Semantic
RelationsHIP
Defintion of Semantic Relationship :
In the
narrow sense are semantic relations relations between concepts or meanings.
The concept
[school] should be distinguished from the word ‘school’. [School] is a kind of
[educational institution]. This indicates a hierarchical (or generic) relationship between two concepts
or meanings, which is one kind among a long range of kinds of semantic
relations.
The concept
[School] may, for example, be expressed by the terms or expressions ‘school’,
‘schoolhouse’ and ‘place for teaching’. The relation between ‘school’ and
‘schoolhouse’ is a (synonym) relation between two words, while
the relation between ‘school’ and ‘place for teaching’ is a relation between a
word and an expression or phrase. The relations between words are termed
lexical relations. 'School' also means [a group of people who share common
characteristics of outlook, a school of thought]. This is a homonym relation: Two senses share the same
word or expression: ‘school’. Synonyms and homonyms are not relations
between concepts, but are about concepts expressed with identical or with
different signs.
Relations
between concepts, senses or meanings should not be confused with relations
between the terms, words, expressions or signs that are used to express the
concepts. It is, however, common to mix both of these kinds of relations under
the heading "semantic relations" (i.e., Cruse, 1986; Lyons, 1977;
Malmkjær, 1995 & Murphy, 2003), why synonyms, homonyms etc. are considered
under the label "semantic relations" in in a broader meaning of this
term.
Some important kinds of semantic
relations are:
1.
Synonym
Synonym
is the same of words have the same of meaning.
Example :
Able
– Capable (Mampu)
I
shall be able to help when I get money
She
is capable of teaching English to young children
Beautiful
– Pretty (Cantik, Indah)
She
is a beautiful girl
Fitri
has a pretty face
2.
Antonymy
There are three kinds of antonymy:
a. Gradable
antonymy
Two
words are opposite in meaning and the negative of the first word is not
necessarily means the other and vice versa, they are called gradable antonyms.
e.g. the word “large” and “small” are
gradable antonymous words. Not large doesn’t always mean small and not small
doesn’t always mean large. There maybe a meaning of rather large or a bit small
between large and small.
b. Complimentary
Antonymy.
When two words are opposite in
meaning and the negative of the first means the other, then they must be
complimentary antonyms. E.g. the word “Single and married are complimentary
antonyms. Not single means married and not married will always means single.
Here the negative of the first word can describe the referent of the second one
and vice versa.
c. Relational
Antonymy
When
two words seem to be opposite in meaning and have a reciprocal semantic
relationship, then they belong to relational antonym or converse words. E.g.
two words “father” and “mother” are two relational antonyms or converse word.
3.
Hyponymy
Is the state
or phenomenon that shows the relationship between more general
term,
( lexical
representation) and the more specific instances for it.
Examples:
The lexical representation of:
red, yellow, green, blue, purple, black is ( color ). Thus we can say that: " red " is a hyponym of " color " and so on.
Examples:
clarinet, guitar, piano, trumpet, violin, are hyponyms because they are " musical instruments " but there is not a single word meaning " musical instrument " that has these words as its hyponyms .
Examples:
The lexical representation of:
red, yellow, green, blue, purple, black is ( color ). Thus we can say that: " red " is a hyponym of " color " and so on.
Examples:
clarinet, guitar, piano, trumpet, violin, are hyponyms because they are " musical instruments " but there is not a single word meaning " musical instrument " that has these words as its hyponyms .
4.
Polysemy
and Homonymy
Homonymy are words that have the same
form but different meanings. There are two major types of homonyms, based
upon whether the meanings of the word are historically connected or result from
coincidence.
Coincidental homonyms
are the result of such historical accidents as phonetic convergence of two
originally different forms or the borrowing of a new word which happens to be
identical to an old word. There is usually no natural link between the
two meanings: the bill of a bird vs the bill one has to pay; or the
bark of a dog vs the bark of a tree.
The second type of homonym, the polysemous [pAli∆si‡∆m´s] homonym,
results when multiple meanings develop historically from the same word.
The process by which a word acquires new meanings is called polysemy [pAli∆si‡∆mi∆].
Unlike coincidental homonyms, polysemous homonyms usually preserve some
perceptible semantic link marking the development of one meaning out of the
other, as in the leg of chair and the leg of person; or the
face of a person vs. the face of a clock.
Sometimes it is impossible to tell whether two words of identical form are true
homonyms (historically unrelated) or polysemous homonyms (historically
related), such as ice scate vs. skate the fish: skate--fish
(from Old English skata') ice skate (from Dutch schaat');
deer/dear are historically related (cf. darling, German Tier, animal.)
Since polysemy is so difficult to separate from true homonymy, dictionaries
usually order entries according to 1) the first recorded appearance of word or
2) frequency of meaning use. This is a problem for lexicographers,
the people who study words and write dictionaries.
5.
Part/Whole Relationship
The
second hierarchical relationship among meanings is that of found in pairs of
words, where the referent of the first word is included in the referent of the
second word. But the relationship is not a hyponymy; it is part of whole
relationship. The difference is that in a hyponymy a “hyponym” is a kind of a
“hypernym”, but in part /whole
relationship a term or word is a “part” of another term or word.
E.g.
“floor, window and wall” are part of room. And “ room” is a part of a house.