning only: fair (ярмарка) – fare (плата за проезд); bow [bəu] (лук) - bow [bau] (поклон); match (спичка) – match (матч)

8 Lexico-grammatical homonyms
Belong to different parts of speech and differ in lexical meaning: tear [tɪə], n. (слеза) – to tear, v. [tɛə] (рвать); bear, n. [bɛə] (медведь) – to bare [bɛə], v. (носить) – bare [bɛə], adj. (обнаженный).

9 Grammatical homonyms Belong to different parts of speech but there is a link between their lexical meanings: milk – to milk; practice – to practise

10 Classification of homonyms (3)
The criterion: whether the paradigms of the homonyms coincide completely or partially. Full homonyms are identical in sound in all their forms and paradigms: match (матч) - match (спичка); ball (мяч) – ball (бал) Partial homonyms are identical only in some of the forms: to found (основывать) – found (Past Indefinite, Past Participle of the verb to find); to lie (lied, lied) (лгать) – to lie (lay, lain) (лежать);

11 Sources of homonyms phonetic changes: night – knight (OE kniht);
write (OE writan) – right (OE reht and riht). borrowings: bank (берег): native origin - bank (банк): Italian; fair (справедливый): native - fair (ярмарка): French.

12 Sources of homonyms shortening of words: flu (from influenza) - flew (Past Indef. of to fly); fan (from fanatic) -fan (вентилятор). conversion: comb, n. – to comb, v., pale, adj. – to pale, v., to make, v. – make, n. (grammatical homonyms).

13 Sources of homonyms Split polysemy:
spring (n) – “the act of springing, a leap”; spring (n) – “a place where a stream of water comes up out of the earth”; spring (n) – “a season of the year”. The original word: springan - “to jump,” “to leap”

14 Split polysemy: BAR late 12c., "stake or rod of iron used to fasten a door or gate," from Old French barre (12c.) c. 1300, "to fasten (a gate, etc.) with a bar," from bar (n.1) "tavern," 1590s, so called in reference to the bars of the barrier or counter over which drinks or food were served to customers (see bar (n.1)). "whole body of lawyers, the legal profession," 1550s, a sense which derives ultimately from the railing that separated benchers from the hall in the Inns of Court.

15 Definition of synonyms
Synonyms are words with the same denotation (or denotative component) but different in connotations (or connotative components). (semantic approach) Methods of studying synonyms: definitional, transformational, componential.

16 Origins of synonyms to begin (native, neutral) – to commence (French, bookish) – to initiate (Latin, bookish) bodily (native, neutral) — corporal (Latin, bookish) brotherly (native, neutral) — fraternal (Latin, bookish).

17 SOURCES OF SYNONYMY to ask belly to gather empty to end to rise
Native English Words Words borrowed from French Words borrowed from Latin to ask belly to gather empty to end to rise teaching to question stomach to assemble devoid to finish to mount guidance to interrogate abdomen to collect vacuous to complete to ascend instruction

18 Phrasal Verbs choose : : pick out, abandon : : give up;
continue : : go on; enter : : come in; lift : : pick up; postpone : : put o ff ; quarrel : : fall out; return : : bring back.

19 V.V. Vinogradov’s classification of synonyms
Ideographic synonyms are words conveying the same concept but differing in shades of meaning: power — force — energy; beautiful — handsome — pretty. Stylistic synonyms have the same denotational components but differ in stylistic characteristics: hearty (neutr.) – cordial (formal), to imitate (neutr.) – to monkey (inform.), to begin (neutr.) – to commence (formal); to die (neutr.) – to pass away (formal).

20 V.V. Vinogradov’s classification of synonyms
Absolute synonyms coincide in all their shades of meaning and in all their stylistic characteristics: gift - present; homeland – motherland, etc. The phenomenon of absolute synonymy is very rare in the language and very often temporary.

21 Classification of synonyms based on the types of connotations
The connotation of degree or intensity: to surprise – to astonish – to amaze – to astound; to shout – to yell – to roar (the rising degree of intensity) The connotation of duration: to stare – to glare – to gaze – to peep - to peer (a lasting look) - to glance (a brief look) The emotive connotation: to stare (to look in surprise, curiosity) – to glare (in anger, rage or fury) – to gaze (in tenderness, admiration or wonder)

22 Classification of synonyms based on the types of connotations
The evaluative connotation (conveys the speaker’s attitude towards the referent): well-known – famous – notorious (-) – celebrated (+) (cf.: a notorious criminal, but a celebrated scientist). The causative connotation: to shiver (because of the frost) – to shudder (with fear, horror). The connotation of manner: to stroll – to stride – to pace – to trot – to swagger

23 Synonyms that differ in their emotive or evaluative meaning
There are words that bear the same meaning but express different emotions of the user, indicating the attitude of the user toward he is using about.

24 Collaborator vs accomplice
Collaborator and accomplice are synonymous as they share the meaning of “a person who helps the other”, but: Collaborator helps another in doing something good, while Accomplice helps another in the criminal act.

25 Synonyms of the verb to look
to stare: to look + steadily, lastingly + in surprise, curiosity, etc. to glare: to look + steadily, lastingly + in anger, rage, fury to gaze: to look + steadily, lastingly + in tenderness, admiration, wonder to glance: to look + briefly, in passing to peep: to look + steadily, lastingly + by stealth; through an opening or from a concealed location to peer: to look + steadily, lastingly + with difficulty or strain

26 Dialectal synonyms Dialectal synonyms – synonyms used in different regional dialects. These are words with more or less the same meaning used in different regional dialects. British English and American English are the two major geographical varieties of the English language.

27 Varieties of English British English Autumn Lift Luggage Lorry Petrol Flat Windscreen Torch American English Fall Elevator Baggage Truck Gasoline Apartment Windshield Flashlight

28 Collocational synonyms
Some synonyms differ in their collocation, i.e. in the words they go together with. Accuse, charge, rebuke are followed by different prepositions: accuse of, charge with, rebuke for

29 The synonymic dominant (the dominant synonym)
the most general word in the group belonging to the basic stock of words stylistically neutral having high frequency of usage, vast combinability, lacking connotations. expresses the notion common to all the members of the group in the most general way without any additional information. to surprise – to astonish – to amaze – to astound; to shout – to yell – to bellow – to roar; to look – to stare – to glare – to gaze – to peer.

30 Synonyms of a polysemantic word
to close – to finish (e.g. to close a discussion) to close – to shut (e.g. to close the door).

31 Euphemisms Euphemism (Gr. eu “well” + pheme “speaking”) is a substitution for an expression that may offend or suggest something unpleasant to the receiver, using instead an agreeable or less offensive expression. E.g. drunk: intoxicated, under the influence (formal), tipsy (colloq.), boiled, tanked, high as a kite (slang), etc.

32 Targets for euphemistic substitution
notions of death, madness, stupidity, drunkenness, certain physiological processes, crimes, etc.

33 Euphemisms (examples)
To die: to expire, to pass away, to depart, to join the silent majority, to kick the bucket, to breathe one’s last, to be gathered to one’s fathers etc. Lavatory : powder room, washroom, restroom, retiring room, (public) comfort station, ladies' (room), gentlemen's (room), water-closet, w.c. ([d0blju:'si:]), public conveniences

34 Antonyms Antonyms are words of the same part of speech having common denotative component of meaning but expressing contrasting points of the same notion. wide - narrow, admit - deny, produce -consume, old - young, etc.

35 Antonyms and parts of speech
Adjectives: high – low, strong – weak, bitter – sweet. Verbs: to lose – to find, to live – to die, to open – to close. Nouns: friend – enemy, joy – grief, good – evil.

36 Antonyms of a polysemantic word
E.g. dull: Boring – the deficiency in interest: interesting, amusing, entertaining Stupid - the deficiency in intellect: clever, bright, capable Not active - the deficiency in activity: active

37 Лекция 9 Омонимы синонимы антонимы гипонимы холонимы меронимы
Structural classification of antonyms (V.N. Komissarov. Dictionary of English Antonyms) D e r i v a t i o n a l antonyms (antonyms of the same root): e.g. to do – to undo, cheerful - cheerless; (affixes which help in the formation of antonyms: un-, in-, dis-, -less, etc.) antonyms of different roots: e.g. day – night, rich - poor.

38 Semantic classification of antonyms
Contradictories : dead – alive, single – married (contradict each other: not dead = alive, not single = married). Contraries (gradable) are polar members of a gradual opposition which may have intermediate elements: cold – (cool – warm) - hot.

39 OPPOSITES Directional opposites involve an opposition in direction with reference to some point (come -go, arrive – depart). Conversives (or relational opposites) as F.R. Palmer calls them denote one and the same referent or situation as viewed from different points of view, with a reversal of the order of participants and their roles. He gave her flowers. She received flowers from him. husband, wife; doctor, patient; teach, learn

40 HYPONYMS AND HYPERONYMS a hyponym is a word or phrase whose semantic field is included within that of another word, its hyperonym

41 MERONYMS VS. HOLONYMS MERONYM A word that denotes a constituent part or a member of something. For example, apple is a meronym of apple tree. HOLONYM A word that names the whole of which a given word is a part finger ---- hand roof house

42 PARONYMS similar-sounding words, related to one part of speech and one semantic field, but having, as a rule, different meanings Politic – acting or judging wisely, prudent. Политичный, расчетливый.  Political – of the state, of government, of politics. Политический


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