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Semantics, part 2. December 3, 2012. And Then There Were Three. Course Evaluations at the end of today’s lecture! Semantics/Pragmatics homework still due on Wednesday I will also pass out a final exam review checklist on Wednesday Wednesday: some comments on language preservation
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Semantics, part 2 December 3, 2012
And Then There Were Three • Course Evaluations at the end of today’s lecture! • Semantics/Pragmatics homework still due on Wednesday • I will also pass out a final exam review checklist on Wednesday • Wednesday: some comments on language preservation • Friday: an opportunity to ask some review questions • Semantics homeworks will be graded by Friday
Meaning Review • Referent: the actual thing in the world an expression picks out. • Extension: a set of referents (= a predicate) in some possible world. • Sense: what an expression refers to in all possible worlds. • Truth: a proposition is true if the referent of its subject is contained in the extension of its predicate. • Meaning: • The meaning of a proposition is the set of conditions in which that proposition is true. • Truth conditions
Compositionality • By the way: • The idea that the meaning of a sentence can be calculated from the meaning(s) of its parts is the principle of compositionality. • Consider this sentence: • The President of the United States is a white male. • Is this true? How do you know? • How about this sentence: • Santa Claus is a white male.
Types of Sentences • Propositions may be distinguished on the basis of the kinds of worlds in which they may be true. • Synthetic propositions may be true or false, depending on the state of affairs in the world. • Analytic propositions are always true, no matter what the state of the world. • Contradictions are always false, no matter what the state of the world. • Quick Write check.
Moving On (Again) • There are several different ways to study meaning in language: • Pragmatics • The meaningful use of linguistic expressions in conversation and discourse. • Compositional Semantics How the meaning of phrases and sentences is built up from the meanings of individual words. • Lexical Semantics The meaning of individual words, and how they’re related to one another.
Lexical Semantics • Here are two basic meaning relationships that words can have with one another: • Synonymy • Two words have the same meaning • couch/sofa, groundhog/woodchuck, hide/conceal • = real-world extensions are identical • Hyponymy • one word’s extension is a subset of another word’s extension • poodle/dog, laptop/computer, gas giants/planets
Synonym Schematic Fido Marmaduke Garfield Rex Spot Snoopy Fifi Mr. Meowser Lassie Scooby The Death Star canines and dogs are synonyms is a dog is a canine
Hyponym Schematic Fido Marmaduke Garfield Rex Spot Snoopy Fifi Mr. Meowser Lassie Tinkerbell The Death Star poodle is a hyponym (subset) of dog is a dog is a poodle
Another One • Antonymy: when words that mean the “opposite” of each other • Complementary antonyms: • Everything in the world is one or the other • unmarried/married, present/absent, visible/invisible • Relational antonyms: • Reflect a symmetrical connection between each other • give/receive, buy/sell, teacher/pupil • employer/employee, adviser/advisee • Scalar antonyms: words form two ends of a scale • hot/cold, happy/sad, big/small, fast/slow
Homonyms/Homophones • Homonyms/Homophones are words with: • same pronunciation • unrelated meanings • from Greek: /homo-/ “same” + /onyma/ “name” • Examples: • trunk (of an elephant), trunk (chest), trunk (of a tree) • also: bear, bare • Homonyms can create ambiguity: • We saw her duck.
Polysemy • Polysemy is when one word has several different, but related meanings. • From Greek: /poly-/ “many” + /sema/ “signal” • Examples: • Mouth of a river ~ mouth of an animal • A baseball diamond ~ a geometric diamond ~ a diamond stone
Intersection • Compositional semantics, continued... • We have discussed how the referents of nouns and the extensions of predicates get put together to form a meaningful proposition. • Now let’s consider adjectives and nouns in noun phrases. • Simplest case: pure intersection • black dogs = • the set of all dogs • intersected with • the set of all black things
Pure Intersection Schematic Marmaduke Odie Charcoal Lassie Spot Rex Darth Vader Spuds Oil dogs black dogs black things
Semantic Features • Idea: the meaning of a word can be precisely determined by the pure intersection of predicates of which it is a hyponym (subset). • Example: “square” • [TWO-DIMENSIONAL, FOUR-SIDED, EQUAL-SIDED] • Example: “bachelor” • [HUMAN, MALE, UNMARRIED] • The predicate sets form a word’s semantic features • “hen” and “mare” share the feature [FEMALE] • “bachelor” and “woman” share the feature [HUMAN]
Verb Features • The same semantic feature can be expressed by a variety of different verbs. • Example: the feature [GO] • reflects a change in position • fly, walk, roll, stumble, run, crawl, etc. • More subtle examples of [GO]: • give: “John gave Mary an engagement ring.” • John Mary • ring • “The boy threw the ball over the fence.”
A Syntax Flashback • Remember that, in syntax, we learned that different verbs require specific complement structures. • For instance, transitive verbs require an object NP in their verb phrases. • I devoured the sandwich. • I met the Professor. • Similarly, ditransitive verbs can take two objects in their verb phrases. • The dog trainer sold me a chew toy. • Larry gave Shelly the textbook.
Syntax/Semantics • There are sub-features of [GO], which are reflected in constraints on verb complements in English. • [BALLISTIC]: a one-time [GO] V’ V NP NP • [SUSTAINED]: a continuous [GO] *V’ V NP NP • Ballistic VerbsSustained Verbs • throw the boy a ball *push the boy a ball • toss the boy a ball *pull the boy a ball • kick the boy a ball *lift the boy a ball • fling the boy a ball *drag the boy a ball
Role-playing • The objects of ditransitive verbs can be expressed in two different syntactic ways: • Larry gave Shelly the textbook. (NP NP) • Larry gave the textbook to Shelly. (NP PP) • Despite the syntactic differences, each noun plays the same role in both sentences: • Larry: Agent (the entity performing the action) • Textbook: Theme (thing being acted upon) • Shelly: Recipient (being coming into possession of something)
Thematic Roles • Verbs have semantic requirements. • For a sentence to make sense, it has to include nouns which can play the roles required by the verb. • give: Agent; Theme; Recipient • Larry gave Shelly the textbook. • Larry gave the textbook to Shelly. • Shelly was given the textbook by Larry. • !Anger gave Shelly the textbook.
Other Thematic Roles • Experiencer • = animate being that has a perceptual or mental experience. • Ex: Susan heard the music. • Source • = the origin of a change. • Ex: Jan arrived from Detroit. • Instrument • = the means used to accomplish an action (not agent) • Ex: The hammer cracked the window.
Other Thematic Roles • Goal • = the end point of a change in location or possession. • Ex: Chris hitchhiked to Alaska. • Location • = the place where an action occurs. • Ex: Neil Young played a show in Winnipeg.