File 6 Semantics Key Terms and Phrases Flashcards
Semantics
The study of linguistic meaning.
Lexical Semantics
A subfield of semantics that studies meanings of lexical expressions.
Compositional Semantics
A subfield of semantics that studies the meaning of phrasal expressions and how those meanings arise given the meaning of the lexical expressions they contain and how they are syntactically combined.
Sense
A mental representation of an expression’s meaning.
Reference
A component of linguistic meaning that relates the sense of some expression to entities in the outside world.
Mental Image
A conception of a word’s sense as a picture in the mind of the language user that represents its meaning.
Prototype
For any given set, a member that exhibits the typical qualities of the members of that set.
Hyponymy
A meaning relationship between words where the reference of some word X is included in the reference of some other word Y.
Hypernym
A meaning relationship between words where the reference of some word X is included in the reference of some other word Y.
Sister Terms
Word that, in terms of their reference, are at the same level in the hierarchy.
Synonymy
A meaning relationship between words where their reference is exactly the same.
Antonymy
A meaning relationship between words where their meanings are in some sense opposite.
Complementary Antonyms
Pair of antonyms such that everything must be described by the first word, the second word, or neither; and such that saying of something that it is not a member of the set denoted by the first word implicates that it is in the set denoted by the second word.
Gradable
Words that are antonyms and denote opposite ends of a scale.
Reverses
Antonyms in which one word in the pair suggests movement that “undoes” the movement suggested by the other.
Converses
Antonyms in which the first word of the pair suggests a point of view opposite to that of the second word.
Proposition
The sense expressed by a sentence.
Truth Value
Either true or false.
Truth Conditions
The set of conditions that would have to hold in the world in order for the proposition expressed by some sentences to be true.
Entailment
A relationship between propositions where a proposition p is said to entail another proposition q just in case if p is true, q has to be true as well.
Mutual Entailment
The relationship between two propositions where they entail one another.
Incompatible
The relationship between two propositions where it is impossible for both of them to be true simultaneously.
Principle of Compositionality
The notion that the meaning of a phrasal expression is predictable from the meanings of the expressions it contains and how they were syntactically combined.
Non-Intersection Adjective
An adjective whose reference is a subset of the set that the noun it modifies refers to, but that does not, in and of itself, refer to any particular set of things.