Holonymy

Holonymy (in Greek ὅλον holon, "whole" and ὄνομα onoma, "name") is a semantic relation. Holonymy defines the relationship between a term denoting the whole and a term denoting a part of, or a member of, the whole. That is,

'X' is a holonym of 'Y' if Ys are parts of Xs, or
'X' is a holonym of 'Y' if Ys are members of Xs.

For example, 'tree' is a holonym of 'bark', of 'trunk' and of 'limb.'

Holonymy is the opposite of meronymy.

Holynymic/meronymic relations are considered from the paradigm of canonical/prototypical relations,[1] i.e. that which is considered an essential component/characteristic/part of the unit in question. Cruse uses the example of a "door-handle" relation compared to a "body-ear" relation: not every "door" has a handle, essentially (e.g. sliding doors, swinging doors), but every "body" (i.e. human body) does have an "ear". He refers to the former as a "facultative" relationship. A handle represents an optional relation.

References

  1. See D. A. Cruse, Lexical Semantics, Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics Series (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986), 162; S. G. Pulman, Word Meaning and Belief (London: Croom Helm, 1983), 83-106; L. Coleman, and P. Kay, Prototype semantics: The English word "lie," Language 57: 26-44.
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