Lexical semantics
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Lexical semantics is a subfield of linguistic semantics. It is the study of how and what the words of a language denote (Pustejovsky, 1995). Words may either be taken to denote things in the world or concepts, depending on the particular approach to lexical semantics.
The units of meaning in lexical semantics are lexical units, which a speaker can continually add to throughout their life, learning new words and their meanings. By contrast, one can only easily learn the grammatical rules of one's native language during a critical period when one is young.[citation needed]
Lexical semantics covers theories of the classification and decomposition of word meaning, the differences and similarities in lexical semantic structure between different languages, and the relationship of word meaning to sentence meaning and syntax.
One question that lexical semantics explores is whether the meaning of a lexical unit is established by looking at its neighbourhood in the semantic net (by looking at the other words it occurs with in natural sentences), or if the meaning is already locally contained in the lexical unit. Another topic that is explored is the mapping of words to concepts. As tools, lexical relations (defined as patterns of association that exist between lexical items in a language[1]) like synonymy, antonymy (opposites), hyponymy and hypernymy - and to a certain degree homonymy as well - are used in this field.
See also
- Lexical chain
- Lexical markup framework
- Minimal recursion semantics
- Ontology
- Polysemy
- Semantic primes
- Semantic satiation
- SemEval
- Thematic role
- Word sense
- Word sense disambiguation
Notes
References
- Dirk Geeraerts, Theories of Lexical Semantics, OUP 2010
- Philip Edmonds on near-synonyms (Chapter 4.1 Lexical semantics)
- Bibliography of linguistics papers dealing with lexical semantics
- The Lexical Semantics of a Machine Translation Interlingua by Rick Morneau
- Lexical Semantics by D.A. Cruse. Cambridge University Press, 1986. ISBN 0-521-27643-8
- Pustejovsky, James, The Generative Lexicon, 1995, MIT Press; presents a theory of lexical semantics.
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