ÑAÏI HOÏC QUOÁC GIA THAØNH PHOÁ HOÀ CHÍ MINH
TRÖÔØNG ÑAÏI HOÏC KHOA HOÏC XAÕ HOÄI VAØ NHAÂN VAÊN
Toâ Minh Thanh
GIAÙO TRÌNH
NHAØ XUAÁT BAÛN ÑAÏI HOÏC QUOÁC GIA
TP HOÀ CHÍ MINH — 2007
iii
LÔØI NOÙI ÑAÀU
Giaùo trình Ngöõ nghóa hoïc tieáng Anh ñöôïc biên soạn một
cách có hệ thống, dựa trên cơ sở tham khảo có chọn lọc nhöõng tư
liệu cuûa nước ngoài, kết hợp với kinh nghiệm giảng dạy nhiều năm
về môn học này của tác giả và tập thể giảng viên trong Bộ môn Ngữ
học Anh. Đây là tập giáo trình được biên soạn duøng để giảng dạy
môn học Ngữ nghĩa học tiếng Anh (English Semantics) cho sinh
viên năm thứ tư Khoa Ngữ văn Anh, Trường Đại học Khoa học Xã
hội và Nhân văn, Đại học Quốc gia Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh.
Giaùo trình gồm bốn phaàn:
1. Introduction (phaàn daãn nhaäp)
2. Word meaning (nghóa cuûa töø);
3. Sentence meaning (nghóa cuûa caâu);
4. Utterance meaning (nghóa cuûa phaùt ngoân)
Lần đầu tiên biên soạn giáo trình này, chúng tôi không tránh
khỏi những sai sót, những khuyết điểm. Rất mong nhận được nhiều
ý kiến đóng góp của bạn đọc vaø của bạn bè đồng nghiệp để giáo
trình ngày càng hoàn thiện hơn, phục vụ giảng dạy sinh viên đạt chất
lượng toát hơn. Ý kiến đóng góp về tập giáo trình này xin gửi về Hội
đồng Khoa học Khoa Ngữ văn Anh, Trường Đại học Khoa học Xã
hội và Nhân văn, Đại học Quốc gia Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh, số 10-
12 Đinh Tiên Hoàng Quận 1, Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh. Điện thoại:
(08)8243328.
Thaønh phoá Hoà Chí Minh, ngaøy 14 thaùng 12 naêm 2006
Toâ Minh Thanh
v
CONTENTS
Preface ....................................................................................... iii
Contents .......................................................................................v
Notational symbols ................................................................... vii
1 INTRODUCTION...................................................................... 9
1.1 What is semantics? ......................................................... 9
1.2 Semantics and its possible included aspects ............. 10
2 WORD MEANING .................................................................. 12
2.1 Semantic features ........................................................ 12
2.2 Componential analysis .................................................. 20
2.3 Semantic fields ............................................................. 21
2.4 Lexical gaps .................................................................... 25
2.5 Referent, reference and sense ................................. 26
2.6 Denotation and connotation ........................................ 30
2.7 Multiple senses of lexical items ................................ 34
2.8 Figures of speech ................................................... 36
2.9 Hyponymy ................................................................ 57
2.10 Synonymy .............................................................. 63
2.11 Antonymy .............................................................. 67
2.12 Homonymy ............................................................. 72
2.13 Polysemy ................................................................ 78
vi
2.14 Ambiguity .............................................................. 81
2.15 Anomaly ................................................................. 87
3 SENTENCE MEANING ............................................... 91
3.1 Proposition, utterance and sentence ........................ 91
3.2 Sentence types (classified according to
truth value) .............................................................. 96
3.3 Paraphrase .............................................................. 99
3.4 Entailment ............................................................. 104
4 UTTERANCE MEANING .................................................... 109
4.1 Presupposition ...................................................... 109
4.2 Conversational implicature ................................... 128
4.3 Conventional implicature ...................................... 145
4.4 Speech acts .................................................................. 146
4.5 Performatives and constatives ............................ 165
4.6 Politeness, co-operation and indirectness ............ 171
4.7 Deixis .................................................................... 173
Answer keys ............................................................................177
List of English-Vietnamese equivalent linguistic terms .......227
Bibliography ............................................................................252
iv
NOTATIONAL SYMBOLS
Most of the symbols used in this text follow conventions, but
since conventions vary, the following list indicates the meanings
assigned to them here.
A: adjunct
AdjP: adjective phrase
AdvP: adverb phrase
C: countable
dO: direct object
Ex: example
mono-trans: mono-transitive verb
n: noun
NP: noun phrase
op: optional
opA of Means: optional adjunct of means
Pro: pronoun
PP: prepositional phrase
RP: Received Pronunciation
S: sentence
Vgrp: verb group
VP: verb phrase
* : unaccepted form
v
-- : related in some way
[ ] : embedded unit
/ : or
⇒ : one-way dependence
⇔ : two-way dependence
= : be equivalent to
+ : with the semantic feature specified
−
−
−
− : without the semantic feature specified
±
±
±
± : with or without the semantic feature specified
9
Section
1
1
1
1
INTRODUCTION
1.1 What is semantics?
Semantics is a branch of linguistics which deals with
meaning. In order to understand this definition, we need to know what
meaning is. However, before we discuss the “meaning” of meaning, it
is necessary to talk about the main branches of linguistics.
Linguistics has three main branches: syntax, semantics and
pragmatics. Syntax is the study of grammar (consisting of
phonology, morphology, syntax, and textual grammar)
whereas semantics and pragmatics deal with meaning.
Semantics is the study of meaning in language (i.e. what language
means) while pragmatics is concerned with meaning in context
(i.e. what people mean by the language they use). Although this is
a semantics course, part of what we are going to discuss is
concerned with pragmatics, for semantics and pragmatics are
closely related.
Take the distinction between semantic meaning and pragmatic
meaning as an illustration of how semantics is different from but, at
the same time, closely related to pragmatics.
Semantic meaning is context-free whereas pragmatic meaning
is context-dependent.
(1) A: ‘Would you like a piece of cake?’
B: ‘I’m on a diet.’
10
The semantic meaning of ‘I’m on a diet’ in (1) is ‘I want to
lose weight by eating the food which is not rich in fat, sugar, etc.’
The pragmatic meaning of ‘I’m on a diet’ in (1) is ‘I don’t want
any piece of cake’ or ‘I’m afraid that I have to refuse your invitation.’
(2) Tom: ‘Do you like the wine I picked out?’
Gina: ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’
The semantic meaning of ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’ in (2) is ‘Is it
right that the wine is made in Italy?’
The pragmatic meaning of ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’ in (2) is ‘I
don’t like the wine you picked out.’
1.2 Semantics and its possible included aspects
“Semantics is a technical term used to refer to the study of
meaning, and since meaning is part of language, semantics is
part of linguistics. Unfortunately, ‘meaning’ covers a variety of
aspects of language, there is no general agreement about the
nature of meaning, what aspects of it may properly be
included in semantics, or the way in which it should be
described.” [Palmer, 1981: 1] This little textbook will try to show
three main aspects that are commonly considered as included in
semantics: word meaning (or, to be more precise, lexical
meaning) [Lyons, 1995: 33], sentence meaning and utterance
meaning.1
1
In semantics it is necessary to make a careful distinction between utterances
and sentences. In particular we need some way of making it clear when we are
discussing sentences and when utterances. We adopt the convention that anything
11
The meaning of remarried, for example, can be analysed in
the three different levels.
At the word level, remarried may be regarded a set of the
four following semantic features: [+human], [±male], [+used to
be married], and [+married again].
At the sentence level when remarried occurs in She is not
remarried, only the fourth semantic feature of the word,
namely [+married again], is informative, i.e. it is part of the
statement.
At the utterance level within the particular context of the
following conversation when remarried occurs in B’s response, it
is the word that helps the utterance presuppose that pastors are
allowed by rule to get married and implicate that the pastor was
once married.
A: ‘How is the pastor?’
B: ‘He is remarried.’
Because of the nature of the subject and the variety of views
on semantics and its possible included aspects, the little
textbook cannot hope to be more than an introductory survey.
written between single quotation marks represents ‘an utterance’, and
anything italicized represents a sentence or (similarly abstract) part of a
sentence, such as a phrase or a word:
‘She is not remarried’ represents an utterance.
She is not remarried represents a sentence.
Married represents a word conceived as part of a sentence.
12
Section
2
2
2
2
WORD MEANING
WORD MEANING is what a word means, i.e. “what counts as
the equivalent in the language concerned.” [Hurford and Heasley,
1984: 3]
2.1 Semantic features
2.1.1 Definition
Semantic features2
are “the smallest units of meaning in a
word.” [Richards et al, 1987: 254]
We identify the meaning of a word by its semantic
features. For example, father may have the following semantic
features: [+human], [+male], [+mature], [+parental] and
[+paternal]. And hen may be described as a set of the following
semantic features: [+animate], [+bird], [+fowl], [+fully grown]
and [+female].
2.1.2 Characteristics
2.1.2.1 Some semantic features need not be specifically
mentioned. For example, if a word is [+human] it is
“automatically” [+animate]. This generalization can be expressed
as a redundancy rule:
2
Semantic features are also referred to as semantic components or semantic
properties.
13
A word that is [+human] is [+animate].
That is why [+animate] need not be specified as a semantic
feature of father, girl, professor, etc. since the semantic feature
can be inferred from [+human].
Some redundancy rules infer negative semantic
features. Thus, semantic features are often shown in the form of
binary oppositions, which can be stated in terms of pluses and
minuses (that is, [+] and [−
−
−
−]):
If father is [+human], it is therefore [−
−
−
−inhuman];
If father is [+male], it is therefore [−
−
−
−female];
If father is [+mature], it is therefore [−
−
−
−immature];
If father is [+paternal], it is therefore [−
−
−
−maternal].
Notice that we identify the meaning of a word according to its
primitive semantic features first, e.g. [+animate], [+human],
[+male], etc.; and then with the assistance of its other semantic
features, e.g. [+parental], [+paternal], etc.
2.1.2.2 Different words may share the same semantic
feature. In other words, the same semantic feature can be
found in many different words.
Ex1: Doctor, engineer, teacher, physicist, chemist,
tailor, hairdresser, etc. all share the same semantic feature
[+professional].
Ex2: Mother, father, son, daughter, brother, sister,
grandparent, aunt, uncle, etc. are all [+kinship].
14
2.1.2.3 The same semantic feature can occur in words of
different parts of speech. In other words, words of different
parts of speech may share the same semantic feature.
For example, [+female] is part of the meaning of the noun
mother, the verb breast-feed and the adjective pregnant. And
[+educational] is a semantic feature found in the nouns school,
teacher, textbook, etc. and in the verbs teach, educate,
instruct, etc.
2.1.2.4 Fromkin and Rodman [1993: 148-149] confirm that
“the semantic properties of words determine what other
words they can be combined with.” These authors give the two
following sentences that are grammatically correct and
syntactically perfect but semantically anomalous:
(1) My brother is an only child.
(2) The bachelor is pregnant.
(1) is strange, or semantically anomalous, because this
sentence represents a contradiction: brother is [+having at least
one sibling] while an only child is [+having no other sibling];
(2) is semantically anomalous for a similar reason: bachelor is
[+male] whereas pregnant is [+female].
Here, Fromkin and Rodman also cite Noam Chomsky’s famous
classic example of semantically anomalous sentences:
(3) Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
This sentence seems to obey all the syntactic rules of English:
its subject is colorless green ideas and its predicate is sleep
furiously; but there is obviously something semantically wrong
15
with the sentence. The adjective colorless is [−
−
−
−colour], but it
occurs with the adjective green the semantic feature of which
[+green in colour]. How can something be [−
−
−
−colour] and [+green
in colour] at the same time? In the same way, the noun ideas,
which is [+abstract], is semantically incompatible with the verb
sleep the noun phrase subject of which must be [+concrete] and
[+animate]. How can an abstract notion like ideas sleep? Then,
the verb sleep, whose adverbial collocations3
are well, badly and
soundly, is semantically incompatible with the adverb furiously.
How can a living being sleep when he is full of violent anger?
In conclusion, knowing all the possible semantic features of a
word enables us to combine semantically compatible words
together to form larger but meaningful linguistic units such as
phrases, clauses and sentences.
Fromkin and Rodman [1993:134] also believe that “because
we know the semantic properties of words, we know when two
words are antonyms, synonyms or homonyms, or are unrelated
in meaning.”
Exercise 1: For each group of words given below, state what
semantic features are shared by the (a) words and the (b)
words, and what semantic features distinguish between the
classes of (a) words and (b) words. The first one is done as an
example.
3
Collocations are regular combinations of words, e.g. by accident and strong tea
are English collocations.
Adverbial collocations refer to the adverbs regularly used together with a certain
verb.
16
1. (a) lobster, shrimp, crab, oyster, mussel
(b) trout, sole, herring, salmon, mackerel
The (a) and (b) words are [+edible water animal].
The (a) words are [+shellfish].
The (b) words are [+fish].
2. (a) widow, mother, sister, aunt, seamstress
(b) widower, father, brother, uncle, tailor
The (a) and (b) words are ___________________________
The (a) words are _________________________________
The (b) words are __________________________________
3. (a) bachelor, son, paperboy, pope, chief
(b) bull, rooster, drake, ram, stallion
The (a) and (b) words are ___________________________
The (a) words are __________________________________
The (b) words are _________________________________
4. (a) table, pencil, cup, house, ship, car
(b) milk, tea, wine, beer, water, soft drink
The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________
The (a) words are __________________________________
The (b) words are __________________________________
5. (a) book, temple, mountain, road, tractor
(b) idea, love, charity, sincerity, bravery, fear
17
The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________
The (a) words are __________________________________
The (b) words are __________________________________
6. (a) rose, lily, tulip, daisy, sunflower, violet
(b) ash, oak, sycamore, willow, beech
(c) pine, cedar, jew, spruce, cypress
The (a) (b) and (c) words are _________________________
The (a) words are __________________________________
The (b) words are __________________________________
The (c) words are __________________________________
7. (a) book, letter, encyclopaedia, novel, notebook, dictionary
(b) typewriter, pencil, ballpoint, crayon, quill, charcoal, chalk
The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________
The (a) words are __________________________________
The (b) words are __________________________________
8. (a) walk, run, skip, jump, hop, swim
(b) fly, skate, ski, ride, cycle, canoe, hang-glide
The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________
The (a) words are __________________________________
The (b) words are __________________________________
9. (a) ask, tell, say, talk, converse
(b) shout, whisper, mutter, drawl, holler
18
The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________
The (a) words are __________________________________
The (b) words are __________________________________
10. (a) alive, asleep, awake, dead, half-dead, pregnant
(b) depressed, bored, excited, upset, amazed,
surprised
The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________
The (a) words are __________________________________
The (b) words are __________________________________
Exercise 2: Identify the semantic features in each of the
following words.
1. Child:_____________________________________________
2. Aunt: ____________________________________________
3. Hen: _____________________________________________
4. Oak (-tree): ______________________________________
5. Flower: ___________________________________________
6. Palm: _____________________________________________
7. Bachelor: _________________________________________
8. Actress: __________________________________________
9. Plod: _____________________________________________
10. Ewe:_____________________________________________
11. Fly: _____________________________________________
19
12. Stallion: _________________________________________
13. Police-officer: ___________________________________
14. Beauty: __________________________________________
15. Imagine: _________________________________________
16. Doe: ____________________________________________
17. Drive: ___________________________________________
18. Home: __________________________________________
19. Elm: ____________________________________________
20. Chalk: ___________________________________________
21. Rose: ____________________________________________
22. Chick: ___________________________________________
23. Pap: _____________________________________________
24. Tiptoe: __________________________________________
25. Pine (-tree): _____________________________________
26. Owe: ____________________________________________
27. Computer: _______________________________________
28. Honesty: ________________________________________
29. Maid: ___________________________________________
30. Spinster: ________________________________________
Exercise 3: How can you distinguish the words given in the
following table from one another, considering their semantic
features?
20
Malay English Vietnamese Chinese
anh huynh
brother
ñeä
em
muoäi
sadara
sister
chò tyû
____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
2.2 Componential analysis
In Semantics, componential analysis is “an approach to the
study of meaning which analyses a word into a set of
meaning components or semantic features.” [Richards et al,
1987: 53]
For example, the meaning of boy may be shown as [+human],
[+male] and [−adult] while that of man may be a combination of
[+human], [+male] and [+adult]. Thus, man is different from boy
basically in one primitive semantic feature: [±adult].
21
Generally speaking, componential analysis is applied to a
group of related words which may differ from one another only
by one or two semantic features.
2.3 Semantic fields
2.3.1 Definition
A semantic field4
is “the organization of related words
and expressions into a system which shows their
relationship to one another.” [Richards et al, 1987: 53]
A semantic field can also be defined as “a set of words with
identifiable semantic affinities.” [Finegan, 1994: 164]
Ex1. The semantic field of kinship terms: father, mother,
brother, sister, uncle, aunt, etc.
Ex2. The semantic field of adjectives describing human
emotional states: angry, sad, happy, exuberant,
depressed, afraid, etc.
Ex3. The semantic field of drinking vessels: cup, mug,
tumbler, wine glass, beer glass, etc.
2.3.2 Ways of organising semantically similar items into
semantic fields
There are various ways according to which semantically
similar items are related to one another:
(a) Items related by topics:
4
A semantic field is also referred to as a lexical field or a lexical set.
22
• Types of fruit: apples, oranges, grapes, bananas, pears,
plums, etc.
• Pieces of furniture: seats, tables, beds, storage, etc.
• Terms of colour: blue, red, yellow, green, black, white, etc.
(b) Items similar in meaning:
• Ways of cooking: stew, boil, fry, steam, roast, grill, smoke,
etc.
• Ways of looking5
: gaze, glance, peer, squint, stare, etc.
• Ways in which a liquid escapes from its container
6
: drip,
leak, ooze, run, seep, etc.
5
Gaze = look long and steadily (at somebody/something) usually in surprise or
admiration: She gazed at me in disbelief when I told her the news.
Glance = take a quick look at: She glanced shyly at him and then lowered her eyes.
Peer (at, through, up, etc,) = look closely and carefully, especially as if unable to see
well: peer at somebody, peer out of the window, peer over the wall, peer through
the gap, peer over one’s spectacles, etc.
Squint (at, through, up, etc,) = look (at somebody/something) with eyes half shut or
turn sideways, or through narrow opening: squint in the light of sunshine, squint
through the letter box.
Stare = look (at somebody/something) with the eyes wide open in a fixed gaze (in
astonishment, wonder, fear, etc.): They all stared in/with amazement.It’s rude tostare.
6
Drip (allow liquid to) fall in drops: Rain was dripping down from the trees. Is that
roof still dripping?
Leak (allow liquid or air to) get in or out wrongly: The boat leaks like a sieve. Air
leaked out of the balloon.
Ooze (from/out of something; out/away) = (allow a thick liquid to) come or flow out slowly:
Black oil was oozing out of the engine. All the toothpaste has oozed out.
Run = (allow a liquid to) flow: The River Rhine runs into the North Sea. Water was
running all over the bathroom floor. The bathroom floor was running with water.
Seep (through/into/out of something; through/out) = (of a liquid) flow slowly and in small
quantities through a substance: Water seeped through the roof of the tunnel.
23
(c) Terms describing people whose weight is below
normal:7
thin, bony, skinny, scrawny, underweight,
emaciated, slender, slim, etc.
(d) Items which form pairs of antonyms: long/short,
light/heavy, alive/dead, love/hate,
approve/disapprove, approve/disapprove, begin/end,
inside/outside, upstairs/downstairs, etc.
Oil is seeping through a crack in the tank.
“Drip, leak, ooze, run, seep indicate the way in which a liquid escape from a
container or tap. Most (not seep) also indicate the way in which a container or tap
allows a liquid to escape. 1 Drip = (allow sth to) fall in regular drops: Water is
dripping from the pipe. The pipe is dripping (water). 2 Leak = (allow sth to) get
out (through a hole in sth): Wine is leaking from the barrel. The barrel is leaking
(wine). 3 Ooze = (allow sth to) move slowly (out of sth) because thick: Blood is
oozing from the wound. The wound is oozing (blood). 4 Run = (allow sth to) flow
continuously (from sth): Water is running from the tap. The tap is running. 5
Seep = move slowly (through a small opening in sth) because thick: Oil is seeping
from the engine.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 272]
7
“When describing people whose weight is below normal, thin is the most general word,
It may be negative, suggesting weakness or lack of health: She‘s gone terribly thin
since operation. Bony is often applied to parts of the body such as hands or face;
skinny and scrawny are negative and can suggest lack of strength: He looks much
too skinny/scrawny to be a weight-lifter. Underweight is the most neural: The
doctor says I’m underweight. Emaciated indicates a serious condition resulting from
starvation. It is often thought desirable to be slim or slender, slim being used
especially of those who have reduced their weight by diet or exercise: I wish I was
as slim as you. You have a beautifully slender figure.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 947]
24
(e) Items which form pairs or trios of synonyms:
smart/bright/intelligent, conserve/preserve/safeguard,
fix/repair/mend,kind/sort/type/variety, happy/glad,etc.
(f) Items grouped as an activity or a process:
• Do the housework: clean the rooms, do the washing, iron
the clothes, get the food, prepare a meal, wash up, etc.
• Do research: make hypotheses, collect data, analyze data,
get results and come to conclusions.
(g) Items classified according to:
Male: waiter, tiger, actor, host, landlord, sir, etc.
• Sex
Female: waitress, tigress, actress, hostess,
landlady, madam, etc.
• Age: grown-ups, adults, elderly people, middle-aged
people, teenagers, children, infants, babies, etc.
• Age and sex:
horse ⇒ stallion:[+male],[+fully grown] dog ⇒ dog: [+male],[+fully grown]
mare:[+female],[+fully grown] bitch:[+female],[+fully grown]
foal: [±
±
±
±male], [−
−
−
−fully grown] puppy: [±
±
±
±male], [−
−
−
−fully grown]
Exercise 4: Organise the given words (and probably those of your
own) into three semantic fields: shirts, end, forward(s), new,
hats, lend, coats, shorts, beginning, trousers, amble, out,
25
limp, tiptoe, plod, socks, trudge, borrow, stomp, in, stump,
old, backward(s), and tramp.
1._________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
2._________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
3._________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
2.4 Lexical gaps
“The absence of a word in a particular place in a lexical
field of a language” is called a lexical gap. [Richards et al, 1987:
164]
For example, in English there is no singular noun that covers
bull, cow and calf either as horse covers stallion, mare and foal
or as goat covers billy-goat, nanny-goat and kid.
horse goat ?
stallion mare foal billy-goat nanny-goat kid bull cow calf
Exercise 5: Try to fill in each of the two blanks with an
appropriate word to prove that there is no lexical gap in the
given semantic fields.
26
sheep giraffe
ram ewe male giraffe baby giraffe
2.5 Referent, reference and sense
2.5.1 Distinction between referent, reference and sense
In Semantics, a distinction is often made between referent,
reference and sense:
2.5.1.1 A referent is an object or an entity in the real
world or in the world of your imagination, e.g. your school,
your classmates, your teacher, any thing you can see in the
classroom right now, the idealistic working conditions you have
ever dreamed of, etc. that is talked about.
Several words, especially the so-called function words8
, have
no obvious referents: the, could, in, since, and, etc.
2.5.1.2 The reference of a word9
or a linguistic expression is
the relationship between that word or expression and the thing
(book), the action (read), the event (graduate from university),
the quality (sincerity), etc. it refers to.
8
It is commonly believed that function words like prepositions (of, in, etc.),
definite and indefinite articles (the, a/an), conjunctions (if, however, or, etc.),
and auxiliaries (may, should, will, etc.) only “signal grammatical relations.”
[Finegan, 1994: 175]
9
Or, to be more precise, a lexical item
27
For example, the reference of Peter’s house is the
relationship between this English noun phrase and the house that
belongs to Peter.
Peter’s house the house that belongs to Peter
(in the Eng. language) REFERENCE (in the real world)
2.5.1.3 The sense10
of a word or a linguistic expression11
shows the internal relationship between that word or expression
and others in the vocabulary of a language.
Ex1. Teacher and student have the sense relationship of the former
is the one who gives a lesson and the latter is the one
who has the lesson given by the former.
Ex2. A dog is chasing a cat has some sense. However, a dog is
human has no sense.
Ex3. The King of Vietnam is bald has some sense: its sense is
constructed by its individual lexical components and its
syntactic structure. However, this sentence has no reference: it
does not refer to any real person because the King of
Vietnam does not exist nowadays.
Consider the following table and identify referent,
reference and sense via their main features.
10
It is necessary to notice that the two linguistic terms sense and meaning will be
used interchangeably from now on in this text.
11
“The SENSE of an expression is its indispensable hard core of meaning.”
[Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 91]
28
REFERENT REFERENCE SENSE
in the external
world
between a language
and the external
world
in a language
either real
or imaginary
abstract abstract
bachelor
a man who has not
ever been married
the relationship
between the word
bachelor and a certain
unmarried man
unmarried
man
Baïch
Tuyeát
the lovely princess
in a fairy tale which
I have already read
the relationship
between
the name Baïch Tuyeát
and the very princess
“Tuyeát Traéng”
2.5.2 Distinction between variable reference, constant
reference and co-reference
2.5.2.1 When the same linguistic expression refers to different
referents, it has variable reference.
Ex1. There are as many potential referents for the phrase your
left ear as there are people with a left ear in the world.
Ex2. The referent of the phrase the present prime minister
used in Britain in 1944 is Mr. Churchill and in 1982 is Mrs.
Thatcher.
29
2.5.2.2 When one linguistic expression refers to one and the
same referent, it has constant reference: the sun, the moon,
Halley’s comet12
, the People’s Republic of China, Angola, the
United Nations, FIFA, UNESCO, etc.
2.5.2.3 When two or more linguistic expressions share the
same referent, they have co-reference.
Ex1. The morning star and the evening star both refer to
the planet called Venus.
Ex2. In a conversation about Britain in 1982, the Prime
Minister and the leader of the Conservative Party
share the same referent: Mrs Thatcher.
Ex3. If we are talking about a situation in which John is
standing alone in the corner, John and the person in
the corner share the same referent.
Exercise 6: What is identified by the word mean or meaning in
the following examples, i.e. reference or sense? Write R for
reference and S for sense.
_____ 1. When Albert talks about “his former friend”, he means me.
_____ 2. Daddy, what does logic mean?
_____ 3. Purchase has the same meaning as buy.
12
Halley’s comet is the bright comet which reappears about every 76 years. It was first
recorded in 240 BC, and the fact of its regular return was established by Edmond
Halley. Its next reappearance is due in 2061.
30
_____ 4. Look up the meaning of democracy in your dictionary.
_____ 5. If you look out of the window now, you’ll see who I mean.
2.6 Denotation13
and connotation14
2.6.1 Definition
The denotation of a word is the core, central or
referential meaning of the word found in a dictionary. In
English, a content word15
may have its denotation described in
terms of a set of semantic features that serve to identify the
particular concept associated with the word.
The connotation of a word is the additional meaning that
the word has beyond its denotative meaning. It shows
people’s emotions and/or attitudes16
towards what the word
refers to.
13
Denotation is also referred to as denotative meaning.
14
Connotation is also referred to as connotative meaning.
15
Content words — principally nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs like
democracy, mother, stir-fry, happy, and totally — “have meaning in that they
refer to objects, events, and abstract concepts” [Finegan, 1994: 161] while
function words specifically articles, prepositions, conjunctions and auxiliaries
like a/an, including, nevertheless, but, should, etc. also carry meaning, though
in a different way from content words: “to signal grammatical relations.”
[Finegan, 1994: 175]
16
“The referential meaning of a word or sentence is frequently called its
denotation, in contrast to the connotation, which includes both its social and
affective meaning.” [Finegan, 1994: 161]
31
Ex1. Child is denotatively described as [+human], [−mature]
and [±male].
Under a certain circumstance, child may positively be
connoted as [+affectionate] or [+innocent].
Under another circumstance, child may negatively be connoted
as [+noisy] or [+irritating].
Ex2. Woman is denotatively described as [+human], [+mature]
and [+female].
Under a certain circumstance, woman may positively be
connoted as [+devoted] or [+patient].
Under another circumstance, woman may negatively be
connoted as [+wicked] or [+talkative].
The denotation of a word can easily be found in a dictionary
while its connotation(s) may probably depend on such factors as
(1) the culture in which the word is used; (2) the language user’s
family and/or educational background; (3) the language user’s
social and/or political class; (4) the language user’s speech
community and/or ethnic group; etc. In brief, these factors are
by virtue of personal and cultural associations.
2.6.2 Distinction between denotation and connotation
Consider the following table and identify denotation and
connotation via their main features.
32
DENOTATION CONNOTATION
what a lexical item
means
emotions and/or attitudes towards
what a lexical item refers to
core, central peripheral
referential social, affective
bachelor unmarried man
- still single after the usual age for marrying
- decided by himself to stay single
- enjoying freedom, friendship, life, etc.
- ready for his impending marriage
spinster unmarried woman
- still singleaftertheusualageformarrying
- not decided by herself to stay single
- left in an unfavourable state
- a symbol for some failure in life
December
the twelfth month
of the year, next
after November
bad weather (usually rainy or snowy),
dark evening, grey sky, slippery streets,
holiday season, Christmas, winter break,
loneliness, separation from the beloved
Ex1. The word fox almost always has a negative connotation in
English when it is associated with any person who is cunning
or deceitful.
33
Ex2. Some English words usually have positive connotations (+);
others usually have neutral connotations (∅); still others
usually have negative connotations (−):
- mother/mom (+), woman (∅), witch (−);
- father/dad (+), man (∅), the old man (−);
- slender (+), thin (∅), skinny (−);
- plump (+), overweight (∅), fat (−).
Ex3. Synonyms, words that have the same basic meaning, do
not always have the same emotional meaning. For
example, the words stingy and frugal both mean ‘careful
with money.’ However, to call a person stingy is an insult,
while the word frugal has a much more positive connotation.
Similarly, a person wants to be slender but not skinny, and
aggressive17
but not pushy. Therefore, you should be
careful in choosing words because many so-called
synonyms are not really synonyms at all.
Exercise 7: Identify all the possible connotations associated with
the word Christmas.
__________________________________________________
________________________________________________
17
Aggressive (often approved) = forceful = (self-)assertive = showing strong and
confident personality; expressing one’s views; demands; etc. confidently:
A good salesman must be aggressive if he wants to be succeeded.
Pushy (also pushing, informally derogative) = trying constantly to draw attention
to oneself and gain an advantage:
He made himself unpopular by being so pushy.
34
2.7 Multiple senses of lexical items
2.7.1 Primary meaning vs. secondary meaning
The first and foremost distinction made in multiple senses of a
word is between its primary and secondary meanings.
2.7.1.1 The primary meaning of a word (or, to be more
precise, a lexical item) is the first meaning or usage that the
word will suggest to most people when it is said in isolation.
The primary meaning of the English noun wing, for instance,
is ‘either of the pair of feathered limbs that a bird uses to fly.’
2.7.1.2 Secondary meanings of a word are the meanings
besides its primary meaning. They are said to be not central but
peripheral.
In addition, secondary meanings of a word are context-
bound whereas its primary meaning is not.
In He usually plays on the wing, for example, wing means
‘side part of the playing area in football, hockey, etc.’ Such a
secondary meaning is derived from the context denoted by the
verb plays.
2.7.2 Literal meaning vs. figurative meaning
It is time to distinguish then within all the possible meanings of
the English noun wing, for example, those that are literal and those
that are figurative.
2.7.2.1 “The basic or usual meaning of a word” [Crowther
(ed.), 1992: 527] is usually referred to as its literal meaning.
35
Some literal meanings are identified via context in the noun wing:
 Part that projects from the side of an aircraft and supports it
in the air: the two wings of an airplane;
 Part of a building that projects from the main part:
the east/west wing of a house;
 Projecting part of the body of a motor vehicle above the wheel:
The left wing of his car was damaged in the collision;
 Part of a political party that holds certain views or has a
particular function: the radical wing of the Labour Party.
2.7.2.2 The figurative meaning of a word is one which is
different from its usual (literal) meaning and which create
vivid mental images to readers or listeners.
Below are some figurative meanings of the noun wing:
- We hope college life will help him to spread his wings a bit.
(= extend his activities and interests)
- Having a new baby to look after has clipped her wings a bit.
(= has prevented her from achieving her ambition)
- She immediately took the new arrivals under her wing.
(= looked after the new arrivals)
- He retires as chairman next year; his successor is waiting in
the wings. (= is ready to replace him)
Wing is an English word that has several closely related but
slightly different meanings. It is said to be polysemous.
36
2.8 Figures of speech
A figure of speech is “a word or phrase which is used for
special effect, and which does not have its usual or literal
meaning.” [Richards et al, 1987: 105]
2.8.1 Simile and metaphor
2.8.1.1 Definition
Simile is “the use of comparison of one thing with
another, eg. as brave as a lion, a face like a mask. [Crowther (ed.),
1992: 848]
It is incredible to notice that not all comparisons belong to simile,
eg. He is much taller than his elder brother. Only the comparisons
clearly employed as examples of figures of speech do.
Metaphor is “the use of a word or phrase to indicate
something different from (though related in some way to)
the literal meaning, as in I’ll make him eat his words or She has a
heart of stone.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 564]
2.8.1.2 Distinction between a simile and a metaphor
A simile is an explicit or direct comparison in which
something is compared to something else by the use of a
function word such as like or as:
- My hands are as cold as ice. (= My hands are very cold.)
- Tom eats like a horse.
(= Tom eats as much as a horse does. In other words, Tom’s
appetite IS explicitly COMPARED TO that of a horse.)
37
A metaphor is an implicit or indirect comparison in which
no function word is used. Something is described by stating another
thing with which it can be compared:
- She has a heart of stone.
(= She has a pitiless and unfeeling nature.)
- I’ll make him eat his word.
(= I’ll make him admit that what he’s said is wrong.)
- He was a lion in the fight.
(= He fought bravely and successfully just like a lion
in the fight for food.)
- His words stabbed at her heart.
(= Like a knife, his words are so sharp that they can
cause great pain or much unhappiness for her. In other
words, his words did not actually stab, but their effect IS
implicitly COMPARED TO the stabbing of a knife.)
2.8.1.3 Distinction between dead metaphors18
and live metaphors
Dead metaphors are used so often that they have lost
their metaphoric characteristics: the leg/face of the table,
the back of the chair, the mouth of the river, the head of the
state, the childhood of the earth, etc.
Dead metaphors are in fact idioms19
or fixed expressions
that native speakers of a language give special meanings and use
18
Dead metaphors are also called either unconscious or fossilized metaphors.
19
An idiom is an expression which functions as a single unit and whose meaning
cannot be worked out from its separate parts. Thus, we cannot understand an
38
naturally and unconsciously: these speakers do not pay attention to
the implicit comparison found in any dead metaphor; they just
think directly of its meaning used in a given context:
- He looks as though he hasn’t had a square meal for months.
(= a large and satisfying meal)
- He washed his hand out of the matter.
(= refused to have anything more to do with the matter)
Live metaphors20
are implied or indirect comparisons
which have a variety of figurative meanings through their
endless use: Tom is a pig may be interpreted as Tom is short
and fat, Tom is slow and lazy, Tom is greedy, Tom is not
intelligent, Tom is neither intelligent nor ambitious, etc.
Live metaphors can only be understood after the implicit
comparison found in any of them is seriously considered and
fully appreciated. Native speakers of a language use live
metaphors intentionally and creatively in order to make their
speech more vivid, figurative, concise, etc.: You are a mist that
appears for a little time and then vanishes.
(= You are implicitly compared to a mist that does not last
long, i.e. you come and leave quickly.)
idiom just by looking at the separate meanings or the word classes of its
members. We have to consider an idiom as a whole and figure out its meaning
in context.
- His excuses cut no ice with me. (= had little or no effect on me)
- The project has been going great guns.(=proceeding vigorously  successfully)
20
Live metaphors are also called conscious metaphors.
39
2.8.2 Personification
Personification is a special kind of metaphor in which some
human characteristic is attributed to an inanimate object
or abstract notion; that is, a lifeless thing or quality is
stated as if it were living, as in pitiless cold, cruel heat, a
treacherous calm, a sullen sky, a frowning rock, the thirsty
ground, the laughing harvest, the childhood of the world, the
anger of the tempest, the deceitfulness of riches, etc.
2.8.3 Metonymy
2.8.3.1 Definition
Metonymy is the substitution of the name of one thing for
that of another to which it is related/with which it is
associated. (In Greek, meta- means ‘substitution’ and onyma
means ‘name’.)
(a) A sign substitutes for the person or the object it signifies or
symbolizes.
- He succeeded to the crown (= the royal office).
- She is a fighter against red tape (= bureaucracy, office routine).
- The new proposal might affect the cloth (= the clergy) in some way.
- Backstairs did influence.
(= intrigues, secret plans to do something bad, secret arrangements)
- Can you protect your children from the cradle to the grave?
(= from childhood to death)
40
(b) An instrument substitutes for an agent.
-The pen (= the writer) has more influence than the sword
(= the soldier).
- He is the best pen (= the best writer) of the day.
- Who brought fire and sword (= adestructive war) into our country?
- We need a force of a thousand rifles (= soldiers).
- Sceptre and crown (= kings)
Must tumble down,
And in the dust be equal made
With the poor crooked scythe and spade (= peasants).
[James Shirley]
(= Like peasants, kings must die.)
(c) A container substitutes for the thing contained.
- The kettle (= the water in the kettle) is boiling.
- He drank the cup.
(= the coffee, the tea, the chocolate, etc. in the cup)
- He is too fond of the bottle (= the liquor in the bottle).
- The conquerors smote the city (= the inhabitants of the city).
- Why don’t you recognize the power of the purse?
(= the money kept in the purse)
(d) The concrete, like an organ of the human body,
substitutes for the abstract such as love, hatred, sincerity, a
mental ability, a natural talent, etc.
41
- She has an ear for music. (= She possesses a remarkable talent
for learning, imitating, appreciating, etc. music.)
- She has a good head of business.
(= She is gifted in/is clever at dealing with business.)
(e) The abstract substitutes for the concrete:
- His Majesty (= the king) died a year ago.
- His Holiness (= the Pope) has just come back to Rome.
- The authorities put an end to the riot.
(= the group of people who have the power to give orders or take action)
(f) The material substitutes for the thing made.
- The marble (= the marble statue21
) speaks.
- All our glass is kept in the cupboard.
(= vessels and articles made of glass)
- He was buried under this stone.
(= this tomb made of stone, this tombstone)
(g) An author/a producer/a place where goods are made
substitutes for his work(s)/its product(s).
- I have never read Keat (= Keat’s poems).
- Have you ever read Homer (= the works of Homer)?
- I love old china (= crockery made in China).
21
A scene found in a fairly tale shows the prince of a kingdom going for a walk
in his garden. When passing by the marble statue, he notices a sweet call:
“My dear prince!”
42
2.8.3.2 Distinction between metaphor and metonymy
On the one hand, metaphor is based on the associated
similarity shared by the two things being implicitly
compared. In other words, only if A and B are similar to each other
in some way can the name commonly referred to A be
metaphorically used to refer to B.
On the other hand, metonymy does not depend on such
similarity.
Let’s consider the two following sentences:
(1) The organization is keeping the brake on pay rises.
(2) No man is an island: entire of itself; every man is a piece of the
continent.
The sentence marked (1) exemplifies a metaphor: the core
meaning of keep the brake on a certain vehicle in order to reduce
its speed or to stop it has been changed to its metaphoric
meaning: control pay rises or cause pay rises to slow down.
The whole sentence means the organization is controlling the
increase in the amounts/sums of money paid for its current
activities.
This sentence marked (2) consists of two metonymies:
respectively, an island and the continent, which are both
[+concrete], stand for isolation and community, which are both
[+abstract].
The whole sentence means no one can isolate himself from the
community he has been living in.
43
2.8.4 Synecdoche
2.8.4.1 Definition
Synecdoche is a special kind of metonymy in which “a part
or aspect of a person, object, etc. is meant to refer to the
whole person, object, etc.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 925]
- They organized a fleet of fifty sails (= ships).
- He is a man of seventy winters (= years of age).
- He managed to earn his bread (= necessaries).
- This is a village of only more than one hundred souls
(= people).
- Gray hairs (= old or elderly people) should be respected.
Synecdoche also involves a whole or genus used to
substitute for a part or species: vessel for ship, the smiling
year for the smiling season of the year, especially the spring, the
Christian world for the Christian Church as a whole, etc.
2.8.4.2 Distinction between metonymy and synecdoche
Let’s consider the four following sentences:
(1) The princess captures the hearts of the nation.
The hearts, which is [+organ of the human body] and thus
[+concrete], is used to stand for the love, which is [+emotional
experience] and thus [+abstract]. The hearts in this case is a
metonymy. The sentence means all the people of that country love
the princess.
44
(2) He has a kind heart.
A heart, which is [+organ of the human body], [+concrete] and
[+part], is used to stand for a person, which is [+human], [+concrete]
and [+whole]. A kind heart in this case is a synecdoche. The
sentence means he is a kind/kind-hearted person who is concerned for
others around him.
(3) Spare the rod and spoil the child.
The rod, which is [+thing] and thus [+concrete], is used to
stand for the punishment, which is [+human activity], [+intention] and
thus more or less [+abstract]. The rod in this case is a metonymy.
The sentence means if you do not punish a child when he does wrong, you
will spoil his character.
(4) All hands on deck did help.
Hands, which is [+organ of the human body], [+concrete] and
[+part], is used to stand for people, which is [+human], [+concrete]
and [+whole]. In this case, hands must be a synecdoche. This
sentence means all the people on one of the floors of the ship worked
hard to accomplish a certain task.
2.8.5 Hyperbole
Hyperbole, which is also called overstatement, is the use of
“exaggerated statement that is made for special effect
and is not meant to be taken literally.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992:
446]
45
Below are a few hyperboles or overstatements:
- I’ve invited millions of (= a lot of) people to my party.
- She sheds floods of tears (= cries a lot) whenever she is upset.
- Don’t live in such a sea of doubt!
(= Don’t be too suspicious!)
- Never in a million years will he admit defeat.
(= He will never admit defeat.)
- I haven’t seen you for ages.
(= for a few weeks, for a couple of months, for a while)
2.8.6 Litotes
Litotes, which is also called meiosis, is the use of
deliberately gentler, milder or weaker statements to
express something in a controlled way.
- I don’t think I would agree with you. (= I disagree with you.)
- I am afraid that no passenger is allowed to smoke in here.
(= You are not allowed to smoke in here.)
Quite often, an expression of litotes is an “ironical
understatement, especially using a negative to emphasize
the contrary.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 527]
- It’s not bad. (= It is fine.)
- It wasn’t easy. (= It was very difficult.)
- Always remember that she is no fool.
(= She is worldly-wise, in fact.)
- Jim was rather upset when he again failed in the final exam.
(= very upset)
46
2.8.7 Irony
Irony is the “expression of one’s meaning by saying the
direct opposite of one’s thoughts in order to be emphatic, amusing,
sarcastic, etc.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 479]
Below are a few expressions of irony:
- What a lovely day it was! Everything I had went wrong.
- He is so intelligent that no examiner has agreed to pass him
so far.
- He is lucky to have such an ugly and awkward wife.
- She is extremely unlucky to be born
in such a prosperous family in a developed European country.
- Your plan is really tricky. The other team will figure it out
in about one play.
2.8.8 Euphemism
2.8.8.1 Definition
Euphemism is “the use of pleasant, mild or indirect words
or phrases in place of more accurate or direct ones.”
[Crowther (ed.), 1992: 305] Respectively, morticians (also called
undertakers) and a garbage man may be euphemistically replaced
by funeral directors and a sanitation engineer.
2.8.8.2 Distinction between a taboo word and a euphemism.
A taboo word, a ‘dirty’ word, is the word or the linguistic
expression that refers to a taboo act or behaviour in a society,
a culture or a speech community while a euphemism is the word or
the linguistic expression that replaces a taboo word or serves
to avoid a frightening or unpleasant subject.
47
It is crucial to recognize that a taboo word and its
euphemism share the same denotative meaning but they differ in
their connotative meanings: the taboo word has a negative
connotation whereas its euphemism has a positive connotation.
Below are a number of common euphemisms and theirtaboo words:
Euphemisms Taboo words
social disease syphilis
criminal assault rape
handicapped crippled
mentally ill insane
underprivileged poor
developing or less developed (country) poor (country)
(more) developed (country) rich (country)
senior citizens the aged
laid to rest buried
perspiration sweat
intoxicated drunk
abdomen belly
odour stink or smell
expectorate spit
retarded or unusual mentally defective
hard of hearing deaf
love child bastard
48
Below are a few expressions of euphemism:
- Pass away is a euphemism for die.
- He was his Majesty’s guest for two years is a euphemism
for He was in jail for two years.
2.8.9 Onomatopoeia
Onomatopoeia is the imitation of natural sounds by means
of words or groups of words. Hiss, cuckoo, thud, moo, baa,
hush, pop, etc. are onomatopoeic words. Growl, splash, crackle,
etc. exemplify semi-onomatopoeia.
Onomatopoeia can be identified in the following sentences:
- She is always squeaking and squawking.
- We could hear the enemy guns booming (away) in the distance.
- He felt a tap on his shoulder.
- Rain was dripping down from the trees. Its steady drip kept
me awake all night long.
Exercise 8: Interpret the meaning the following sentences and
state what kind of figures of speech (also called figurative
language) used in each of them.
1. When he gets going, Jack is a streak of lightning.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
49
2. I found the fifty-two pounds of books you left for me to carry. Your
kindness really moved me.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
3. The man is a demon for work.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
4. When you take that course, plan to study thirty hours a day.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
5. The wind howled angrily around the house all night.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
6. When the White House called, the ambassador went at once.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
7. My dormitory room is like a cave.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
50
8. Come to the dormitory and see what a cave I live in.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
9. Dick was fairly pleased when he won the brand-new car in the contest.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
10. If you are not happy with the service, go and talk to the City Hall.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
11. Man does not live by bread alone.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
12. We now live under the same roof.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
13. Albert was as sharp as a tack this morning. He answered every
question as soon as it was asked.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
51
14. The river ate the bank away.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
15. Keep overeating like that and pretty soon you’ll weigh a
thousand pounds.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
16. After she heard the good news, she grinned like a mule eating briars.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
17. The captain was in charge of one hundred horses.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
18. Joe cried a little when he lost the thousand dollars.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
19. You can depend on Gina; she is a rock when trouble comes.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
52
20. Life is a dream.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
21. He’s so hardheaded that he won’t listen to anyone.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
22. Research says that these methods are best.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
23. Right at this minute, I could drink a barrel of water without
stopping.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
24. It is amazing what a great mind he is.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
25. Alice came in gently, like a May breeze.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
53
26. Susie is a picture of loveliness in her new dress.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
27. A thousand thanks are for your kindness.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
28. I walked past the big sad mouth which didn’t know what to say then.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
29. We are tired to death of such movies.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
30. Give every man thine ears, bid a few thy voice.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
31. There was a storm in Parliament last night.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
54
32. I’m afraid he has misrepresented the facts.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
33. He worked and worked until he breathed his last.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
34. We’ll just have to go our separate ways.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
35. They were vital, unforgettable matches that gave us a new
window on the game.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
36. I’ve told you a thousand times not to touch that again.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
37. He is as mute as a fish.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
55
38. We stopped to drink in the beautiful scenery.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
39. His words can be trusted.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
40. The police team has cemented close ties with the hospital staff.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
41. The boss gave her a hot look.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
42. He could not bridle his anger.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
43. He attacked every weak point in my argument.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
56
44. In 1940, after the fall of France, England had no defense left but
her ancient valor.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
45. The fire snaps and crackles like a whip; its sharp acrid smoke stings
the eyes. It is the fire that drives a thorn of memory in my heart.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
46. The organization is keeping the brake on pay rises.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
47. Her father is a captain of industry.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
48. I am the captain of my soul.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
49. To fall out of a tree in one’s early childhood is not a particularly
reassuring experience.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
57
50. Nomanis anisland: entire of itself; everymanis apiece of the continent.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
2.9 Hyponymy
2.9.1 Definition
Hyponymy is a relation in which the referent of a word is
totally included in the referent of another word. In other
words, hyponymy is the relationship between each of the
hyponyms22
(the “lower” word) and its superordinate23
(the
“higher” word):
cook
grill toast boil fry24
roast bake smoke ………
stir-fry sauteù deep-fry
2.9.2 Distinction between a hyponym and a superordinate
22
Hyponyms are also referred to as subordinates or specific lexical items.
23
Superordinates are also referred to as hyper(o)nyms or generic lexical items.
24
stir-fry = fry (vegetables, meat, etc.) for a short time in very hot oil
while stirring them
sauteù = fry (food like potatoes) quickly in a little fat
deep-fry = fry (food like potatoes) quickly in hot fat that completely covers them
58
A hyponym is a word “whose referent is totally included
in the referent of another word (the prefix hypo- in hyponym
means ‘below’).” [Finegan, 1994: 165]
Accordingly, a superordinate is a word whose referent
covers all the referents of its hyponyms. (The prefix hyper-
in hyper(o)nym means ‘over.’)
Ex1. plant
tree bush (shrub) flowering plant moss grass ………
Hyponyms often exist at more than one level, resulting in
multiple layers of hyponymic relationships:
Ex2. colour
blue red yellow green black ………
turquoise25
aquamarine royal blue
In this case, blue is a word that has a hyponym and a
superordinate at the same time. Since turquoise, aquamarine and
royal blue refer to different shades of blue, these words are
IMMEDIATE hyponyms [Palmer: 1981: 87] of blue. The word
blue in its turn is, along with many other colour terms, an
IMMEDIATE hyponym of colour. We thus obtain a hierarchy of
25
Turquoise = greenish blue; aquamarine = bluish green; royal blue = deep
bright blue
59
terms related to each other through hyponymic relationships.
Similar hierarchies can be established for many lexical fields:
Ex3. physical entity
plant animal rock
fish bird insect bug reptile mammal ………
sparrow hawk crow fowl ……… human animal (beast)
chicken turkey quail ……… dog cat cow ………
Note in this case that the word animal appears on two different
levels. English speakers indeed use the word to refer to at least
two different referents: animals as distinct from plants and rocks,
and animals (generally mammals other than humans) as distinct
from humans.
2.9.3 Hyponymy and inclusion
“HYPONYMY involves us in the notion INCLUSION in the
sense that tulip and rose are included in flower, and lion and
elephant in mammal (or perhaps animal). Similarly, scarlet is
included in red. Inclusion is thus a matter of class
membership. The ‘super’ term is the SUPERORDINATE and the
‘lower’ term is the HYPONYM.” [Palmer, 1981: 85]
60
Exercise 9: Each of the following sentences presents a pair of
words. Which of them is a superordinate and which, a
hyponym?
1. She reads books all day – mostly novels.
2. A crocodile is a reptile.
3. There’s no flower more beautiful than a tulip.
4. He likes all vegetables except carrots.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
Exercise 10: Draw a chart to show the relationship between a
superordinate and a hyponym.
1. luggage and suitcase
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
2. green vegetable and bean
61
3. animal and foal
4. animal and child
5. fowl and rooster
6. plant and coconut
7. plant and rose
62
8. vocal organ and tongue tip
9. head and eyelash
10. furniture and dressing table
11. vehicle and convertible
12. vocalize and croon
63
2.10 Synonymy
2.10.1 Definition
Synonymy is a relation in which various words have different
(written and sound) forms but have the same or nearly the
same meaning.
Ex1: The two English verbs hide and conceal are synonyms; they
both mean keep somebody/something from being seen or
known about.
Ex2: The four English nouns kind, type, sort and variety are
synonyms; they all refer to a group having similar
characteristics.
2.10.2 Distinction between true synonymy and
partial synonymy
2.10.2.1 True synonymy
There are few true synonyms in the lexicon of a language.
Ex1. Movie, film, flick26
and motion picture may be considered
as synonyms because they all refer to the same set of referents
in the real world. In other words, they have the same
denotative meaning. However, these lexical items differ in
their connotative meanings: movie may strike you as American
while film may strike you as British or as appropriate for
movie classics or art movies; flick is used chiefly in very
informal contexts whereas motion picture is quaintly
outdated and has connotations as a term from the thirties or
forties of the 20th
century.
26
flick n [C] (dated, informal) cinema film
64
In brief, movie, film, flick and motion picture are not true
synonyms.
Ex2. Fast, quick and rapid may be considered as synonyms
because they may be used interchangeably in reference to
someone’s running speed: He’s a fast/quick/rapid runner.
However; a fast talker, one who is able to get out of trouble
by talking cleverly, is different from a quick talker, one who
usually talks in a rapid manner; some people may lead their
lives in the fast lane, not in the rapid lane or in the quick
lane; he has a quick mind, not a rapid mind or a fast mind; he
gave her a quick glance, not a rapid glance or a fast glance;
and rapid is the usual term when reference is made to a
person’s strides, especially metaphorical strides: Tom has made
rapid strides in his math this term. In brief, fast, quick and
rapid are not true synonyms.
Quite often, words that appear synonymous at first glance
actually refer to slightly different sets of concepts or are used in
different situations. “The fact that there are few true synonyms in
the lexicon of a language reflects the general tendency of language
users to make most of what is available to them. If two terms have the
same referent, the meaning of one of them is usually modified to
express differences in referential, social or affective meaning27
.
Although true synonymy is rare, the notion is useful because it
helps describe similarities between the meanings of different
terms in the lexicon.” [Finegan, 1994: 168]
27
In other words, synonyms usually have different connotations: mother, Mum,
Mom, Mummy, and Mommy.
65
2.10.2.2 Partial synonymy
Partial synonymy is a relation in which a polysemous word
shares one of its meanings with another word.
For example, one meaning of deep is synonymous with
profound in the pair of sentences marked (1)a-b. In other words,
deep and profound can be used interchangeably in (1)a-b. No
such interchange can be found in (2)a-b:
(1)a. You have my deep sympathy.
(1)b. You have my profound sympathy.
(2)a. The river is very deep at this point.
(2)b. *The river is very profound at this point.
Partial synonymy leads to collocations: a bunch of keys, a
herd of sheep, a school of ants, a flock of birds, a group of
teachers, a gang of thieves, etc.
Exercise 11: The following pairs of words are partial synonyms,
i.e. they do not share all their senses. For each pair, (a) gives a
sentence in which the two can be used interchangeably; (b)
gives another sentence in which only one of them can be used.
1. strong/powerful
(a) ________________________________________________
(b) ________________________________________________
2. ripe/mature
(a) ________________________________________________
(b) ________________________________________________
66
3. broad/wide
(a) ________________________________________________
(b) _______________________________________________
4. soil/earth
(a) ________________________________________________
(b) ________________________________________________
5. edge/side
(a) ________________________________________________
(b) ________________________________________________
6. permit/allow
(a)_________________________________________________
(b)_________________________________________________
Exercise 12: Identify various meanings of each of the two given
polysemous words and then point out which meaning exemplify
partial synonymy.
1. deep
(i) This is a deep well.
(ii) He only gave a deep sigh.
(iii) You have my deep sympathy.
(iv) With his hands deep in his pockets, he went away.
The ________ meaning of deep is synonymous with __________.
67
2. broad
(i) The river is very broad at this point.
(ii) He just gave a broad smile.
(iii) Luckily, my boss is a man of broad views.
(iv) He speaks English with a broad Yorkshire accent.
The _________ meaning of broad is synonymous with ________.
2.11 Antonymy
2.11.1 Definition
Antonymy is a relation in which two words have different
(written and sound) forms and are opposite in meaning.
Ex1: Pass--fail, hot--cold and thinner--fatter are three
pairs of antonyms.
Ex2: True--false, big--small and buy--sell are three pairs of
antonyms.
2.11.2 Classification
2.11.2.1 Binary antonymy28
and gradable antonymy
2.11.2.1.1 Below is probably a common way of telling binary
antonymy from gradable antonymy:
Binary antonymy is a relation in which two members of a pair
of antonyms:
28
Binary antonymy is also referred to as complementary antonymy.
68
(a) are mutually exclusive: not alive is dead and not dead is alive.
(b) cannot be used in a comparative or superlative sense:
*He is more single/more married than his brother.
(c) cannot be used in questions with how to ask about degrees:
*How single/How married is he?
Thus, alive--dead and married--single are two pairs of
binary antonyms.
Gradable antonymy is a relation in which two members of a
pair of antonyms:
(a) are gradable: between hot and cold are three
“intermediate terms” [Palmer, 1981: 95] warm, tepid (or
lukewarm) and cool.
(b) can be used in a comparative or superlative sense: wider is
less narrow, more difficult is less easy, etc.
(c) can be used in questions with how to ask about degrees:
How difficult is the test?29
Thus, hot--cold and difficult--easy are two pairs of
gradable antonyms.
2.11.2.1.2 The distinction between binary antonymy and
gradable antonymy is sometimes blurred by language users. In
English, for example, it is reasonable to assume that whatever is
alive is not dead and that whatever is dead is not alive, and thus
29
How easy is the test? is also possible, but its context is very restricted, e.g. to
show that one can manage to pass the test without any difficulty.
69
that the adjectives dead and alive form a pair of binary antonyms.
However, we do have expressions like half-dead, barely alive,
and more dead than alive, which suggest that, in some contexts,
we see alive and dead as gradable antonyms. Nevertheless, the
distinction between the two types of antonyms is useful in
that it describes an important distinction between two types of
word relationships.
2.11.2.2 Relational antonymy
Two members of a pair of relational antonyms30
display
symmetry in their meaning. The “if…, then …” formula can be
used to test and identify relational antonyms: if Mr. Brown is
Jack’s employer, then Jack is Mr. Brown’s employee; if Jenny is
thinner than Mary, then Mary is fatter than Jenny; if John
bought a car from Fred, then Fred sold a car to John; etc.
Thus, buy--sell, employer--employee, and thinner--fatter
are three pairs of relational antonyms.
Relational antonyms belong to various word classes:
 Verbs: buy--sell, give--receive, lend--borrow, import--
export, own--belong to, etc.
 Nouns: employer--employee, grandparent--grandchild,
father/mother--son/daughter, fianceù--fianceùe,
parent--child/offspring, professor--student,
teacher--pupil, doctor--patient, debtor--creditor,
landlord/landlady--tenant, husband--wife,
uncle/aunt--nephew/niece, etc.
30
Relational antonyms are also called converses.
70
 Comparative adjectives: thinner--fatter, cheaper --
more expensive, greater than--less than, etc.
 Comparative adverbs: more efficiently--less efficiently,
faster--more slowly, etc.
 Prepositions: above--below, in front of--behind,
over--under, before--after, north of--south of,
west of--east of, etc.
2.11.3 Antonymy and (un)markedness
Words that are in an antonymous relationship often do
not have equal status with respect to markedness. In a pair of
antonyms, one member is more unmarked (or less marked) and
the other is more marked (or less unmarked), e.g. high--low, tall-
-short, heavy--light, far--near, expensive--cheap, hot--cold,
long--short, wide--narrow, deep--shallow, difficult--easy,
married--single, well--badly, etc.
The unmarkedness of one member of any pair of antonyms
enables it to occur in questions of degree like How heavy is it?
(not How light is it?), How tall are you? (not How short are
you?), How deep is the canal? (not How shallow is the canal?),
How expensive is this bracelet? (not How cheap is this bracelet?),
How well can you speak English? (not How badly can you speak
English?), etc.
Similarly, since married is less marked than single, we say we
talk about one’s marital status, and not about one’s single status.
71
Exercise 13: Are the following pairs of words binary antonyms?
(1) chalk--cheese Yes / No (4) dead--alive Yes / No
(2) same--different Yes / No (5)married--unmarried Yes / No
(3) copper--tin Yes / No (6) cheap--expensive Yes / No
Exercise 14: Are the following pairs of words relational
antonyms?
(1) below--above Yes / No (4)grandparent--grandchild Yes / No
(2) love--hate Yes / No (5) greater than--less than Yes / No
(3) conceal--reveal 31
Yes / No (6) own--belong to Yes / No
Exercise 15: Identify the continuous scale of values between the
two given words.
1. love--hate: _________________________________________
2. hot -- cold: _________________________________________
3. big -- small: _________________________________________
4. rich -- poor: ________________________________________
5. none -- all: _________________________________________
6. possibly -- certainly: ________________________________
7. never--always: ______________________________________
31
Conceal sb/sth (from sb/sth) = keep sb/sth from being seen or known about:
- He tried to conceal/did not reveal his heavy drinking from his family.
Reveal sth (to sb) = make sth known (to sb):
- The doctor did not reveal the truth to him/concealed the truth from him.
72
Exercise 16: State whether the following pairs of antonyms are
binary, gradable or relational by writing B (binary), G
(gradable) or R (relational):
1. good--bad: ______________ 9. import--export: ________________________________
2. pass--fail: ______________ 10. better than--worse than: _________________________
3.deciduous--evergreen:_____ 11. easy--difficult: ________________________________
4.expensive—cheap: ________ 12. hot--cold: ________________________________
5.parent--offspring: ________ 13. legal--illegal: ________________________________
6. beautiful--ugly: __________ 14. asleep--awake: ________________________________
7. false--true:______________ 15. rude--polite: ________________________________
8. lessor--lessee: ___________ 16. husband--wife: ________________________________
2.12 Homonymy
2.12.1 Distinction between homonymy, homophony and
homography
2.12.1.1 Homonymy is a relation in which various words have
the same (sound and written) form but have different
meanings.
Ex1: Classified as two homonyms are the noun bank1, which
means a financial institution, and the noun bank2, which
means the shore of a river; both being pronounced /b`7k/ in
RP32
.
32
Received Pronunciation (usually abbreviated to RP) “is most familiar as the
accent used by most announcers and newsreaders on serious national and
international BBC broadcasting channels.” Also, it “is often most recommended
for foreign learners studying British English.” [Roach, 1991: 4]
73
Ex2: Classified as three homonyms are the noun bear, which refers to
a large heavy animal with thick fur, the verb bear1, which
means give birth to, and the verb bear2, which means tolerate;
all being pronounced /be6(r)/ in RP.
2.12.1.2 Homophony is a relation in which various words have
the same sound form33
but have different meanings and
written forms.
Ex1: Classified as two homophones are the noun hour, which
means a twenty-fourth part of a day and night, and the
possessive adjective our, which means belonging to us; both
being pronounced /aυ6(r)/ in RP.
Ex2: Classified as two homophones are the noun place, which
means a particular area or position in space, and the noun
plaice, which means a type of fish; both being pronounced
/ple1s/ in RP.
2.12.1.3 Homography is a relation in which various words
have the same written form34
but have different meanings
and sound forms.
Ex1: Classified as two homographs are the verb lead /li:d/ in Does
this road lead to town and the noun lead /led/ in Lead is a
heavy metal.
Ex2: Classified as two homographs are the bare infinitive form
read /ri:d/ and the past tense form read /red/.
33
also referred to as pronunciation
34
also referred to as spelling
74
2.12.2 Homophones as a distinct type of homonyms
“The terminological relationship between homonymy,
homography, and homophony is not entirely clear. For instance,
homophones that are not homographs are sometimes
classified as a distinct type of homonyms, but the formal identity
of homonyms may also be defined so strictly as to exclude non-
homographic homophones from the class of homonyms (at least
for those languages that have written records). The very fact that
homonyms are different words (i.e., that they are distinct entities in
the lexicon) implies that they are semantically distinct.” [Asher
and Simpson, 1994: 1595]
Consider the following table and identify antonymy,
synonymy, homonymy, homophony, and homography via their
main features.
Written form Sound form Meaning
antonymy −
−
−
− −
−
−
− −
−
−
−
synonymy −
−
−
− −
−
−
− +
homonymy + + −
−
−
−
homophony −
−
−
− + −
−
−
−
homography + −
−
−
− −
−
−
−
+ : the same or nearly the same;
−
−
−
− : different or opposite
75
Among a number of linguists who regard non-homographic
homophones as a distinct type of homonyms are Fromkin and
Rodman [1993: 129]: “Homonyms are different words that are
pronounced the same, but may or may not spelled the same. To,
two and too are homonyms because they are pronounced the
same, despite their spelling differences.”
These authors and many others may require homonymy re-
defined:
Homonymy is a sense relation in which various words are
written the same way and/or sound alike but have different
meanings, e.g. feat (strength or courage) and feet (plural of
foot), know (have something in one’s mind) and no (not any), row
(a quarrel) and row (a line), wound (an injury) and wound (past of
wind), etc.
Exercise 17: Give the phonemic transcription shared by two
members of each of the given pairs of words to identify
them as a pair of homophones:
The first one is done as an example.
1. altar /‘0:lt6(r)/ alter 11. herd __________ heard
2. beech __________ beach 12. knight _________ night
3. boar ___________ bore 13. nose __________ knows
4. coarse _________ course 14. leek ____________ leak
5. crews ___________ cruise 15. maid ___________ made
6. deer ____________ dear 16. pail _____________ pale
7. draft ___________ draught 17. reign ___________ rain
76
8. fare ____________fair 18. scene __________ seen
9. flour ___________ flower 19. thrown ________throne
10. grate _________ great 20. whole ___________ hole
Exercise 18: Give the phonemic transcription shared be two
members of each of the given pairs of words to identify
them as a pair of homonyms: The italic words in bracket are
to clarify the meaning in question of the given words.
The first one is done as an example.
1. lie1 (meaning tell lies)
lie 2 (meaning put one’s body on a horizontal surface)
Classified as two homonyms are the verb lie1, which means
tell lies, and the verb lie2, which means put one’s body
on a horizontal surface; both being pronounced /la1/ in
RP.
2. bat (meaning a tool for hitting in baseball)
bat (meaning the small mouse-like animal that flies at night and
feeds on fruit and insects)
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
3. too (meaning more than should be)
too (meaning also)
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
77
4. might (meaning great strength or power)
might (expressing possibility)
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
5. bare (meaning without the usual covering or protection)
bare (meaning uncover or reveal something)
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
6. sound (meaning thing that can be heard)
sound (meaning healthy or in good condition)
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
7. lead (as in Does this road lead to town)
lead (as in He’s the chief trouble-maker; the others just follow his
lead)
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
Exercise 19: What is the relationship between the words in the
following pairs? If the words are antonyms, specify what kind
of antonyms they are. The italic words in bracket are to clarify
the meaning in question of the given words.
78
The first one is done as an example.
1. true -- false: binary antonymy
2. gloom -- darkness: __________________
3. dark (as in a dark room) -- dark (as in Don’t look on the dark
side of things): __________________
4. wind (as in The wind is blowing hard) -- wind (as in wind one’s
watch): __________________
5. deny -- admit: __________________
6. host -- guest: __________________
7. sow (as in sow a field with wheat) -- sow (meaning a female
pig): __________________
8. pupil (at a school) -- pupil (of an eye): __________________
9. cheap -- expensive: __________________
10. coarse -- course: __________________
2.13 Polysemy
2.13.1 Definition
Polysemy is a relation in which a single word has two or more
slightly different but closely related meanings.
Ex1: The noun chip has the three following meanings:
(i) a small piece of some hard substance which has been
broken off from something larger: a chip of wood/glass.
79
(ii) a small cut piece of potato which is fried for eating: Can I
try one of your chips?
(iii) a small but vital piece of a computer: This computer has
got a faster chip than the old one.
The three meanings are closely related because they all
contain the semantic feature [+small piece].
Ex2: The verb break has the two following meanings:
(i) separate into two or more parts as a result of force
or strain (but not cutting): He broke that cup.
(ii) become unusable by being damaged; make (something)
unusable by damaging: My watch is broken.
The two meanings are closely related because both contain the
semantic feature [+can no longer be used].
2.13.2 Distinction between polysemy and homonymy
A well-known problem in semantics is how to decide whether
we are dealing with a single polysemous word (like plain) or with
two or more homonyms (like port1, as in The ship left port, and
port2, as in He drank port). In other words, how do you know
when you have separate lexical items rather than a single word
with different meanings?
Using SPELLING as a criterion is misleading: many sets of
words are obviously distinct but have the same spelling as, for
example, the noun sound meaning noise and the adjective sound
meaning healthy, or the noun bank1 meaning financial institution
and the noun bank2 meaning shore of a river.
80
One modestly reliable criterion is the word’s ETYMOLOGY,
or historical origin. Take as an example the two English words
which derive from different Anglo-Saxon roots: bank1 meaning
financial institution is an early borrowing from French while bank2
meaning shore of a river has a Scandinavian origin.
The various ANTONYMS and SYNONYMS of a word provide
a different kind of criterion that can be useful in distinguishing
between HOMONYMY and POLYSEMY. Since the two senses of
plain, which are (1) clear or easy and (2) undecorated, share a
synonym in simple and an antonym in complex. This fact suggests
that they are indeed two meanings of one and the same
POLYSEMIC word. No such shared synonym or antonym can be
identified for the two meanings of sound, which is, by chance, the
form of two different words, sound1 and sound2, which have the
same spelling and thus, also sound alike.
Another interesting question is whether there is any
COMMONALITY between the different meanings of what
appears to be the same word. The two meanings of plain can be
characterized as devoid of complexity, which suggests that they are
related, but no such description exists for bank1 and bank2. Thus
plain in these two senses is POLYSEMIC, while the two senses of
bank reflect HOMONYMIC lexical items.
There is no doubt that it is often difficult to decide whether a
particular pair of look-alike and sound-alike word forms are
two separate homonymous words or simply a polysemic word
with different meanings. Though HOMONYMY and
POLYSEMY can be distinguished as different notions, the
boundary between them is not clear-cut.
81
Also notice that homonyms like bank1 and bank2, port1 and
port2, sound1 and sound2, etc. are treated in distinct dictionary
entries whereas two or more closely related meanings of the
polysemous word foot, chip, or plain are linked together within
only one dictionary entry.
2.14 Ambiguity
2.14.1 Structural ambiguity
A sentence is considered as structurally ambiguous when its
structure permits more than one interpretation.
For example, we can consider the prepositional phrase with
binoculars in We watched the hunters with binoculars either as
an adjectival to be the post-nominal modifier of the noun phrase
the hunters or as an adverbial to be the optional adjunct of means
of the verb watched.
S S
NP1 VP NP1 VP1
Pro Vgrp NP2 Pro VP2 AdvP
[mono-trans] [dO] [opA of Means]
Vgrp NP2
NP3 AdjP [mono-trans] [dO] PP
We watched the hunters with binoculars. We watched the hunters with binoculars.
82
2.14.2 Lexical ambiguity
Any ambiguity resulting from the ambiguity of a word is
lexical ambiguity.
Ex1. We can interpret the sentence They were waiting at the bank
in two different ways because the two nouns bank — bank1,
which means financial institution and bank2, which means
shore of the river — are two homonyms.
Ex2. We can interpret the sentence That robot is bright in two
different ways because the adjective bright is a polysemous
word which has two slightly different but closely related
meanings: shining and intelligent.
Thus, both polysemy and homonymy contribute to lexical
ambiguity.
Exercise 20: Explain the lexical ambiguity in each of the
following sentences by providing two sentences that
paraphrase its two different meanings.
The first one is done as an example.
1. They were waiting at the bank.
Meaning one: They were waiting at the financial institution.
Meaning two: They were waiting at the shore of the river.
2. The long drill is boring.
Meaning one: ______________________________________
Meaning two: ______________________________________
83
3. When he got the clear title to the land, it was a good deed.
Meaning one: ______________________________________
Meaning two: ______________________________________
4. The proprietor of the fish store was the sole owner.
Meaning one: ______________________________________
Meaning two: ______________________________________
5. We like the ball.
Meaning one: ______________________________________
Meaning two: ______________________________________
6. They passed the port at night.
Meaning one: ______________________________________
Meaning two: ______________________________________
7. The captain corrected the list.
Meaning one: ______________________________________
Meaning two: ______________________________________
8. He was knocked over by the punch.
Meaning one: ______________________________________
Meaning two: ______________________________________
9. The camel swallowed the chocolate and then ate it.
Meaning one: ______________________________________
Meaning two: ______________________________________
84
Exercise 21: Does polysemy or homonymy contribute to the lexical
ambiguity in each of the two given sentences.
(1) She cannot bear children.
(2) The cat sat on the mat.
________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
Exercise 22: In what way are homonyms related to lexical
ambiguity?
________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
Exercise 23: In what way is a polysemous word related to lexical
ambiguity?
________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
85
Exercise 24: Explain the structural ambiguity in each of the
following sentences:
1. The drunkard visitor
rolled up the carpet.
6. They are cooking bananas.
2. Is he really that kind? 7. They are moving sidewalks.
3. My fianceùe is reserved. 8. John
loves Richard more than Martha.
4. I saw her slip. 9. Old men and women
will be served first.
5. I saw her duck. 10. The thing that bothered Bill
was crouching under the table.
1(a) The drunkard visitor
rolled up the carpet.
1(b) The drunkard visitor
rolled up the carpet.
2(a) Is he really that kind? 2(b) Is he really that kind?
3 (a) My fianceùe is reserved. 3(b) My fianceùe is reserved.
86
4(a) I saw her slip. 4(b) I saw her slip.
5(a) We saw her duck. 5(b) We saw her duck.
6(a) They are cooking bananas. 6(b) They are cooking bananas.
7(a) They are moving sidewalks. 7(b) They are moving sidewalks.
8(a) John loves Richard
more than Martha.
8(b) John loves Richard
more than Martha.
87
9(a) Old men and women
will be served first.
9(b) Old men and women
will be served first.
10(a) The thing that bothered Bill
was crouching under the table.
10(b)ThethingthatbotheredBill
wascrouchingunderthetable.
2.15 Anomaly
2.15.1 Definition
Anomaly is “a violation of semantic rules to create
nonsense.” [Finegan, 1993: 148]
Ex1. That bachelor is pregnant is semantically anomalous because
bachelor is [+male] whereas pregnant is [+female].
Ex2. My brother is the only child in the family is an English
sentence that is grammatically correct and syntactically
perfect; however, it is semantically anomalous because it
represents a contradiction. The meaning of brother includes
the semantic feature [+having at least one sibling] whereas
the only child in the family is [+having no other sibling].
88
2.15.2 Anomaly and contradiction
Anomaly involves us in the notion contradiction in the sense that
semantically anomalous sentences constitute a type of
contradictory sentences. For example, John killed Bill, who
remained alive for many years after is semantically anomalous
because the so-called sentence represents a contradiction: no living
organism can remain alive after being killed. In fact, Bill died right at
the moment John killed him.
Exercise 25: Explain the anomaly of each of the following
sentences.
1. Christopher is killing phonemes.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
2. My brother is a spinster.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
3. The boy swallowed the chocolate and then chewed it.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
4. Babies can lift one ton.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
89
5. Puppies are human.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
6. My unmarried sister is married to a bachelor.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
7. The bigger key and John opened the door.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
8. James sliced the ideas.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
9. Jack’s courage chewed the bones.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
10. I hear the cloud.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
11. The tiger remained alive for an hour after the hunter killed it.
90
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
Exercise 26: How can each of the given sentences be changed to
avoid anomaly?
1. ____________________________________________________
2. ____________________________________________________
3. ____________________________________________________
4. ____________________________________________________
5. ____________________________________________________
6. ____________________________________________________
7. ____________________________________________________
8. ____________________________________________________
9. ____________________________________________________
10. ___________________________________________________
11. __________________________________________________
91
Section
3
3
3
3
SENTENCE MEANING
“SENTENCE MEANING is what a sentence means,
regardless of the context and situation in which it may be used.”
[Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 269]
3.1 Proposition, utterance and sentence
3.1.1 “A PROPOSITION is that part of the meaning of the
utterance of a declarative sentence which describes some
state of affairs. The state of affairs typically involves persons or
things referred to by expressions in the sentence. In uttering a
declarative sentence a speaker typically asserts a proposition.”
[Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 19]
Ex1. The following pair of sentences expresses the same
proposition:
1(a) Harry took out the garbage.
1(b) Harry took the garbage out.
The following pair of sentences expresses different propositions:
2(a) Isobel loves Tony.
2(b) Tony loves Isobel.
92
Ex2. The following pair of sentences expresses the same
proposition:
3(a) John gave Mary a book.
3(b) Mary was given a book by John.
The following pair of sentences expresses different propositions:
4(a) George danced with Ethel.
4(b) George didn’t dance with Ethel.
Exercise 27: Do the two following sentences have the same
proposition?
(1) Mr Dindlay killed Janet.
(2) Mr Dindlay caused Janet to die.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
Exercise 28: Explain why the two members of each of the
following pairs of sentences35
do not share the same
proposition.
35
This means the two members of each pair are not paraphrases of each other.
93
1(a) John is the parent of James.
1(b) James is the parent of John.
3(a) The fly was on the wall.
3(b) The wall was under the fly.
2(a) The hunter bit the lion.
2(b) The lion bit the hunter.
4(a) Jack was injured by a stone.
4(b) Jack was injured with a stone.
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
______________________________________________________
3.1.2 Distinction between a proposition and a sentence
“Propositions, unlike sentences, cannot be said to belong to
any particular language. Sentences in different languages can
correspond to the same proposition, if the two sentences are
perfect translations of each other.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984:
21-22] For example, English I’am cold, French J’ai froid, German
Mir ist kalt and Vietnamese Toâi laïnh can, to the extent to which
they are perfect translations of each other, be said to correspond to
the same proposition.
94
3.1.3 Distinction between an utterance and a sentence
“An UTTERANCE is the USE by a particular speaker, on a
particular occasion, for a particular purpose, of a piece of
language, such as a sequence of sentences, or a single phrase,
or even a single word.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 15]
“A SENTENCE is neither a physical event nor a physical
object. It is conceived abstractly, a string of words put
together by the grammatical rules of a language. A sentence
can be thought of as the IDEAL string of words behind various
realizations in utterances and inscriptions.” [Hurford and Heasley,
1984: 16]
Jane: ‘Coffee?’ ← Would you like some coffee?
Steve: ‘Sure!’ ← I’m sure to love it.
Jane: ‘White?’ ← Would you like (black coffee or) white coffee?
Steve: ‘Black.’ ← I’d like black coffee, please.
(One-word utterances) (Well-formed sentences)
“The distinction between sentence and utterance is of
fundamental importance to both semantics and pragmatics.
Essentially, we want to say that a sentence is an abstract
theoretical entity defined within a theory of grammar, while
utterance is the issuance of a sentence.” [Levinson, 1983: 18]
“Utterances of non-sentences, e.g. short phrases or
single words, are used by people in communication all the time.
People do not converse wholly in (tokens of) well-formed
sentences. But the abstract idea of a sentence is the basis for
understanding even those expressions, which are not
95
sentences. In the overwhelming majority of cases, the meaning of
non-sentences can be best analysed by considering them to be
abbreviations, or incomplete versions, of whole sentences.”
[Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 18]
“The term ‘utterance’ can be used to refer either to the
process (or activity) of uttering or to the product of that
process (or activity). Utterances in the first of these two senses
are commonly referred to nowadays as speech acts; utterances in
the second sense may be referred to — in a specialized sense of
the term — as inscriptions36
.” [Lyons, 1995: 235]
3.1.3 Distinction between a proposition, a sentence and an
utterance
3.1.3.1 “It is useful to envisage the kind of family tree
relationship between the three notions shown in the diagram. For
example, a single proposition could be expressed by using
several sentences (say The Monday Club deposed Mrs Thatcher, or
Mrs Thatcher was deposed by The Monday Club) and each of these
sentences could be uttered an indefinite number of times.”
[Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 23]
PROPOSITION
SENTENCE SENTENCE SENTENCE
UTTERANCE UTTERANCE UTTERANCE UTTERANCE UTTERANCE UTTERANCE
36
The term ‘inscriptions’ is “not widely used by linguists. It must be interpreted
as being more appropriate to the written than it is to the spoken language.”
[Lyons, 1995: 235]
96
3.1.3.2 Also, it is interesting to note that the same
proposition can be expressed by different sentences and that
the same sentence can be realised by different utterances on
particular occasions.
Exercise 29: Fill in the following chart given by Hurford and
Heasley [1984: 23] with ‘+’ or ‘–’ as appropriate. Thus, for
example, if it makes sense to think of a proposition being a
particular regional accent, put a ‘+’ in the appropriate box; if
not put a ‘–.’
Utterances Sentences Propositions
Can be loud or quiet
Can be grammatical or not
Can be true or false
In a particular regional accent
In a particular language
3.2 Sentence types (classified according to truth value37
)
37
“You can understand well-formed sentences of your language without knowing
their truth value. Knowing the truth conditions is not the same as knowing the
actual facts. Rather, the truth conditions, the meaning, permit you to examine
the world and learn the actual facts … Knowing a language includes knowing
the semantic rules for combining meanings and the conditions under which
sentences are true or false.” [Fromkin and Rodman, 1993: 146]
97
3.2.1 “An ANALYTIC sentence is one that is necessarily
TRUE, as a result of the senses of the words in it.” [Hurford and
Heasley, 1984: 91-92]
Ex1. All elephants are animals.
The truth of this sentence follows from the senses of
elephants and animals.
Ex2. Sam’s wife is married.
The truth of this sentence follows from the senses of wife and
married.
3.2.2 A contradictory sentence, which is also called “A
CONTRADICTION38
, is a sentence that is necessarily FALSE, as a
result of the senses of the words in it. Thus a contradiction is in a
way the opposite of an analytic sentence.” [Hurford and Heasley,
1984: 93]
Ex1. This animal is a vegetable is a contradictory sentence; it
must be false because of the senses of animal and vegetable.
Ex2. Sam is older than himself 39
is a contradictory sentence; it
must be false because of the senses of older than and
himself. In fact, Sam can be older (or younger) than somebody
else, but not than himself.
38
A contradictory sentence is also referred to as a contradiction by Peccei
[1999: 9] and Hurford and Heasley [1984: 93]. Goddard [1998: 17] uses the term
contradiction to refer to a somewhat different notion: “Contradiction is where a
sentence must be false because of the meanings involved.”
39
Notice that Sam looks older than he is proves to be a synthetic sentence.
98
3.2.3 “A SYNTHETIC sentence is one which is NOT analytic,
but may be either true or false, depending on the way the world
is.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 92]
Ex1. John is from Ireland.
There is nothing in the senses of John, Ireland or from
which makes the sentence necessarily true or false.
Ex2. Sam’s wife is German.
There is nothing in the senses of Sam’s, wife or German
which makes the sentence necessarily true or false.
Exercise 30: Circle the following sentences A for analytic, S for
synthetic or C for contradiction, as appropriate.
1. John’s nine-year-old brother is a boy. A / S / C
2. John’s brother is nine years old. A / S / C
3. Cats are not vegetables. A / S / C
4. No cats like to bathe. A / S / C
5. Cats never live more than 20 years. A / S / C
6. My watch is slow. A / S / C
7. My watch is a device for telling the time. A / S / C
8. That girl is her own mother’s mother. A / S / C
9. That boy is his own father’s son. A / S / C
10. Alice is Ken’s sister. A / S / C
11. Some typewriters are dusty. A / S / C
12. If it breaks, it breaks. A / S / C
13. John killed Bill, who remained alive for many years after. A / S / C
14. Bachelors cannot form lasting relationships. A / S / C
15. Bachelors are lonely. A / S / C
99
3.3 Paraphrase
3.3.1 Definition
3.3.1.1 PARAPHRASE is “the relationship between a word
and a combination of other words with the same meaning. For
instance, many people would agree that loud means something like
can be heard from far away. Ultimately, the whole project of
describing or explaining word-meanings depends on paraphrase
because we must use words — or other equivalent symbols —
to explain other words.” [Goddard, 1998: 18]
3.3.1.2 “When asked what a sentence means, people usually
provide another sentence that has virtually the same
meaning, a paraphrase.” [Peccei, 1999: 3]
3.3.1.3 “A sentence which expresses the same proposition
as another sentence is a paraphrase of that sentence.”
[Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 104]
3.3.1.4 “Sentences are paraphrases if they have the same
meaning (except possibly for minor differences in
emphases).” [Fromkin and Rodman, 1993: 132]
Consider the two following sentences:
(1) The girl kissed the boy.
(2) The boy was kissed by the girl.
Although there may be a difference in the emphasis in these two
sentences — in the second the emphasis is on what happened to the
boy, whereas in the first the emphasis is on what the girl did — the
meaning relations between the verb kiss and the two noun
100
phrases the girl and the boy are the same in both cases, and on
this basis the two sentences are paraphrases of each other.
3.3.2 Possible ways to paraphrase a sentence
There are a variety of ways that we could paraphrase a sentence:
(1) Change individual words:
1(a) using synonyms:
Cats DRINK cream. ⇔ Domestic felines CONSUME
the liquid fat of milk.
1(b) using relational antonyms (also called converses):
I LENT that book to Jim. ⇔ Jim BORROWED that book from me.
(2) Change sentence structure:
Cats DRINK cream. ⇔ Cream IS DRUNK by cats.
(3) Change both individual words and sentence structure:
Cats DRINK cream. ⇔ The liquid fat of milk IS DRUNK
by domestic felines.
To provide a paraphrase we use our knowledge of both the
meanings of individual words and of the English grammar.
Exercise 31: The following pairs are paraphrases of each other.
Identify the way employed to paraphrase them.
1(a) The house was CONCEALED by the tree.
1(b) The house was HIDDEN by the tree.
101
2(a) The needle is too short.
2(b) The needle is not long enough.
3(a) Some countries have no coastline.
3(b) Not all countries have a coastline.
4(a) Watching television is not a waste of time.
4(b) Watching television is a good way to spend one’s time.
5(a) My friend LOATHES string beans.
5(b) My pal HATES pole beans.
6(a) I’ll LOOK FOR that book right now.
6(b) I’ll SEEK FOR that book at once/immediately.
7(a) Steve HUGGED Jane.
7(b) Steve GAVE Jane a hug.
8(a) John is the parent of James.
8(b) James is the child of John.
9(a) My father OWNS this car.
9(b) This car BELONGS TO my father.
10(a) John SOLD the book to David.
10(b) David BOUGHT the book from John.
11(a) Steve HUGGED Jane.
11(b) Jane WAS HUGGED by Steve.
102
12(a) We HAD hardly BEGUN our work when it rained.
12(b) Hardly HAD we BEGUN our work when it rained.
13(a) Sitting in one place for so long is very uncomfortable.
13(b) It is very uncomfortable to sit in one place for so long
14(a) I saw Ted at the party.
14(b) It was Ted that I saw at the party.
15(a) The nearest service station is 50 miles away.
15(b) It is 50 miles to the nearest service station.
16(a) Jenny and Kevin are twins.
16(b) Kevin and Jenny are twins.
17(a) They had a wonderful holiday
even though the weather was bad.
17(b) Despite/In spite of the bad weather,
they had a wonderful holiday.
17(c) They had a wonderful holiday, despite the bad weather.
17(d) They had a wonderful holiday in spite of the bad weather.
18(a) Bachelors PREFER red-haired girls.
18(b) Girls with red hair ARE PREFERRED by unmarried men.
19(a) Sam SLICED the salami with a knife.
19(b) Sam USED a knife to slice the salami.
103
20(a) Considering your condition, we won’t press charges.
20(b) Under the circumstances, we won’t press charges.
21(a) The laser HAS a wide variety of applications.
21(b) As we have seen, the use of the laser IS numerous.
22(a) In order to make a good impression at a job interview,
you should prepare well for the interview.
22(b) As you can see, it is necessary to be well prepared for
the job interview.
23(a) Synonyms, words that have the same basic meaning,
do not always have the same emotional meaning.
23(b) Many so-called synonyms are not really synonyms at all.
24(a) The composition proficiency requirements as now stated
should not apply.
24(b) I would propose that the standard used to judge international
student papers be relaxed or done away with.
25(a) Although Grants Pass, Oregon, is a fairly small town,
it offers much to amuse summer visitors.
25(b) If you want to give your family a nice, wholesome
vacation, try visiting Grants Pass, Oregon.
104
3.4 Entailment
3.4.1 Definition
3.4.1.1 “Entailment is a relationship that applies between two
sentences40
, where the truth of one implies the truth of the
other because of the meanings of the words involved.” [Goddard,
1998: 17]
For example, John was killed entails John died. Obviously,
John died could not be true any time before it was true that John was
killed.
3.4.1.2 “An entailment is something that logically follows
from what is asserted in the utterance.” [Yule, 1996: 25]
Shirley: ‘It’s so sad. George regrets getting Mary pregnant.’
Jean: ‘But he didn’t get her pregnant. We know that now.’
In the above conversation, Jean’s utterance of ‘he didn’t get
her pregnant’ actually entails ‘George didn’t get Mary pregnant’
as a logical consequence. “The entailment (a necessary
consequence of what is said) is simply more powerful than the
presupposition (an earlier assumption41
).” [Yule, 1996: 32]
3.4.1.3 “Entailments are inferences that can be drawn
solely from our knowledge about the semantic relationships
40
For brevity here, as elsewhere in the little textbook, we speak of entailment
between sentences, rather than, more strictly, between the propositions
underlying sentences.
41
Quite contrary to the entailment ‘George didn’t get Mary pregnant’ is the
earlier assumption that ‘George got Mary pregnant’.
105
in a language. This knowledge allows us to communicate much
more than we actually ‘say’.” [Peccei, 1999: 14]
3.4.2 Characteristics
3.4.2.1 “Entailment applies cumulatively. Thus if X entails Y
and Y entails Z, then X entails Z.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 108]
Take the following as an example:
X, Some boys ran down the street entails Y, Some kids ran
down the street.
Y, Some kids ran down the street entails Z, Some kids went
down the street.
Therefore
X, Some boys ran down the street entails Z, Some kids went
down the street.
3.4.2.2 “Hyponymy involves entailment. To say This is a
tulip entails This is a flower, and This is scarlet entails This is
red.” [Palmer, 1981: 87] The relation between tulip and flower
and between scarlet and red brings out the HIERARCHICAL
CLASSIFICATION involved in hyponymy.
3.4.3 Types of entailment
There are two types of entailment:
(i) One-way entailment:
The entailments of this first type come about because of
hyponymic relations between words:
Ex1. Alfred saw a bear asymmetrically entails Alfred saw an animal.
106
If Alfred saw a bear then he necessarily saw an animal; but if
Alfred saw an animal, he could have seen a bear but not
necessarily. It could be a big bad wolf, for example.
Ex2. Max ate the pizza asymmetrically entails
Max did something to the pizza.
Since the meaning do something to is found in eat, the
sentence Max ate the pizza asymmetrically entails Max did
something to the pizza; but if Max did something to the pizza,
he could have eaten it but not necessarily. He could have baked
or bought it, for example.
(ii) Two-way entailment42
:
The entailments between a pair of sentences are mutual since
the truth of either sentence guarantees the truth of the other.
Ex1. Paul borrowed a car from Sue symmetrically entails
Sue lent a car to Paul.
Ex2. The police chased the burglar symmetrically entails
The burglar was chased by the police.
It is interesting to notice that  hyponymic relations
between words result in a great number of one-way
entailments;  paraphrases are two-way entailments; and 
relational pairs of antonyms such as sell--buy, lend--borrow,
own--belong to, etc. do contribute to two-way entailments.
42
Two-way entailment is also referred as mutual entailment by Peccei [1999: 12].
107
Exercise 32: Use ⇒ to show one-way entailment and ⇔ to show
two-way entailment in each of the following pairs of
sentences:
1(a) John is a bachelor.
1(b) John is a man.
11(a) Eliza plays the flute.
11(b) Someone/Eliza plays a musical instrument.
2(a) I’m wearing black boots.
2(b)I’m wearing black footwear.
12(a) Alan planted roses.
12(b) Someone/Alan planted flowers.
3(a) Mary owns three houses.
3(b) Mary owns a house.
13(a) All dogs have fleas.
13(b) My dog has fleas./Some dogs have fleas.
4(a) Alvin is Mary’s husband.
4(b) Mary is married.
14(a) My uncle teaches at the community college.
14(b) My uncle is a teacher.
5(a) The wolf killed the bear.
5(b) The bear is dead.
15(a) My pet cobra likes the taste of chocolate.
15(b) My pet cobra finds chocolate tasty.
6(a) My father owns this car.
6(b) This car belongs to my father.
16(a) The Jones sold their house to the Cruses.
16(b) The Cruses bought the house from the Jones.
7(a) I gave Erin the summons.
7(b) I gave the summons to Erin.
17(a) Some countries have no coastline.
17(b) Not all countries have a coastline.
8(a) John is the parent of James.
8(b) James is the child of John.
18(a) I saw Ted at the party.
18(b) It was Ted that I saw at the party.
9(a) Jenny and Kevin are twins.
9(b) Kevin and Jenny are twins.
19(a) It is 50 miles to the nearest service station.
19(b) The nearest service station is 50 miles away.
10(a) The bear killed the wolf.
10(b) The wolf was killed
by the bear
20(a) Bachelors prefer red-haired girls.
20(b) Girls with red hair are preferred
by unmarried men.
108
Exercise 33: What sense relation holds between the two
sentences in each of the following pairs:
1(a) Tom is married to Mary.
1(b) Mary is married to Tom.
6(a) Jim is fatter than Ed
and Ed is fatter than Bob.
6(b) Jim is fatter than Bob.
2(a) John is the father of Neil.
2(b) Neil is the father of John.
7(a) Some of the students came to my party.
7(b) Not all of the students came to my party.
3(a) Dick is a bachelor.
3(b) Dick is a man.
8(a) The fly was over the wall.
8(b) The wall was under the fly.
4(a) Gina plays tennis.
4(b) Someone/Gina plays sports.
9(a) Jane is a spinster.
9(b) Jane is married.
5(a) Kevin boiled an egg.
5(b) Kevin cooked an egg.
10(a) The beetle is alive.
10(b) The beetle is dead.
109
Section
4
4
4
4
UTTERANCE MEANING
“UTTERANCE MEANING is what a speaker means when
he makes an utterance in a particular situation.” [Hurford and
Heasley, 1984: 269]
4.1 Presupposition43
4.1.1 Definition and characteristics
4.1.1.1 Presupposition is “what a speaker or writer
assumes that the receiver of the message already knows.”
[Richards et al, 1987: 228] Thus, ‘John doesn’t write poems
anymore’ presupposes that John once wrote poetry. And
‘Would you like another beer?’ presupposes that the person called
you here has already had at least one beer.
4.1.1.2 “Presuppositions are inferences about what is
assumed to be true in the utterance rather than directly
asserted to be true:
‘Faye has looked for the keys’ directly asserts Faye has
looked for the keys
43
“It is proved very difficult for authors in the area to agree on a definition for it. This
definition problem is partly a reflection of the fuzzy boundary between pragmatics
and semantics.” [Peccei, 1999: 19]
110
‘Where has Faye looked for the keys? ’ presupposes Faye
has looked for the keys
‘Annie has a sofa’ directly asserts Annie has a sofa
‘Don’t sit on Annie’s sofa’ presupposes Annie has a sofa.”
[Peccei, 1999: 19]
4.1.1.3 “Speakers often make implicit assumptions about
the real world, and the sense of an utterance may depend on
those assumptions, which some linguists term
presuppositions.44
” [Fromkin and Rodman, 1993: 161]
In the following dialogue, for example, both A and B know (1)
who Simon and Monica are; that (2) Simon has a vehicle, most
probably a car; and that (3) Monica has no vehicle at the moment.
A: ‘What about inviting Simon tonight?’
B: ‘What a good idea; then he can give Monica a lift.’
4.1.1.4 Presuppositions can be used to communicate
information indirectly. If someone says My brother is rich, we assume
that the person has a brother, even though that fact is not
explicitly stated. Much of the information that is exchanged in a
conversation or discourse is of this kind. Often, after a conversation
has ended, we will realize that some fact imparted to us was not
specifically mentioned. That fact is often a presupposition.
44
“Other linguists describe the same phenomenon as implication. Presupposition
is used here because it seems to be more widely accepted usage.” [Fromkin
et al, 1990: 193]
111
4.1.2 Characteristics
4.1.2.1 The presupposition of an utterance remains the same
under its NEGATION:
(1)a. ‘John stopped smoking.
(1)b. ‘John didn’t stop smoking.’
(1)a-b both presuppose that John once smoked cigarettes.
(2)a. ‘The dog’s tail was cut.’
(2)b. ‘The dog’s tail wasn’t cut.’
(2)a-b both presuppose that the dog had a tail.
(3)a. ‘I like his car.’
(3)b. ‘I don’t like his car.’
(3)a-b both presuppose that he owns a car.
4.1.2.2 The presupposition of an utterance remains the same
under its INTERROGATION:
(4)a. ‘John stopped smoking.’
(4)b. ‘Did John stop smoking?’
(4)c. ‘Why did John stop smoking?’
(4)a-c all presuppose that John once smoked cigarettes.
4.1.2.3 The presupposition of an utterance may be cancelled
under its EXTENSION:
(5)a. ‘She didn’t feel regret at the over-cooked meat.’
(5)b. ‘She didn’t feel regret at the over-cooked meat
because it was in fact well-done.’
112
(5)a presupposes that the meat was overcooked while (5)b
presupposes that the meat was well-done.
4.1.3 Classification
There exist a number of different types of presupposition.
4.1.3.1 The existential presupposition
A possessive45
noun phrase (abbreviated to NP)
⇒ a complete statement: X had / has / will have + an indefinite46
NP
1. ‘They haven’t spoken to each other since their last week’s quarrel.’
(countable noun: singular) their last week’s quarrel
The utterance presupposes that they had a quarrel last week.
2. ‘I lost my watch yesterday at Beán Thaønh market.’
(countable noun: singular) my watch
The utterance presupposes that I had a watch.
3. ‘That her turtle ran away made Emily very sad.’
(countable noun: singular) her turtle
The utterance presupposes that Emily had a (pet) turtle.
4. ‘John’s sister has been in hospital for a week.’
(countable noun: singular) John’s sister
The utterance presupposes that John has a sister.
45
My, your, their, John’s, the book’s, etc. make a noun phrase possessive.
46
The indefinite article a/an makes a singular noun phrase indefinite.
Respectively, to signal that a noun phrase whose head noun is either
uncountable or plural is indefinite, one may use some or a number of instead
of a/an.
113
5. ‘Could you come to our party this weekend?’
our party (countable noun: singular)
The utterance presupposes that
we are going to47
have a party this weekend.
6. ‘This is my youngest sister.’
my youngest sister
The utterance presupposes that I have a number of younger sisters.
7.‘Itrytohand in this assignment ontime.’ (countable noun: singular)
an assignment of mine = my assignment = this assignment
The utterance presupposes that I have an assignment.
8. ‘Her mother’s death was a great blow to Mary.’
‘Mary can’t get over her mother’s death.’
The utterance presupposes that
Mary’s mother died. (intransitive verb)
Mary’s mother is dead. (be + adjective)
A definite48
NP ⇒ a complete statement
There is/was/are/were (not)+ an indefinite NP (+adjunct of place)
There exist/exists/existed + an indefinite NP (+adjunct of place)
47
Are going to is [+future], [+near], and [+arrangement].
48
The definite article the as well as the demonstrative adjectives this, that,
these, and those make a noun phrase definite.
114
9. ‘The American girl next door is having a party.’
the American girl next door (countable noun: singular)
The utterance presupposes that
there is an American girl next door.
there is a girl from the USA living next door.
10. ‘Children like all the pictures in this book very much.’
all the pictures in this book (countable noun: plural)
The utterance presupposes that
there are/exist a number of pictures in this book.
a number of pictures can be found in this book.
11. ‘The king of Sweden has just left for France.’
(countable noun: plural) the king of Sweden
The utterance presupposes that there is/exists a king in Sweden.
The utterance presupposes that the king of Sweden exists.
12. ‘They searched everywhere for the missing child.’
(countable noun: singular) the missing child
The utterancepresupposesthatthere wasa child who wasmissing.
The utterance presupposes that a child was missing.
A definite NP ⇒ an indefinite NP
13. ‘The book you gave me is worth reading.
the book (= which/that) you gave me
The utterance presupposes that you gave me a book.
115
4.1.3.2 The factive presupposition
14. ‘Nobody realized that Kelly was ill.’
The utterance presupposes that Kelly was ill.
15. ‘Ed realized/didn’t realize that he was in debt.’
The utterance presupposes that Ed was in debt.
16. ‘I was aware/wasn’t aware that she was married.’
The utterance presupposes that she was married.
17. ‘It is odd/isn’t odd that he left early.’
The utterance presupposes that he left early.
18. ‘I am glad that it’s over.’
The utterance presupposes that it’s over.
19. ‘We regret(ted) telling him the truth.’
The utterance presupposes that we told him the truth.
20. ‘He regretted/didn’t regret not booking the ticket in advance.’
Theutterancepresupposesthathedid not book theticketinadvance.
(The speaker assumes that
the hearer already knows what the ticket is.)
4.1.3.3 The non-factive presupposition
21. ‘I imagined that Kelly was ill.’
The utterance presupposes that Kelly was not ill.
22. ‘I dreamed that I was rich.’
The utterance presupposes that I was not rich.
116
23. ‘We imagined that we were in Hawaii.’
The utterance presupposes that we were not in Hawaii.
24. ‘He pretends to be ill.’
The utterance presupposes that he is not ill.
25. ‘She pretended that he had understood what she meant.’
The utterance presupposes that
he did not understand what she meant.
4.1.3.4 The lexical presupposition
26. ‘You’re late again.’
The utterance presupposes that you were late before.
27. ‘The Brazilian team beat the French team again.’
The utterance presupposes that
the Brazilian team beat/had beaten the French team before.
28. ‘I’m not going to let him come under my roof anymore.’
The utterance presupposes that
he often comes under my roof/to my house.’
29. ‘I ’m going to change job.’
The utterance presupposes that I have a job already.
30. ‘My sister’s going to change job. ’
The utterance presupposes that my sister has a job already.
The utterance presupposes that
I have a sister and she has a job already.
31. ‘I’ve just got a driving license.’
117
The utterance presupposes that I had no driving license before.
The utterance presupposes that
I did not have a driving license before.
32. ‘Jim wants more popcorn.’
The utterance presupposes that
Jim has had/has eaten some popcorn.
33. ‘She managed/didn’t manage to pay her debt.’
The utterance presupposes that she tried to pay her debt.
The utterance presupposes that
she owed a debt and she tried to pay it.
34. ‘Can you stop making that noise?’
The utterance presupposes that you are making that noise.
The utterance presupposes that
there is some noise and you are making it.
35. ‘He stopped smoking.’
The utterance presupposes that
he used to smoke/he once smoked.
36. ‘After a while they stopped arguing.’
The utterance presupposes that they had been arguing.
37. ‘The police ordered the teenagers to stop drinking.’
The utterance presupposes that
the teenagers had been drinking.
(The speaker assumes that
the hearer already knows who the teenagers are.)
118
38. ‘They started complaining.’
The utterance presupposes that
they had never complained before.
4.1.3.5 The structural presupposition
A Wh-question ⇒ a complete statement
39. ‘Where did you buy the bike?’
The utterance presupposes that you bought a bike.
(The speaker assumes that
the hearer already knows what the bike is.)
40. ‘How long has your grandfather been in hospital?’
The utterance presupposes that
your grandfather has been in hospital.
41. ‘When did he leave?’
The utterance presupposes that he left.
42. ‘What do you usually do in your free time?’
The utterance presupposes that you have some free time
and that you do something at leisure.
43. ‘When did you get your bachelor degree?’
The utterance presupposes that you got a bachelor degree.
44. ‘How long have you been selling cocaine?’
The utterance presupposes that you have been selling cocaine.
119
45. ‘Why don’t pigs have wings?’
The utterance presupposes that pigs don’t have wings.
46. ‘How did you know the defendant had bought a knife?’
The utterance presupposes that
you knew the defendant had bought a knife.
(The speaker assumes that
the hearer already knows who the defendant is.)
47. ‘Who is going to give me a lift to the airport?’
The utterance presupposes (1) that the speaker needs to go
to the airport, (2) that the hearers already know what the
airport is and where it is located, and (3) that the hearers own
a vehicle, most probably a car, and are able to drive.’
A Wh-embedded clause ⇒ a complete statement
48. ‘I was eating popcorn when Mike smashed the television set.’
The utterance presupposes that Mike smashed the television set.
(The speaker assumes that
the hearer already knows what the television set is.)
49. ‘I don’t know why I’ve got an average mark.’
The utterance presupposes that I’ve got an average mark.
50. ‘How fast was the car going when it ran the red light?’
The utterance presupposes that the car ran the red light.
(The speaker assumes that
the hearer already knows what the car is.)
120
51. ‘It is odd how proud he was.’
The utterance presupposes that he was proud.
52. ‘I wonder how he managed49
to get the job.’
The utterance presupposes that he managed to get a job.
(The speaker assumes that
the hearer already knows what the job is.)
4.1.3.6 The counter-factual presupposition
An if clause ⇒ a complete statement
53. ‘If I had enough money, I would buy that house.’
if I had enough money
The utterance presupposes that I do not have enough money.
54. ‘If I had had enough money, I would have bought that house.’
if I had had enough money
The utterance presupposes that I did not have enough money.
55. ‘If you were my friend, you’d have helped me.’
if you were my friend
The utterance presupposes that you are not my friend.
56. ‘If he hadn’t made such a terrible mistake, we would be very
happy now.’
if he hadn’t made such a terrible mistake
49
The utterance ‘He managed to get the job’ presupposes that he tried to get the
job.
121
The utterance presupposes that
he did make/made a terrible mistake.
An embedded clause after ‘wish’ ⇒ a complete statement
57. ‘They wish they could go on vacation now.’
they could go on vacation now
The utterance presupposes that they cannot go on vacation now.
58. ‘I wish I had studied medicine.’
I had studied medicine
The utterance presupposes that I did not study medicine.
A clause with a modal perfect verb form ⇒ a complete statement
59. ‘You shouldn’t have seen such a horror film.’
The utterance presupposes that
you did see/saw a horror film.
60. ‘You could have talked to the dean.’
The utterance presupposes that you did not talk to the dean.
In brief, it is believed that “presuppositions are closely
linked to the words and grammatical structures that are
actually used in the utterance and our knowledge about the
way language users conventionally interpret them” and that
“presuppositions can be drawn when there is little or no
surrounding context.” [Peccei, 1999: 22]
122
Exercise 34: Identify the presupposition(s) in each of the
following sentences.
1. ‘I am sorry I cannot find your book right now.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
2. ‘On the occasion of my friend's birthday, I intend to buy her a
new vase.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
3. ‘The exam is not so difficult.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
4. ‘She is not happy about the chemistry course she's taking.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
5. ‘We haven't heard anything from Barbara.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
6. ‘They were rich.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
7. ‘Can you stop playing with your cat?’
123
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
8. ‘She was not aware that her son had an accident.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
9. ‘The explosion was so loud that it could be heard from miles
away.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
10. ‘I wish I had not booked the tickets.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
11. ‘Tom might find the chocolate cake in the kitchen.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
12. ‘You will be amazed when you see the view.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
13. ‘I am so sorry, I am in a hurry and I can't answer your question
right now.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
124
14. ‘She was not aware that it would hurt her so much.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
16. ‘Could you drive me to the airport?’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
17. ‘It took us two days to come back from Hanoi by train.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
18. ‘It is going to rain for a long time.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
19. ‘I am going to have a final examination in Semantics.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
20. ‘We are going to be teachers of English.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
21. ‘I think I will pass the exam.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
125
22. ‘I hope to have a good result for this exam.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
23. ‘But before your encouragement, we would have given up.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
24. ‘I got an excellent mark for my essay last time.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
25. ‘I missed my class on Monday because I overslept.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
26. ‘My sister is going to graduate from university.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
27. ‘I've got a good mark for the exam in American Literature.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
28. ‘I am going to have a new grammar book.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
126
29. ‘When did you give up teaching?’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
30. ‘When did you stop beating your wife?’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
31. ‘Fred continued/didn't continue speaking.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
32. ‘I cleaned/didn't clean the room.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
33. ‘He killed/didn't kill the bird.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
34. ‘What was John worried about?’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
35. ‘Bill drank another glass of beer?’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
127
36. ‘Could you lend me the novel when you finish it?’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
37. ‘I can't guess when the rain stops?’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
38. ‘Please take me to the circus again.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
39. ‘He pretended to be pleased with the gift.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
40. ‘If only you had taken his offer.’
The utterance presupposes that _________________________
________________________________________________
Exercise 35: Which of the following utterances share the same
presupposition?
(1) ‘Did Mike smash the television set?’
(2) ‘When did Mike smash the television set?’
(3) ‘I was eating popcorn when Mike smashed the television set.’
(4) ‘Why did Mike smash the television set?’
128
(5) ‘I don’t understand why Mike smashed the television set.’
(6) ‘I wonder if Mike smashed the television set.’
(7) ‘I wonder how Mike smashed the television set.’
_______________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
4.2 Conversational implicature
4.2.1 Introduction
In the middle of their lunch hour, one woman asks another how
she likes the hamburger she is eating, and receives the answer in
(1):
(1) ‘A hamburger is a hamburger.’
When the listener hears the utterance marked (1), she first has
to assume that the speaker is being co-operative and intends to
communicate something. “That something must be more than
just what the words mean. It is an additional conveyed
meaning, called an implicature.” [Yule, 1996: 35]
The notion implicature, which is the shortened form of the
notion conversational implicature (although distinctions between
this and another kind of implicature namely conventional
implicature should be introduced later, in Section 4.3), provides
some explicit account of how it is possible to mean more than
what is really ‘said’:
129
(2) A: ‘I hope you brought the bread and the cheese.’
B: ‘Ah, I brought the bread.’
B’s utterance may implicate that B did not bring the cheese, since
what is not mentioned was not brought.
4.2.2 Definition
Conversational implicature promises to bridge “the gap
between what is literally said and what is conveyed.”
[Levinson, 1983: 98]
(3)a A: ‘Coffee?’
B: ‘It would keep me awake all night.’
B’s utterance may implicate that B would rather not drink
coffee.
(4)a A: ‘Have you finished the student’s evaluation form and
reading list?’
B: ‘I’ve done the reading list.’
B’s utterance may implicate that B has not done the evaluation
form, since what is not mentioned has not been done yet.
(5)a Phil: ‘Are you going to Mark’s barbecue?’
Jean: ‘Well, Mark’s got those dogs now.’
Jean’s utterance may implicate that she is not going to Mark’s
barbecue.
4.2.3 Characteristics
130
4.2.3.1 People may draw somewhat different
conversational implicature from a certain utterance. For
example, not everyone infers from (6)a that Mike was not very
keen on the dessert and from (7)a that Mary does not like the hat:
(6)a Annie: ‘Was the dessert any good?’
Mike: ‘Annie, cherry pie is cherry pie.’
Mike’s utterance may implicate that he was not very keen on
the dessert.
(7)a Virginia: ‘Do you like my new hat?’
Mary: ‘It’s pink.’
Mary’s utterance may implicate that she does not like the hat.
Respectively compare (3-7)a with (3-7)b to see that a
different conversation implicature may be drawn despite the
fact that the content of the second speaker’s utterance
remains the same.
(3)b A: ‘We went to see The Omen last night but it wasn’t very
scary.’
B: ‘It would keep me awake all night.’
B’s utterance may implicate that B thinks The Omen is scary.’
(4)b A: ‘You look very pleased with yourself.’
B: ‘I’ve done the reading lists.’
B’s utterance may implicate that B’s pleased with himself
because he’s done the reading lists.
131
(5)b Phil: ‘His garden looks awful.’
Jean: ‘Well, Mark’s got those dogs now.’
Jean’s utterance may implicate that Mark’s dogs have wrecked
the garden.
(6)b Annie: ‘I thought the pie would cheer you up.’
Mike: ‘Annie, cherry pie is cherry pie.’
Mike’s utterance may implicate that it takes more than cherry
pie to cheer him up.
(7)b Virginia: ‘Try the roast pork.’
Mary: ‘It’s pink.’
Mary’s utterance may implicate that she is not having the
roast pork.
In brief, “unlike presuppositions and entailments,
implicatures50
are inferences51
that cannot be made in isolated
utterances. They are dependent on the context of the
utterance and shared knowledge between the speaker and
the hearer.” [Peccei, 1999: 30]
4.2.3.2 Conversational implicature can be suspended or
denied. Since conversational implicature is part of what is
50
This is true only for conversational implicatures, not for conventional
implicatures.
51
“An INFERENCE is any conclusion that one reasonably entitled to draw from
a sentence or utterance. All entailments are inferences, but not all inferences
are entailments. Implicature … is another kind of inference, distinct from
entailment.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 279-280]
132
communicated and not said, the speaker can explicitly suspend
or deny that he/she intended to communicate such meaning in
different ways.
The speaker can suspend the implicature that the hearer only
won five dollars by using the expression at least, as in (8)b; the
speaker can deny the implicature by either adding further
information, often following the expression in fact, as in (8)c or
reinforcing the implicature with additional information, as in (8)d:
(8)a. ‘You have won five dollars.’
b. ‘You have at least won five dollars.’
c. ‘You have won five dollars, in fact, you’ve won ten!’
d. ‘You have won five dollars, that’s four more than one.’
4.2.3.3 Conversational implicatures are “conclusions drawn
from utterances on particular occasions and not from isolated
sentences … In this respect the problem of implicature resembles
the problem of how a hearer arrives at the indirect illocutions
of utterances.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 280]
4.2.4 Grice’ theory of conversational implicature
Grice [1975, 1978]52
has proposed a way of analysing
conversational implicature based on the co-operative principle
and its four basic maxims of Quality, Quantity, Relevance, and
Manner.
52
The key ideas concerning conversational implicature “were proposed by Grice
in the William James lectures delivered at Harvard in 1967 and still only
partially published.” [Levinson, 1983: 100]
133
The co-operative principle, which can be stated simply as
“be as helpful to your hearer as you can” [Hurford and Heasley,
1984: 281] and which “controls the way in which a conversation
may proceed” [Palmer, 1981: 173], and its maxims, which are
“guidelines for the efficient and effective use of language in
conversation” [Levinson, 1983: 101], are expressed as follows:
“The co-operative principle
make your contribution such as is required, at the stage at
which it occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the talk
exchange in which you are engaged
The maxim of Quality
try to make your contribution one that is true, specifically:
(i) do not say what you believe to be false
(ii) do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence
The maxim of Quantity
(i) make your contribution as informative as required for current
purposes of the exchange
(ii) do not make your contribution more informative than is required
The maxim of Relevance
make your contribution relevant
The maxim of Manner
be perspicuous53
, and specifically:
(i) avoid obscurity54
(ii) avoid ambiguity
(iii) be brief
(iv) be orderly
53
Be perspicuous means ‘express yourself clearly’.
54
Obscurity means ‘state of being unclear’.
134
In short, these maxims specify what participants have to do in
order to converse in a maximally efficient, rational, co-operative
way: they should speak sincerely, relevantly and clearly, while
providing sufficient information.” [Levinson, 1983: 101-102] In
fact, these conversational maxims are not always observed.
One way, Grice believes, in which conversational implicatures
may be derived is where the speaker observes the maxims in a
fairly direct way: he may amplify what he says by some
straightforward inferences:
(9) A (to a passer-by): ‘I am out of petrol.’
B: ‘Oh; there is a garage just around the corner.’
B’s utterance may implicate that the garage is probably open
and A may obtain petrol there.
Another way in which implicatures may be derived is where
the speaker deliberately and ostentatiously breaches or (as
Grice put it) flouts the maxims:
(10) A: ‘Let’s get the kids something.’
B: ‘Okay, but I veto I-C-E C-R-E-A-M-S.’
B’s utterance may implicate that it is not allowed to mention
ice-cream directly in front of the kids.
In this example, “B ostentatiously infringes the maxim of
Manner (be perspicuous) by spelling out the word ice-creams, and
thereby conveys to A that B would rather not have ice-creams
mentioned directly in the presence of the children, in case they are
thereby prompted to demand some.” [Levinson, 1983: 104-105]
4.2.5 Classification
135
The two following types of conversational implicature are
both of great interest.
4.2.5.1 Those that derive from the observation of
conversational maxims:
Maxim of Quantity: Make your contribution as informative as required and
do not make your contribution more informative than
is required.
(11) Mother: ‘Have you finished your homework
and put your books away?’
Son: ‘I have finished my homework.’
B’s utterance may implicate that B has not put his books away
or the books have not been put away yet.
Maxim of Relevance: Make your contribution relevant.
(12) A: ‘Can you tell me the time?’
B: ‘Well, the milkman has come.’
B’s utterance may implicate that B does not know the exact time of
the present moment, but B can provide some information from
which A may be able to deduce the approximate time, namely
the milkman has come.
4.2.5.2 Those that derive from the violation of conversational
maxims:
Maxim of Quality: Make your contribution one that is true.
(13) A: ‘John has two PhDs.’
B: ‘John has two PhDs but I don’t believe he has.’
B’s utterance may implicate that A should be suspicious of the
true value of John’s two PhDs.
136
Here B’s contribution, taken literally, is pragmatically
anomalous because, by violating the maxim of Quality, “it
contradicts the standard Quality implicature55
that one
believes what one asserts.” [Palmer, 1981: 105] At some
deeper (non-superficial) level, however, B’s contribution should
not in fact be anomalous for “implicatures (as we shall see) are
deniable.” [Levinson, 1983: 105]
(14) A: ‘Does your farm contain 400 acres56
?’
B: ‘I don’t know that it does, and I want to know if it does.’
B’s utterance may implicate that B does not think that his/her
farm contains 400 acres.
B’s contribution violates the maxim of Quality by pointing
out that since A does not ask sincerely and hence does not lack and
require the requested information, B does not need to try to make
his/her response one that is true, i.e. B is also free to say what
he/she believes to be false.
Maxim of Relevance: Make your contribution relevant.
(15) A: ‘Where’s Bill?’
B: ‘There’s a yellow VW outside Sue’s house.’
B’s utterance may implicate that if Bill has a yellow VW, he is
now in Sue’s house.
B’s contribution, taken literally, fails to answer A’s question,
and thus seems to violate at least the maxims of Quantity and
Relevance. Despite this apparent failure of co-operation, there
could be possible connection between the location of Bill and that
55
Levinson [1983: 104] calls the inferences that arise from observing the four
basic maxims of conversation ‘standard implicatures’.
56
An acre is a measure of land which equals 4,050 square meters or 4,840 square
yards.
137
of a yellow VW. Thus, at some deeper (non-superficial) level, B’s
contribution is in fact co-operative since it implicates that Bill is
probably in Sue’s house.
Exercise 36: Write down one implicature that can be drawn from
the second speaker’s response in each of the following
conversations:
(1) Mary: ‘Did you manage to fix that leak?’
Jim: ‘I tried to.’
Jim’s utterance may implicate that ______________________
________________________________________________________
(2) Steve: ‘What happened to your flowers?’
Jane: ‘A dog got into the garden.’
Jane’s utterance may implicate that ______________________
________________________________________________________
(3) Laura: ‘Who used all the printer paper?’
Dick: ‘I used some of it.’
Dick’s utterance may implicate that _____________________
________________________________________________________
(4) Gina: ‘I hear you’re always late with the rent.’
Robin: ‘Well, sometimes I am.’
Robin’s utterance may implicate that ____________________
________________________________________________________
(5) Jenny: ‘Mike and Annie should be here by now. Was their
plane late?’
Alfred: ‘Possibly.’
138
Alfred’s utterance may implicate that ____________________
________________________________________________________
(6) Gwen: ‘This cheese looks funny. The label said not to store the
cheese in the freezer.’
Alvin: ‘Yeah, I did see the label.’
Alvin’s utterance may implicate that _____________________
________________________________________________________
(7) Mat: ‘What’s with your mother?’
Bob: ‘Let’s go to the garden.’
Bob’s utterance may implicate that ______________________
________________________________________________________
(8) Carmen: ‘Did you buy the car?’
Maria: ‘It cost twice as much as I thought it would.’
Patricia’s utterance may implicate that ___________________
________________________________________________________
(9) Robert: ‘Where’s the salad dressing?’
Gabriela: ‘We’ve run out of olive oil.’
Gabriela’s utterance may implicate that __________________
________________________________________________________
(10) Maggie: ‘The bathroom’s flooded!’
Jim: ‘Someone must have left the tap on.’
Jim’s utterance may implicate that ______________________
________________________________________________________
(11)Austin: ‘Want some fudge brownies?’
Jenny: ‘There must be 20,000 calories there.’
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Jenny’s utterance may implicate that _____________________
________________________________________________________
(12)Alice: ‘Have you seen my sweater?’
Max: ‘There’s a sweater on the sofa.’
Max’s utterance may implicate that ______________________
________________________________________________________
(13)Phil’s mother: ‘How did you do on these exams?’
Phil: ‘I failed physics.’
Phil’s utterance may implicate that ______________________
________________________________________________________
(14) Paul: ‘I didn’t take it.’
Virginia: ‘Why do you always lie?’
Virginia’s utterance may implicate that ___________________
________________________________________________________
(15)Tom: ‘It works now.’
Janet: ‘When did Eric fix it?’
Janet’s utterance may implicate that _____________________
________________________________________________________
(16)Liza: ‘I hear you’ve invited Mat and Chris.’
Ed: ‘I didn’t invite Mat.’
Ed’s utterance may implicate that _______________________
________________________________________________________
(17) A: ‘What are the Nelsons like?’
B: ‘They were rich.’
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B’s utterance may implicate that ________________________
________________________________________________________
(18) A: ‘What is this examination in Semantics like?’
B: ‘It is so easy this time.’
B’s utterance may implicate that ________________________
________________________________________________________
(19)A: ‘Did you get the milk and the eggs?’
B: ‘I got the milk.’
B’s utterance may implicate that ________________________
________________________________________________________
(20)A: ‘Did Carmen like the party?’
B: ‘She left after an hour.’
B’s utterance may implicate that ________________________
________________________________________________________
Exercise 37: In each case below decide which maxim has not
been observed and what conversational implicature might
be drawn. Background information is given in square brackets.
(1)A: ‘I really like that dinner.’
B: ‘I’m a vegetarian.’
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
(2) A: ‘Would you like a cocktail? It’s my own invention.’
B: ‘Well, mmm uh it’s not that we don’t drink.’
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________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
(3) A: ‘How are you?’
B: ‘I’m dead.’
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
(4) A: ‘We’re going to the movies.’
B: ‘I’ve got an exam tomorrow.’
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
(5) A: ‘Are you going to Steve’s barbecue?’
B: ‘A barbecue is an outdoor party.’
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
(6) Teacher [towards the end of a lecture]: ‘What time is it?’
Student: ‘It is 10: 44 and 35.6 seconds.’
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
(7) Policeman [at the front door]: ‘Is your father or your mother at
home?’
Small boy [who knows that his father is at home]: ‘Either my
mother’s gone out shopping or she hasn’t.’
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________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
(8) Mother: ‘Now tell me the truth. Who put the ferret in the
bathtub?’
Son [who knows who did it]: ‘Someone put it there.’
________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________
4.2.6 Distinction between presupposition and conversational
implicature
4.2.6.1 A presupposition is “anything the speaker assumes
to be true before making the utterance” [Peccei, 1999: 19]
while a conversational implicature is an inference or an
additional unstated meaning drawn from any conversation.
(1) A: ‘What happened to my calculator?’
B: ‘Someone used it this morning.’
A’s utterance presupposes that A has a calculator
and that the calculator worked well before.
B’s utterance may implicate that it is not B who broke the
calculator.
(2) A: ‘Will your brother go to the conference this afternoon?’
B: ‘He’s gone to Hanoi.’
A’s utterance presupposes that B has a brother
and that there will be a conference this afternoon.
143
B’s utterance may implicate that B’s brother will not go to the
conference.
4.2.6.2 Compare their few main properties to distinguish
presupposition from conversational implicature:
PRESUPPOSITION CONVERSATIONAL IMPLICATURE
Presupposition is more
straightforward and more
objective.
It is easily drawn before making an
utterance.
Conversational implicature is less
straightforward and more
subjective/personal.
It is derived from observing or
violating one or more maxims and
drawn after a conversation is over.
Ex: ‘Is the Pope Catholic?’
The utterance presupposes that
the Pope does exist in the world.
Ex: A: ‘Do you like apples?’
B: ‘Is the Pope Catholic?’
B’s utterance may implicate that
he/she does like apples.
Exercise 38: In each of the following decide whether each of the
inferences in brackets is a presupposition (P) or an implicature
(I) derived from the underlined utterance.
(1) A: ‘My girlfriend lives in New York.’
B: ‘My girlfriend lives in Boston.’ (I have a girlfriend.)
(2) A: ‘What?’
B: ‘Why are you laughing at me?’ (You are laughing at me.)
(3) A: ‘Why is she eating those?’
B: ‘Her father didn’t give her any supper.’ (She didn’t have any
supper.)
144
(4) A: ‘Is John engaged?’
B: ‘He’s bought a ring.’ (John is engaged.)
(5) A: ‘You look pleased.’
B: ‘I managed to pass the exam.’ (I tried to pass the exam.)
(6) A: ‘Did you finish that report?’
B: ‘I started it.’ (I didn’t finish it.)
(7) Paul: ‘I didn’t take it.’
Virginia: ‘Why do you always lie?’ (You always lie.)
Exercise 39: In each of the following decide whether each of the
inferences in brackets is a presupposition (P) or an implicature (I).
(1) A: ‘What’s with Jean?’
B: ‘She discovered that her central heating is broken.’
(Her central heating is broken.)
(2) A: ‘How do you like your bath?’
B: ‘Warm.’ (I don’t like it hot.)
(3) A: ‘What do you think of this necklace and bracelet?’
B: ‘The bracelet is beautiful.’ (The necklace is not beautiful.)
(4) A: ‘Has the kitchen been painted?’
B: ‘Tom’s away.’ (No.)
(5) A: ‘How come Mary’s all dressed up?
B: ‘We’re going to the D-E-N-T-I-S-T.’
(Mary hates the dentist.)
145
(6) A: ‘It works now.’
B: ‘When did Eric fix it?’ (Eric fixed it.)
4.3 Conventional implicature
Unlike conversational implicatures, conventional
implicatures “don’t have to occur in conversation, and they don’t
depend on special contexts for their interpretation. Not unlike
lexical presuppositions, conventional implicatures are
associated with specific words and result in additional conveyed
meanings when those words are used.” [Yule, 1996: 45] Among
these words are and, but, even, and yet.
(1) ‘Linda suggested black, but I chose white.’
The utterance may implicate that the speaker does
something in contrast to what has been suggested.
(2) ‘Even John came to the party.’
The utterance may implicate that contrary to the speaker’s
expectation, John came.
(3) ‘Jenny isn’t here yet.’
The utterance may implicate that the speaker expects that
Jenny should be there by then.
(4) ‘She put on her clothes and left the house.’
The utterance may implicate that there are two action
occurring in sequence, i.e. one after another.
146
4.4 Speech acts
“An important part of the meaning of utterances is what
speakers DO by uttering them.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 334]
4.4.1 Definition
“A speech act is an UTTERANCE as a functional unit in
communication.” [Richards et al, 1985: 265]
“Quite contrary to the popular belief that actions and words
are entirely distinct, many actions can actually be performed with
words.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 235]
4.4.2 Characteristics
A speech act has two kinds of meaning:
(a) locutionary meaning (also known as propositional
meaning), which is its basic literal meaning conveyed by
its particular words and structure(s);
(b) illocutionary meaning (also known as illocutionary
force), which is the effect the utterance might have
on the hearer. [Richards et al, 1985: 265]
Consider the two following sample dialogues:
(1) Sam: ‘I am thirsty.’
(= ‘Give me something to drink, please.’)
Annie: ‘I’ll bring you a glass of water.’
The locutionary meaning of ‘I am thirsty’ is
I am suffering from my thirst.
The illocutionary meaning of ‘I am thirsty’ is Sam indirectly
requests Annie to give him something to drink.
147
(2) Jane: ‘Can you shut the window?’
(= ‘Shut the window, please.’)
Jane’s husband: ‘Certainly.’
The locutionary meaning of ‘Can you shut the window?’ is
I wonder whether you are able to shut the window.
The illocutionary meaning of ‘Can you shut the window?’ is
Jane indirectly requests her husband to shut the window.
4.4.3 Classification
There are five main types of speech acts, according to Searl
[1981]:
4.4.3.1 The representative describes a state of affairs in the
world: asserting, stating, claiming, affirming, making hypotheses,
describing, predicting, reporting, etc. The representative can
generally be characterized as being true or false.
(3) Tom: ‘Where are you from?’
David: ‘I’m from Canada.’57
‘I’m from Canada’ is a representative: David directly gives a
piece of information concerning where he was born and grew
up.
57
Describing a state of affairs requested by its preceding question, a response is
usually classified as a representative.
148
(4) Teacher: ‘There are only two seasons in the south: the
dry season and the rainy season.’58
Student 1: ‘Then, each season is exactly six months long?’
Student 2: ‘Is there any transitional period between them?’
‘There are only two seasons in the south: the dry season and the
rainy season’ is a representative: the teacher directly informs
his/her students of what the weather is like in the south.
4.4.3.2 The commissive commits the speaker to a course
of action: promising, vowing, threatening, offering, etc.
(5) Jenny: ‘If you don’t stop fighting, I’ll call the police.’
Bill: ‘Call them at once to turn your brother in.’
‘I’ll call the police’ is a commissive: Jenny directly threatens to call
the police if Bill and her brother don’t stop fighting.
(6) Alice: ‘When will I receive my reimbursement?’
Victor: ‘Authors always pay their debts.’
(= ‘I’ll pay you back later.’)
‘Authors always pay their debts’ is a commissive: Victor indirectly
promises to pay Alice back later.
4.4.3.3 The declarative changes the world by bringing
about or altering the state of affairs it names: dismissing,
sentencing, naming, announcing marriage, etc.
58
The teacher’s statement is true when it is used to describe the weather in the
south of Vietnam, for example. This statement may be false when it refers to
the weather in the south of China.
149
(7) Vicar: ‘I now pronounce you man and wife.’
[at the wedding ceremony held in a church]
‘I now pronounce you man and wife’ is a declarative: the vicar is
directly announcing the legal and permanent union between a man
and a woman as husband and wife, simultaneously changing their
marital status.
(8) Minister of Education: ‘I resign.’
Prime Minister: ‘You’ll be free from tomorrow.’
(= ‘I dismiss you from your current position.’)
‘I resign’ is a declarative: the Minister of Education directly
declares to give up his/her current position.
‘You’ll be free from tomorrow’ is also a declarative: the Prime
Minister indirectly declares to dismiss the Minister of Education
from his/her current position.
This type of speech acts is quite special that it can only count if
the speaker has the appropriate authority to perform the type of acts.
4.4.3.4 The directive intends to get the listener to carry
out an action: commanding, requesting, begging, warning,
challenging, inviting, suggesting, giving advice, etc.
(9) Ed: ‘The garage is a mess.’
Faye: ‘Clean it up.’
‘Clean it up’ is a directive: Faye directly orders Ed to make the
garage tidy.
150
(10) George: ‘How about a dinner out?’
Beth: ‘My essay is due tomorrow morning.’
(= ‘Leave me alone to write my essay.’)
‘My essay is due tomorrow morning’ is a directive: Beth indirectly
asks/requests George to leave her alone, writing her essay.
4.4.3.5 The expressive indicates the speaker’s
psychological state(s) or feeling(s)/attitude(s) about
something: greeting, apologizing, complaining, thanking, etc.
(11)Desk clerk: ‘I beg your pardon. I’ll be right back.’
Client: ‘No problem.’
‘I beg your pardon’ is an expressive: the desk clerk directly
apologizes to the client for his/her absence for a while.
(12)Jack’s friend: ‘This beer is disgusting.’
Jack: ‘Why don’t you learn to take the bad with the good?’
‘This beer is disgusting’ is an expressive: Jack’s friend directly
shows that he/she extremely dislikes the beer.
Leech (1983) proposed an extra category, which is called the
rogative.
4.4.3.6 The rogative refers to a special kind of directives
which deals with requests for information and which is
typically in form of a question.
(13)Tom: ‘Where are you from?’
David: ‘I’m from Canada.’
151
‘Where are you from’ is a rogative: Tom directly asks/requests
David for some information on his nationality or origin.
Peccei [1999: 54] gives the following linguistic expressions
typically related to various types of speech acts:
Speech-act
category
Typical expression
Example
Declaratives
declarative structure
with speaker as subject and
a performative verb
in simple present tense
We find the defendant guilty.
I resign.
Representatives
declarative structure Tom’s eating grapes.
Bill was an accountant.
Expressives
declarative structure with
words referring to feelings
I’m sorry to hear that.
This beer is disgusting.
Directives
imperative sentence Sit down!
Fasten your seat belts.
Rogatives
interrogative sentence Where did he go?
Is she leaving?
Commissives
declarative structure
with speaker as subject and
future time expressed
I’ll call you tonight.
We ’re going to turn you in.
4.4.4 Distinction between direct and indirect speech acts
“Speech acts can be classified as direct or indirect. In a direct
speech act there is a direct relationship between its linguistic
structure and the work it is doing. In indirect speech acts the
speech act is performed indirectly through the performance of
another speech act.” [Peccei, 1999: 56]
Performing a direct speech act, the speaker utters a
sentence which means exactly what he or she says:
152
1(a) ‘Come in, please.’ is a direct request.
2(a) ‘It is quite wrong to condone robbery.’ is a direct assertion
against robbery.
3(a) ‘You should go to the doctor.’ is a direct piece of advice.
Performing an indirect speech act, the speaker utters a
sentence which does not mean exactly what he or she says:
1(b) ‘Won’t you come in?’ is not merely a Yes-No question. It is an
indirect request made in a very concerned manner.
2(b) ‘Is it right to condone robbery?’ is an indirect assertion against
robbery though it is in form of a Yes-No question.
3(b) ‘Why don’t you go to the doctor?’ is not used to ask for any
reason. Instead, it is used to give an indirect piece of advice
though it is in form of a Wh-question.
Indirect speech acts are often felt to be more polite ways of
performing certain kinds of speech acts, such as requests and refusals. It
is crucial for any language learner to approach indirect speech acts and
learn how to recognize them and then use them in context.
Exercise 40: Give a situation in which each of the following
utterances occurs, interpret its meaning and then classify it
according to different types of speech acts.
1. ‘Let’s go to our place for a beer.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
2. ‘I don’t know how to answer this question.’
153
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
3. ‘Mind your head!’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
4. ‘How nice to see you!’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
5. ‘Who will believe this story?’
A:
________________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
6. ‘Is it right to cheat in any exam?’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
7. ‘Would you like a cup of coffee?’
A: _____________________________________________
154
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
8. ‘I was so sorry to hear about your loss.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
9. ‘I’m dead tired now!’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
10. ‘I’m awfully sorry I wasn’t at the meeting this morning.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
11. ‘If you don’t try your best, you’ll fail in the exam.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
12. ‘Why don’t you take a seat?’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
______________________________________________________
155
13. ‘How dare you speak to her like that?’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
14. ‘You look lovely today in your new dress.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
15. ‘I’d sell it if I were you.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
16. ‘I’ll be right back.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
17. ‘I beg you to reconsider your decision.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
18. ‘Do you think I’m an idiot?’
A: _____________________________________________
156
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
19. ‘May I hand in my final paper the day after tomorrow.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
20. ‘We select Alfred as the head of our group.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
21. ‘I’ll pay you back in two days.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
22. ‘We are going to turn you in.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
______________________________________________________
23. ‘I would appreciate it if you went away.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
157
24. ‘Can I help you?’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
25. ‘I’ve stopped smoking.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
26. ‘Goodness!’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
27. ‘Drink a cup of coffee.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
______________________________________________________
28. ‘That doesn’t sound very serious.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
29. ‘I’ve got to go now.’
A: _____________________________________________
158
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
30. ‘Someone said you got fired.’
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
Exercise 41: For each of the following utterances, provide two
situations so that one utterance performs two different acts.
Interpret the utterances and identify the acts performed in the
light of the situations you provide.
1. ‘Do you feel better today?’
SITUATION 1:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
2. ‘I beg your pardon.’
SITUATION 1:
A: _____________________________________________
159
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
3. ‘It’s going to rain.’
SITUATION 1:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
4. ‘It’s snowing.’
SITUATION 1:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
A: _____________________________________________
160
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
5. ‘I said I didn’t.’
SITUATION 1:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
6. ‘There’s a bend ahead.’
SITUATION 1:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
7. ‘Keep off the grass.’
SITUATION 1:
161
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
8. ‘I’m very upset that so many of you are talking.’
SITUATION 1:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
9. ‘Be aware of dogs.’
SITUATION 1:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
162
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
10. ‘What else do you want?’
SITUATION 1:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
SITUATION 2:
A: _____________________________________________
B: ______________________________________________
_____________________________________________________
4.4.5 Distinction between locution, illocution and perlocution
4.4.5.1 “A locutionary act is the saying of something which
is meaningful and can be understood. For example, saying the
sentence Shoot the snake is a locutionary act if hearers
understand the words shoot, the, snake and can identify the
particular snake referred to.
4.4.5.2 An illocutionary act is using a sentence to perform
a function. For example, ‘Shoot the snake’ may be intended as
an order or a piece of advice.
4.4.5.3 A perlocutionary act is the results or effects that
are produced by means of saying something. For example,
shooting the snake would be a perlocutionary act.
163
The above-mentioned three-part distinction by Austin [1962] is
less frequently used than a two-part distinction between the
propositional content of a sentence (the PROPOSITION(S)
which a sentence expresses or implies) and the illocutionary
force or intended effects of speech acts.” [Richards et al, 1985:
168-169]
In brief, the LOCUTION of an utterance is producing an
utterance, which is “a meaningful linguistic expression” [Jule,
1996: 48]; the ILLOCUTION of an utterance is using such an
utterance “to perform a function” [Richards et al, 1985: 168];
the PERLOCUTION of an utterance is “causing a certain effect
on the hearer or others.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 243]
Exercise 42: Using the locution, illocution, perlocution
analysis, analyse the underlined utterance in each of the
following dialogues.
(1) Mrs Smith’s neighbour: ‘I was so sorry to hear about your loss.’
Mrs Smith:‘Thankyou. Itwas a greatshock,butImustgetusedtoit.’
Locution:_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
Illocution:_____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
164
Perlocution:____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
(2) A: ‘Would you like a cup of coffee?’
B: ‘Yes, please.’
Locution:_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
Illocution:_____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
Perlocution:____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
(3) Son: ‘Can I go out for a while, Mum?’
Mother: ‘You can play outside for half an hour.’
Locution:_______________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
Illocution:_____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
Perlocution:____________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
165
4.4.6 Felicity conditions
“FELICITY CONDITIONS are the conditions which must
be fulfilled for a speech act to be satisfactorily performed
or realized.
The felicity conditions necessary for promises are:
(a) A sentence is used which states a future act of the speaker.
(b) The speaker has the ability to do the act.
(c) The hearer prefers the speaker to do the act rather than not to do
it.
(d) The speaker would not otherwise usually do the act.
(e) The speaker intends to do the act.” [Richards et al, 1987: 104]
4.5 Performatives and constatives
4.5.1 Definition
A performative is “one that actually describes the act
that it performs, i.e. it PERFORMS some act and
SIMULTANEOUSLY DESCRIBES that act.” [Hurford and
Heasley, 1984: 235]
For example, ‘I promise to repay you tomorrow’ is a
performative because in saying it the speaker actually does what
the utterance describes, i.e. he promises to repay the hearer the
next day. The utterance both describes and is a promise.
A constative asserts something that is either true or false.
166
For example, ‘John promised to repay me tomorrow’ is a
constative because the utterance does not simultaneously do
what it describes, i.e. John promised to repay the hearer the next
day. The utterance describes a promise but is not itself a promise.
Exercise 43: Are the following utterances performative59
(P) or
constative (C)?
1. ‘I NAME this ship Hibernia.’ P / C
2. ‘I BELIEVE in the dictatorship of the Proletariat.’ P / C
3. ‘I ADMIT I was hasty.’ P / C
4. ‘I THINK I was wrong.’ P / C
5. ‘I hereby INFORM you that you are sacked.’ P / C
6. ‘I GIVE you supper every night.’ P / C
7. ‘I WARN you not to come any closer.’ P / C
8. ‘I TRY to get this box open with a screwdriver.’ P / C
9. ‘I PRONOUNCE you man and wife.’ P / C
10. ‘I SENTENCE you to be hanged by the neck.’ P / C
Exercise 44: Also note that the most reliable test to determine
whether an utterance is performative is to insert the word
hereby and see if the modified utterance is acceptable. Can
hereby be acceptably inserted in the following utterances?
59
Note that direct performative utterances contain A PERFORMATIVE VERB,
“one which, when used in a simple positive present tense sentence, with a 1st
person singular subject, can make the utterance of that sentence
performative.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 237]
167
1. ‘I ( ) GIVE notice that I will lock these doors in 60 seconds.’ Yes/No
2. ‘I ( ) PROMISED him that I would be at the station at 3:00pm.’Yes/No
3. ‘It ( ) GIVES me great pleasure to open this building.’ Yes/No
4. ‘I ( ) WARN you not to talk to my sister again.’ Yes/No
5. ‘I ( ) WARN you that you will fail.’ Yes/No
6. ‘They ( ) WARN her that she will fail.’ Yes/No
7. ‘I ( ) COMMAND you to teach first-year Semantics.’ Yes/No
8. ‘Tokyo ( ) IS the captain of Japan.’ Yes/No
9. ‘I ( ) ASK you to mind your head.’ Yes/No
10. ‘I ( ) BELIEVE in God the Father Almighty,
Creator of Heaven and Earth.’ Yes/No
4.5.2 Characteristics
“Performative utterances contain a performative verb and
many have 1st
person singular subjects and are in the present
tense.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 238] But there are exceptions
to this pattern. Some performatives do not have a 1st
person
singular subject.
4.5.2.1 To make his/her utterance more polite, the speaker
tends to replace an active performative with the 1st
person
singular subject by its passive version with the 2nd
or 3rd
person singular/plural subject:
1(a) ‘You ARE hereby FORBIDDEN to leave this room.’
1(b) ‘I hereby FORBID you to leave this room.’
168
2(a) ‘Spitting IS hereby FORBIDDEN.’
2(b) ‘I hereby FORBID you to spit.’
3(a) ‘All passengers on flight number forty-seven
ARE REQUESTED to proceed to gate ten.’
3(b) ‘I REQUEST all passengers on flight number forty-seven
to proceed to gate ten.’
4(a) ‘Listeners ARE (hereby) REMINDED
that BBC wireless licenses expire on April 9th
.’
4(b) ‘I (hereby) REMIND listeners
that BBC wireless licenses expire on April 9th
.’
4.5.2.2 The 1st
person singular subject, which is I, can be
replaced by the 1st
person plural subject, which is we:
5(a) ‘We hereby THANK you for
the compliments you have paid us.’
5(b) ‘My wife and I hereby THANK you for
the compliments you have paid us.’
4.5.2.3 The 1st
person singular subject, which is I, can be
replaced by the 3rd
person plural subject, which is the
management, for example:
6(a) ‘The management hereby WARN customers that
mistakes in change cannot be rectified once the
customer has left the counter.’
169
6(b) ‘I hereby WARN customers that mistakes in change cannot
be rectified once the customer has left the counter.’
4.5.3 Distinction between explicit performatives and implicit
performatives
Explicit performatives are those that contain A
PERFORMATIVE VERB while implicit performatives are those
that do not contain A PERFORMATIVE VERB.
Ex1. ‘I hereby WARN you that you will fail’ is an explicit
performative (i.e. a verbalized warning) while ‘If you do
not try your best, you’ll fail in the exam’ is an implicit
performative (i.e. an implied warning).
Ex2. ‘I PROMISE to give you a helpful hand when you are in
need’ is an explicit performative (i.e. a verbalized
promise) while ‘If you need me at any time, just call’ is an
implicit performative (i.e. an implied promise).
Exercise 45: Fill in each of the blanks with an appropriate word.
The first one is done as an example.
1. Semantics is a branch of linguistics which deals with meaning.
2. __________ is a relation in which various words have the same
written form but have different meanings and sound forms.
3. A ________ is a sentence that is necessarily false, as a result of
the senses of the words in it.
4. _________ is a relation in which the referent of a word is totally
included in the referent of another word.
170
5. A ______ is an ideal string of words put together by the
grammatical rules of a language.
6. _________ is a relation in which two words have different
(written and sound) forms and are opposite in meaning.
7. A _________ is that part of the meaning of the utterance of a
declarative sentence which describes some state of affairs.
8. ___________ is a relation in which various words have the same
sound form but have different meanings and written forms.
9. An ________ is the use by a particular speaker, on a particular
occasion, for a particular purpose, of a piece of language, such as a
sequence of sentences, or a single phrase, or even a single word.
10. The _____ of a word or an expression is the relationship
between that word or expression and the thing, the action, the
event, the state of affairs, etc. it refers to.
11. _________ is a violation of semantic rules to create nonsense.
12. Semantic _______ are the smallest units of meaning in a word.
13. _________ is a relation in which various words have the same
(sound and written) form but have different meanings.
14. Any ambiguity resulting from the ambiguity of a word is
__________ ambiguity.
15. ________ synonymy is a relation in which a polysemous word
shares one of its meanings with another word.
16. A sentence is considered as __________ ambiguous when its
structure permits more than one interpretation.
17. ________ is a relation in which a single word has two or more
slightly different but closely related meanings.
171
18. An _____ sentence is one that is necessarily true, as a result of
the senses of the words in it.
19. Semantic meaning is context-free whereas ______________
meaning is context-dependent.
20. _________ is a relation in which various words have different
(written and sound) forms but have the same or nearly the same
meaning.
21. A ______ performs some act and simultaneously describes that
act.
4.6 Politeness, co-operation and indirectness
4.6.1 The principle of politeness
Leech [1983] proposes two maxims concerning the principle
of politeness:
- The approbation maxim: Minimize dispraise of the other;
maximize praise of the other.
- The tact maxim: Minimize the cost to the other;
maximize the benefit to the other.
Accordingly, some utterances seem more polite than others.
The higher the cost of the direct act, the more likely it is for the
speaker to use an indirect form.
(1) ‘Set the table.’ (the least polite)
(2) ‘Can you set the table?’
(3) ‘Could I possibly ask you to set the table?’ (the most polite)
172
4.6.2 Politeness and co-operation
There is no doubt that politeness and co-operation are often
in conflict with each other. Language users must be consciously
aware of this conflict and flexibly apply both of the principles in
face-to-face conversation.
(1) Tom: ‘Do you like the wine I picked out?’
Gina: ‘Not really.’ (+direct, +negative)
(2) Tom: ‘Do you like the wine I picked out?’
Gina: ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’ (−direct, +negative)
In (2), ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’ implies a less than whole-hearted
endorsement of the wine by failing to be relevant since the topic
was the wine’s taste not its country of origin. Still, Gina was
being more polite than coming right out with the fact that she did
not like the wine as in (1), though she has proved to observe the
maxim of Relevance of the co-operation principle strictly.
4.6.3 Politeness and indirectness
Politeness and indirectness are closely related to each
other and that is why indirect negative responses are more
polite than direct ones:
(1) Jenny: ‘Well, I’ve done this. I’ve dyed my hair blonde.’
Ed: (a) ‘You look awful.’ (+direct, +negative)
(b) ‘You look amazing.’ (−direct, ±negative)
173
(2) Jean: ‘What did the students say about my teaching?’
Kate: (a) ‘Pretty bad.’ (+direct, +negative)
(b) ‘Let’s hope none of them are lawyers.’
(−direct, +negative)
(c) ‘Some students are very positive.’
(−direct, +negative)
In (1), the ambiguity of amazing (amazing for its beauty or
amazing for its awfulness) in ‘You look amazing’ allows the
speaker to be truthful and yet somewhat more polite than the direct
answer ‘You look awful.’
In (2), ‘Let’s hope none of them are lawyers’ and ‘Some
students are very positive’ both imply rather than directly state
that overall the student evaluations were not good and
therefore are more polite than ‘Pretty bad.’
4.7 Deixis
4.7.1 Definition
“Deixis is a technical term (from Greek) for one of the most
basic things we do with utterances. It means ‘pointing’ via
language. Any linguistic form used to accomplish this ‘pointing’ is
called a deictic expression. When you notice a strange object
and ask, ‘What’s that?’, you are using a deictic expression
(‘that’) to indicate something in the immediate context. Deictic
expressions are also sometimes called indexicals.” [Yule, 1996: 9]
4.7.2 Classification
174
Deixis consists of three notions:
(i) Personal deixis “can mark a number of overlapping
distinction: person, gender, number, and social relations.”
[Finegan, 1994: 178] Pronouns and their alternative forms are
usually markers of personal deixis. The system of English pronouns
contrasts in person between first person, second person and third
person and in number between singular and plural. The gender
distinction is made in English in the third person singular only: he for
masculine referents and she for feminine referents. Unlike French,
for example, the choice of an English pronoun in the second person
does not clearly reflect the social status of referents:
(1) ‘In this family, we rarely smoke or drink.’
(2) ‘Did you get the carton of milk I asked you to?’
(ii) Spatial deixis is “the marking in language of the
orientation or position in space of the referent of a linguistic
expression.” [Finegan, 1994: 179] Common markers of spatial
deixis in English are demonstratives (this vs. that) and such
adverbs of place as here, there and the like:
(3) ‘I’m over here.’
(4) ‘Would you like this one or that one?’
(iii) Temporal deixis is “the orientation or position of the
reference of actions and events in time.” [Finegan, 1994: 180] In
English, temporal deixis can be marked either by such words and
phrases as before, last time, now, then, tomorrow, and the like
or through tense, encoded on the verb with affixes or expressed in
an independent morpheme:
175
(5) ‘I walked to school every day.’
(6) ‘Tomorrow is a holiday.’
4.7.3 Complexity in the use of deictic expressions
4.7.3.1 As for the first person plural in (7), “there is, in
English, a potential ambiguity in such uses which allows two
different interpretations. There is an exclusive ‘we’ (speaker plus
other(s), excluding addressee) and an inclusive ‘we’ (speaker and
addressee included).” [Yule, 1996: 11]
(7) ‘We clean up after ourselves around here.’
4.7.3.2 “The distance associated with third person forms”
[Yule, 1996: 11] is also used to make potential accusations (for
example, ‘you didn’t clean up’) less direct, as in 8(a), or make a
potential personal issue seem like an impersonal one, based on
a general rule, as in 8(b):
8(a) ‘Somebody didn’t clean up after himself.’
8(b) ‘Each person has to clean up after him or herself.’
4.7.3.3 If here means the place of the speaker’s utterance and
now means the time of the speaker’s utterance, an utterance such as
(9) should be nonsense:
(9) ‘I am not here now.’
However, one can say (9) into the recorder of a telephone
answering machine, projection that now will apply to anytime
someone tries to call him/her, not to when he/she actually records
the word.
176
4.7.3.4 Then applies to both past in 10(a) and present in (10)b
time relative to the speaker’s present time:
(10)a ‘April 29th
, 1999? I was in Hanoi then.’
(10)b ‘Dinner at 8:30 on Friday? Okay, I’ll see you then.’
4.7.3.5 “The present tense is the proximal form and the
past tense is the distal form.” [Yule, 1996: 15] Treated as
distant from the speaker’s current situation are both, typically,
something that has taken place in the past, as in 11(a), and,
less obviously, something that is treated as extremely
unlikely, as in 11(b):
(11)a ‘At ten, I could ride a bicycle.’
(11)b ‘I could buy the house, if I had enough money.’
4.7.3.6 “There exists in English a distinction between “the
‘near speaker’ meaning of direct speech and the ‘away from
speaker’ meaning of indirect speech.” [Yule, 1996: 16]
(12)a ‘I’ll call you tonight.’
(12)b ‘He promised to call me that night.’

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Semantics p1

  • 1. ÑAÏI HOÏC QUOÁC GIA THAØNH PHOÁ HOÀ CHÍ MINH TRÖÔØNG ÑAÏI HOÏC KHOA HOÏC XAÕ HOÄI VAØ NHAÂN VAÊN Toâ Minh Thanh GIAÙO TRÌNH NHAØ XUAÁT BAÛN ÑAÏI HOÏC QUOÁC GIA TP HOÀ CHÍ MINH — 2007
  • 2. iii LÔØI NOÙI ÑAÀU Giaùo trình Ngöõ nghóa hoïc tieáng Anh ñöôïc biên soạn một cách có hệ thống, dựa trên cơ sở tham khảo có chọn lọc nhöõng tư liệu cuûa nước ngoài, kết hợp với kinh nghiệm giảng dạy nhiều năm về môn học này của tác giả và tập thể giảng viên trong Bộ môn Ngữ học Anh. Đây là tập giáo trình được biên soạn duøng để giảng dạy môn học Ngữ nghĩa học tiếng Anh (English Semantics) cho sinh viên năm thứ tư Khoa Ngữ văn Anh, Trường Đại học Khoa học Xã hội và Nhân văn, Đại học Quốc gia Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh. Giaùo trình gồm bốn phaàn: 1. Introduction (phaàn daãn nhaäp) 2. Word meaning (nghóa cuûa töø); 3. Sentence meaning (nghóa cuûa caâu); 4. Utterance meaning (nghóa cuûa phaùt ngoân) Lần đầu tiên biên soạn giáo trình này, chúng tôi không tránh khỏi những sai sót, những khuyết điểm. Rất mong nhận được nhiều ý kiến đóng góp của bạn đọc vaø của bạn bè đồng nghiệp để giáo trình ngày càng hoàn thiện hơn, phục vụ giảng dạy sinh viên đạt chất lượng toát hơn. Ý kiến đóng góp về tập giáo trình này xin gửi về Hội đồng Khoa học Khoa Ngữ văn Anh, Trường Đại học Khoa học Xã hội và Nhân văn, Đại học Quốc gia Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh, số 10- 12 Đinh Tiên Hoàng Quận 1, Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh. Điện thoại: (08)8243328. Thaønh phoá Hoà Chí Minh, ngaøy 14 thaùng 12 naêm 2006 Toâ Minh Thanh
  • 3. v CONTENTS Preface ....................................................................................... iii Contents .......................................................................................v Notational symbols ................................................................... vii 1 INTRODUCTION...................................................................... 9 1.1 What is semantics? ......................................................... 9 1.2 Semantics and its possible included aspects ............. 10 2 WORD MEANING .................................................................. 12 2.1 Semantic features ........................................................ 12 2.2 Componential analysis .................................................. 20 2.3 Semantic fields ............................................................. 21 2.4 Lexical gaps .................................................................... 25 2.5 Referent, reference and sense ................................. 26 2.6 Denotation and connotation ........................................ 30 2.7 Multiple senses of lexical items ................................ 34 2.8 Figures of speech ................................................... 36 2.9 Hyponymy ................................................................ 57 2.10 Synonymy .............................................................. 63 2.11 Antonymy .............................................................. 67 2.12 Homonymy ............................................................. 72 2.13 Polysemy ................................................................ 78
  • 4. vi 2.14 Ambiguity .............................................................. 81 2.15 Anomaly ................................................................. 87 3 SENTENCE MEANING ............................................... 91 3.1 Proposition, utterance and sentence ........................ 91 3.2 Sentence types (classified according to truth value) .............................................................. 96 3.3 Paraphrase .............................................................. 99 3.4 Entailment ............................................................. 104 4 UTTERANCE MEANING .................................................... 109 4.1 Presupposition ...................................................... 109 4.2 Conversational implicature ................................... 128 4.3 Conventional implicature ...................................... 145 4.4 Speech acts .................................................................. 146 4.5 Performatives and constatives ............................ 165 4.6 Politeness, co-operation and indirectness ............ 171 4.7 Deixis .................................................................... 173 Answer keys ............................................................................177 List of English-Vietnamese equivalent linguistic terms .......227 Bibliography ............................................................................252
  • 5. iv NOTATIONAL SYMBOLS Most of the symbols used in this text follow conventions, but since conventions vary, the following list indicates the meanings assigned to them here. A: adjunct AdjP: adjective phrase AdvP: adverb phrase C: countable dO: direct object Ex: example mono-trans: mono-transitive verb n: noun NP: noun phrase op: optional opA of Means: optional adjunct of means Pro: pronoun PP: prepositional phrase RP: Received Pronunciation S: sentence Vgrp: verb group VP: verb phrase * : unaccepted form
  • 6. v -- : related in some way [ ] : embedded unit / : or ⇒ : one-way dependence ⇔ : two-way dependence = : be equivalent to + : with the semantic feature specified − − − − : without the semantic feature specified ± ± ± ± : with or without the semantic feature specified
  • 7. 9 Section 1 1 1 1 INTRODUCTION 1.1 What is semantics? Semantics is a branch of linguistics which deals with meaning. In order to understand this definition, we need to know what meaning is. However, before we discuss the “meaning” of meaning, it is necessary to talk about the main branches of linguistics. Linguistics has three main branches: syntax, semantics and pragmatics. Syntax is the study of grammar (consisting of phonology, morphology, syntax, and textual grammar) whereas semantics and pragmatics deal with meaning. Semantics is the study of meaning in language (i.e. what language means) while pragmatics is concerned with meaning in context (i.e. what people mean by the language they use). Although this is a semantics course, part of what we are going to discuss is concerned with pragmatics, for semantics and pragmatics are closely related. Take the distinction between semantic meaning and pragmatic meaning as an illustration of how semantics is different from but, at the same time, closely related to pragmatics. Semantic meaning is context-free whereas pragmatic meaning is context-dependent. (1) A: ‘Would you like a piece of cake?’ B: ‘I’m on a diet.’
  • 8. 10 The semantic meaning of ‘I’m on a diet’ in (1) is ‘I want to lose weight by eating the food which is not rich in fat, sugar, etc.’ The pragmatic meaning of ‘I’m on a diet’ in (1) is ‘I don’t want any piece of cake’ or ‘I’m afraid that I have to refuse your invitation.’ (2) Tom: ‘Do you like the wine I picked out?’ Gina: ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’ The semantic meaning of ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’ in (2) is ‘Is it right that the wine is made in Italy?’ The pragmatic meaning of ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’ in (2) is ‘I don’t like the wine you picked out.’ 1.2 Semantics and its possible included aspects “Semantics is a technical term used to refer to the study of meaning, and since meaning is part of language, semantics is part of linguistics. Unfortunately, ‘meaning’ covers a variety of aspects of language, there is no general agreement about the nature of meaning, what aspects of it may properly be included in semantics, or the way in which it should be described.” [Palmer, 1981: 1] This little textbook will try to show three main aspects that are commonly considered as included in semantics: word meaning (or, to be more precise, lexical meaning) [Lyons, 1995: 33], sentence meaning and utterance meaning.1 1 In semantics it is necessary to make a careful distinction between utterances and sentences. In particular we need some way of making it clear when we are discussing sentences and when utterances. We adopt the convention that anything
  • 9. 11 The meaning of remarried, for example, can be analysed in the three different levels. At the word level, remarried may be regarded a set of the four following semantic features: [+human], [±male], [+used to be married], and [+married again]. At the sentence level when remarried occurs in She is not remarried, only the fourth semantic feature of the word, namely [+married again], is informative, i.e. it is part of the statement. At the utterance level within the particular context of the following conversation when remarried occurs in B’s response, it is the word that helps the utterance presuppose that pastors are allowed by rule to get married and implicate that the pastor was once married. A: ‘How is the pastor?’ B: ‘He is remarried.’ Because of the nature of the subject and the variety of views on semantics and its possible included aspects, the little textbook cannot hope to be more than an introductory survey. written between single quotation marks represents ‘an utterance’, and anything italicized represents a sentence or (similarly abstract) part of a sentence, such as a phrase or a word: ‘She is not remarried’ represents an utterance. She is not remarried represents a sentence. Married represents a word conceived as part of a sentence.
  • 10. 12 Section 2 2 2 2 WORD MEANING WORD MEANING is what a word means, i.e. “what counts as the equivalent in the language concerned.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 3] 2.1 Semantic features 2.1.1 Definition Semantic features2 are “the smallest units of meaning in a word.” [Richards et al, 1987: 254] We identify the meaning of a word by its semantic features. For example, father may have the following semantic features: [+human], [+male], [+mature], [+parental] and [+paternal]. And hen may be described as a set of the following semantic features: [+animate], [+bird], [+fowl], [+fully grown] and [+female]. 2.1.2 Characteristics 2.1.2.1 Some semantic features need not be specifically mentioned. For example, if a word is [+human] it is “automatically” [+animate]. This generalization can be expressed as a redundancy rule: 2 Semantic features are also referred to as semantic components or semantic properties.
  • 11. 13 A word that is [+human] is [+animate]. That is why [+animate] need not be specified as a semantic feature of father, girl, professor, etc. since the semantic feature can be inferred from [+human]. Some redundancy rules infer negative semantic features. Thus, semantic features are often shown in the form of binary oppositions, which can be stated in terms of pluses and minuses (that is, [+] and [− − − −]): If father is [+human], it is therefore [− − − −inhuman]; If father is [+male], it is therefore [− − − −female]; If father is [+mature], it is therefore [− − − −immature]; If father is [+paternal], it is therefore [− − − −maternal]. Notice that we identify the meaning of a word according to its primitive semantic features first, e.g. [+animate], [+human], [+male], etc.; and then with the assistance of its other semantic features, e.g. [+parental], [+paternal], etc. 2.1.2.2 Different words may share the same semantic feature. In other words, the same semantic feature can be found in many different words. Ex1: Doctor, engineer, teacher, physicist, chemist, tailor, hairdresser, etc. all share the same semantic feature [+professional]. Ex2: Mother, father, son, daughter, brother, sister, grandparent, aunt, uncle, etc. are all [+kinship].
  • 12. 14 2.1.2.3 The same semantic feature can occur in words of different parts of speech. In other words, words of different parts of speech may share the same semantic feature. For example, [+female] is part of the meaning of the noun mother, the verb breast-feed and the adjective pregnant. And [+educational] is a semantic feature found in the nouns school, teacher, textbook, etc. and in the verbs teach, educate, instruct, etc. 2.1.2.4 Fromkin and Rodman [1993: 148-149] confirm that “the semantic properties of words determine what other words they can be combined with.” These authors give the two following sentences that are grammatically correct and syntactically perfect but semantically anomalous: (1) My brother is an only child. (2) The bachelor is pregnant. (1) is strange, or semantically anomalous, because this sentence represents a contradiction: brother is [+having at least one sibling] while an only child is [+having no other sibling]; (2) is semantically anomalous for a similar reason: bachelor is [+male] whereas pregnant is [+female]. Here, Fromkin and Rodman also cite Noam Chomsky’s famous classic example of semantically anomalous sentences: (3) Colorless green ideas sleep furiously. This sentence seems to obey all the syntactic rules of English: its subject is colorless green ideas and its predicate is sleep furiously; but there is obviously something semantically wrong
  • 13. 15 with the sentence. The adjective colorless is [− − − −colour], but it occurs with the adjective green the semantic feature of which [+green in colour]. How can something be [− − − −colour] and [+green in colour] at the same time? In the same way, the noun ideas, which is [+abstract], is semantically incompatible with the verb sleep the noun phrase subject of which must be [+concrete] and [+animate]. How can an abstract notion like ideas sleep? Then, the verb sleep, whose adverbial collocations3 are well, badly and soundly, is semantically incompatible with the adverb furiously. How can a living being sleep when he is full of violent anger? In conclusion, knowing all the possible semantic features of a word enables us to combine semantically compatible words together to form larger but meaningful linguistic units such as phrases, clauses and sentences. Fromkin and Rodman [1993:134] also believe that “because we know the semantic properties of words, we know when two words are antonyms, synonyms or homonyms, or are unrelated in meaning.” Exercise 1: For each group of words given below, state what semantic features are shared by the (a) words and the (b) words, and what semantic features distinguish between the classes of (a) words and (b) words. The first one is done as an example. 3 Collocations are regular combinations of words, e.g. by accident and strong tea are English collocations. Adverbial collocations refer to the adverbs regularly used together with a certain verb.
  • 14. 16 1. (a) lobster, shrimp, crab, oyster, mussel (b) trout, sole, herring, salmon, mackerel The (a) and (b) words are [+edible water animal]. The (a) words are [+shellfish]. The (b) words are [+fish]. 2. (a) widow, mother, sister, aunt, seamstress (b) widower, father, brother, uncle, tailor The (a) and (b) words are ___________________________ The (a) words are _________________________________ The (b) words are __________________________________ 3. (a) bachelor, son, paperboy, pope, chief (b) bull, rooster, drake, ram, stallion The (a) and (b) words are ___________________________ The (a) words are __________________________________ The (b) words are _________________________________ 4. (a) table, pencil, cup, house, ship, car (b) milk, tea, wine, beer, water, soft drink The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________ The (a) words are __________________________________ The (b) words are __________________________________ 5. (a) book, temple, mountain, road, tractor (b) idea, love, charity, sincerity, bravery, fear
  • 15. 17 The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________ The (a) words are __________________________________ The (b) words are __________________________________ 6. (a) rose, lily, tulip, daisy, sunflower, violet (b) ash, oak, sycamore, willow, beech (c) pine, cedar, jew, spruce, cypress The (a) (b) and (c) words are _________________________ The (a) words are __________________________________ The (b) words are __________________________________ The (c) words are __________________________________ 7. (a) book, letter, encyclopaedia, novel, notebook, dictionary (b) typewriter, pencil, ballpoint, crayon, quill, charcoal, chalk The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________ The (a) words are __________________________________ The (b) words are __________________________________ 8. (a) walk, run, skip, jump, hop, swim (b) fly, skate, ski, ride, cycle, canoe, hang-glide The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________ The (a) words are __________________________________ The (b) words are __________________________________ 9. (a) ask, tell, say, talk, converse (b) shout, whisper, mutter, drawl, holler
  • 16. 18 The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________ The (a) words are __________________________________ The (b) words are __________________________________ 10. (a) alive, asleep, awake, dead, half-dead, pregnant (b) depressed, bored, excited, upset, amazed, surprised The (a) and (b) words are ____________________________ The (a) words are __________________________________ The (b) words are __________________________________ Exercise 2: Identify the semantic features in each of the following words. 1. Child:_____________________________________________ 2. Aunt: ____________________________________________ 3. Hen: _____________________________________________ 4. Oak (-tree): ______________________________________ 5. Flower: ___________________________________________ 6. Palm: _____________________________________________ 7. Bachelor: _________________________________________ 8. Actress: __________________________________________ 9. Plod: _____________________________________________ 10. Ewe:_____________________________________________ 11. Fly: _____________________________________________
  • 17. 19 12. Stallion: _________________________________________ 13. Police-officer: ___________________________________ 14. Beauty: __________________________________________ 15. Imagine: _________________________________________ 16. Doe: ____________________________________________ 17. Drive: ___________________________________________ 18. Home: __________________________________________ 19. Elm: ____________________________________________ 20. Chalk: ___________________________________________ 21. Rose: ____________________________________________ 22. Chick: ___________________________________________ 23. Pap: _____________________________________________ 24. Tiptoe: __________________________________________ 25. Pine (-tree): _____________________________________ 26. Owe: ____________________________________________ 27. Computer: _______________________________________ 28. Honesty: ________________________________________ 29. Maid: ___________________________________________ 30. Spinster: ________________________________________ Exercise 3: How can you distinguish the words given in the following table from one another, considering their semantic features?
  • 18. 20 Malay English Vietnamese Chinese anh huynh brother ñeä em muoäi sadara sister chò tyû ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________ 2.2 Componential analysis In Semantics, componential analysis is “an approach to the study of meaning which analyses a word into a set of meaning components or semantic features.” [Richards et al, 1987: 53] For example, the meaning of boy may be shown as [+human], [+male] and [−adult] while that of man may be a combination of [+human], [+male] and [+adult]. Thus, man is different from boy basically in one primitive semantic feature: [±adult].
  • 19. 21 Generally speaking, componential analysis is applied to a group of related words which may differ from one another only by one or two semantic features. 2.3 Semantic fields 2.3.1 Definition A semantic field4 is “the organization of related words and expressions into a system which shows their relationship to one another.” [Richards et al, 1987: 53] A semantic field can also be defined as “a set of words with identifiable semantic affinities.” [Finegan, 1994: 164] Ex1. The semantic field of kinship terms: father, mother, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, etc. Ex2. The semantic field of adjectives describing human emotional states: angry, sad, happy, exuberant, depressed, afraid, etc. Ex3. The semantic field of drinking vessels: cup, mug, tumbler, wine glass, beer glass, etc. 2.3.2 Ways of organising semantically similar items into semantic fields There are various ways according to which semantically similar items are related to one another: (a) Items related by topics: 4 A semantic field is also referred to as a lexical field or a lexical set.
  • 20. 22 • Types of fruit: apples, oranges, grapes, bananas, pears, plums, etc. • Pieces of furniture: seats, tables, beds, storage, etc. • Terms of colour: blue, red, yellow, green, black, white, etc. (b) Items similar in meaning: • Ways of cooking: stew, boil, fry, steam, roast, grill, smoke, etc. • Ways of looking5 : gaze, glance, peer, squint, stare, etc. • Ways in which a liquid escapes from its container 6 : drip, leak, ooze, run, seep, etc. 5 Gaze = look long and steadily (at somebody/something) usually in surprise or admiration: She gazed at me in disbelief when I told her the news. Glance = take a quick look at: She glanced shyly at him and then lowered her eyes. Peer (at, through, up, etc,) = look closely and carefully, especially as if unable to see well: peer at somebody, peer out of the window, peer over the wall, peer through the gap, peer over one’s spectacles, etc. Squint (at, through, up, etc,) = look (at somebody/something) with eyes half shut or turn sideways, or through narrow opening: squint in the light of sunshine, squint through the letter box. Stare = look (at somebody/something) with the eyes wide open in a fixed gaze (in astonishment, wonder, fear, etc.): They all stared in/with amazement.It’s rude tostare. 6 Drip (allow liquid to) fall in drops: Rain was dripping down from the trees. Is that roof still dripping? Leak (allow liquid or air to) get in or out wrongly: The boat leaks like a sieve. Air leaked out of the balloon. Ooze (from/out of something; out/away) = (allow a thick liquid to) come or flow out slowly: Black oil was oozing out of the engine. All the toothpaste has oozed out. Run = (allow a liquid to) flow: The River Rhine runs into the North Sea. Water was running all over the bathroom floor. The bathroom floor was running with water. Seep (through/into/out of something; through/out) = (of a liquid) flow slowly and in small quantities through a substance: Water seeped through the roof of the tunnel.
  • 21. 23 (c) Terms describing people whose weight is below normal:7 thin, bony, skinny, scrawny, underweight, emaciated, slender, slim, etc. (d) Items which form pairs of antonyms: long/short, light/heavy, alive/dead, love/hate, approve/disapprove, approve/disapprove, begin/end, inside/outside, upstairs/downstairs, etc. Oil is seeping through a crack in the tank. “Drip, leak, ooze, run, seep indicate the way in which a liquid escape from a container or tap. Most (not seep) also indicate the way in which a container or tap allows a liquid to escape. 1 Drip = (allow sth to) fall in regular drops: Water is dripping from the pipe. The pipe is dripping (water). 2 Leak = (allow sth to) get out (through a hole in sth): Wine is leaking from the barrel. The barrel is leaking (wine). 3 Ooze = (allow sth to) move slowly (out of sth) because thick: Blood is oozing from the wound. The wound is oozing (blood). 4 Run = (allow sth to) flow continuously (from sth): Water is running from the tap. The tap is running. 5 Seep = move slowly (through a small opening in sth) because thick: Oil is seeping from the engine.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 272] 7 “When describing people whose weight is below normal, thin is the most general word, It may be negative, suggesting weakness or lack of health: She‘s gone terribly thin since operation. Bony is often applied to parts of the body such as hands or face; skinny and scrawny are negative and can suggest lack of strength: He looks much too skinny/scrawny to be a weight-lifter. Underweight is the most neural: The doctor says I’m underweight. Emaciated indicates a serious condition resulting from starvation. It is often thought desirable to be slim or slender, slim being used especially of those who have reduced their weight by diet or exercise: I wish I was as slim as you. You have a beautifully slender figure.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 947]
  • 22. 24 (e) Items which form pairs or trios of synonyms: smart/bright/intelligent, conserve/preserve/safeguard, fix/repair/mend,kind/sort/type/variety, happy/glad,etc. (f) Items grouped as an activity or a process: • Do the housework: clean the rooms, do the washing, iron the clothes, get the food, prepare a meal, wash up, etc. • Do research: make hypotheses, collect data, analyze data, get results and come to conclusions. (g) Items classified according to: Male: waiter, tiger, actor, host, landlord, sir, etc. • Sex Female: waitress, tigress, actress, hostess, landlady, madam, etc. • Age: grown-ups, adults, elderly people, middle-aged people, teenagers, children, infants, babies, etc. • Age and sex: horse ⇒ stallion:[+male],[+fully grown] dog ⇒ dog: [+male],[+fully grown] mare:[+female],[+fully grown] bitch:[+female],[+fully grown] foal: [± ± ± ±male], [− − − −fully grown] puppy: [± ± ± ±male], [− − − −fully grown] Exercise 4: Organise the given words (and probably those of your own) into three semantic fields: shirts, end, forward(s), new, hats, lend, coats, shorts, beginning, trousers, amble, out,
  • 23. 25 limp, tiptoe, plod, socks, trudge, borrow, stomp, in, stump, old, backward(s), and tramp. 1._________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ 2._________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ 3._________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ 2.4 Lexical gaps “The absence of a word in a particular place in a lexical field of a language” is called a lexical gap. [Richards et al, 1987: 164] For example, in English there is no singular noun that covers bull, cow and calf either as horse covers stallion, mare and foal or as goat covers billy-goat, nanny-goat and kid. horse goat ? stallion mare foal billy-goat nanny-goat kid bull cow calf Exercise 5: Try to fill in each of the two blanks with an appropriate word to prove that there is no lexical gap in the given semantic fields.
  • 24. 26 sheep giraffe ram ewe male giraffe baby giraffe 2.5 Referent, reference and sense 2.5.1 Distinction between referent, reference and sense In Semantics, a distinction is often made between referent, reference and sense: 2.5.1.1 A referent is an object or an entity in the real world or in the world of your imagination, e.g. your school, your classmates, your teacher, any thing you can see in the classroom right now, the idealistic working conditions you have ever dreamed of, etc. that is talked about. Several words, especially the so-called function words8 , have no obvious referents: the, could, in, since, and, etc. 2.5.1.2 The reference of a word9 or a linguistic expression is the relationship between that word or expression and the thing (book), the action (read), the event (graduate from university), the quality (sincerity), etc. it refers to. 8 It is commonly believed that function words like prepositions (of, in, etc.), definite and indefinite articles (the, a/an), conjunctions (if, however, or, etc.), and auxiliaries (may, should, will, etc.) only “signal grammatical relations.” [Finegan, 1994: 175] 9 Or, to be more precise, a lexical item
  • 25. 27 For example, the reference of Peter’s house is the relationship between this English noun phrase and the house that belongs to Peter. Peter’s house the house that belongs to Peter (in the Eng. language) REFERENCE (in the real world) 2.5.1.3 The sense10 of a word or a linguistic expression11 shows the internal relationship between that word or expression and others in the vocabulary of a language. Ex1. Teacher and student have the sense relationship of the former is the one who gives a lesson and the latter is the one who has the lesson given by the former. Ex2. A dog is chasing a cat has some sense. However, a dog is human has no sense. Ex3. The King of Vietnam is bald has some sense: its sense is constructed by its individual lexical components and its syntactic structure. However, this sentence has no reference: it does not refer to any real person because the King of Vietnam does not exist nowadays. Consider the following table and identify referent, reference and sense via their main features. 10 It is necessary to notice that the two linguistic terms sense and meaning will be used interchangeably from now on in this text. 11 “The SENSE of an expression is its indispensable hard core of meaning.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 91]
  • 26. 28 REFERENT REFERENCE SENSE in the external world between a language and the external world in a language either real or imaginary abstract abstract bachelor a man who has not ever been married the relationship between the word bachelor and a certain unmarried man unmarried man Baïch Tuyeát the lovely princess in a fairy tale which I have already read the relationship between the name Baïch Tuyeát and the very princess “Tuyeát Traéng” 2.5.2 Distinction between variable reference, constant reference and co-reference 2.5.2.1 When the same linguistic expression refers to different referents, it has variable reference. Ex1. There are as many potential referents for the phrase your left ear as there are people with a left ear in the world. Ex2. The referent of the phrase the present prime minister used in Britain in 1944 is Mr. Churchill and in 1982 is Mrs. Thatcher.
  • 27. 29 2.5.2.2 When one linguistic expression refers to one and the same referent, it has constant reference: the sun, the moon, Halley’s comet12 , the People’s Republic of China, Angola, the United Nations, FIFA, UNESCO, etc. 2.5.2.3 When two or more linguistic expressions share the same referent, they have co-reference. Ex1. The morning star and the evening star both refer to the planet called Venus. Ex2. In a conversation about Britain in 1982, the Prime Minister and the leader of the Conservative Party share the same referent: Mrs Thatcher. Ex3. If we are talking about a situation in which John is standing alone in the corner, John and the person in the corner share the same referent. Exercise 6: What is identified by the word mean or meaning in the following examples, i.e. reference or sense? Write R for reference and S for sense. _____ 1. When Albert talks about “his former friend”, he means me. _____ 2. Daddy, what does logic mean? _____ 3. Purchase has the same meaning as buy. 12 Halley’s comet is the bright comet which reappears about every 76 years. It was first recorded in 240 BC, and the fact of its regular return was established by Edmond Halley. Its next reappearance is due in 2061.
  • 28. 30 _____ 4. Look up the meaning of democracy in your dictionary. _____ 5. If you look out of the window now, you’ll see who I mean. 2.6 Denotation13 and connotation14 2.6.1 Definition The denotation of a word is the core, central or referential meaning of the word found in a dictionary. In English, a content word15 may have its denotation described in terms of a set of semantic features that serve to identify the particular concept associated with the word. The connotation of a word is the additional meaning that the word has beyond its denotative meaning. It shows people’s emotions and/or attitudes16 towards what the word refers to. 13 Denotation is also referred to as denotative meaning. 14 Connotation is also referred to as connotative meaning. 15 Content words — principally nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs like democracy, mother, stir-fry, happy, and totally — “have meaning in that they refer to objects, events, and abstract concepts” [Finegan, 1994: 161] while function words specifically articles, prepositions, conjunctions and auxiliaries like a/an, including, nevertheless, but, should, etc. also carry meaning, though in a different way from content words: “to signal grammatical relations.” [Finegan, 1994: 175] 16 “The referential meaning of a word or sentence is frequently called its denotation, in contrast to the connotation, which includes both its social and affective meaning.” [Finegan, 1994: 161]
  • 29. 31 Ex1. Child is denotatively described as [+human], [−mature] and [±male]. Under a certain circumstance, child may positively be connoted as [+affectionate] or [+innocent]. Under another circumstance, child may negatively be connoted as [+noisy] or [+irritating]. Ex2. Woman is denotatively described as [+human], [+mature] and [+female]. Under a certain circumstance, woman may positively be connoted as [+devoted] or [+patient]. Under another circumstance, woman may negatively be connoted as [+wicked] or [+talkative]. The denotation of a word can easily be found in a dictionary while its connotation(s) may probably depend on such factors as (1) the culture in which the word is used; (2) the language user’s family and/or educational background; (3) the language user’s social and/or political class; (4) the language user’s speech community and/or ethnic group; etc. In brief, these factors are by virtue of personal and cultural associations. 2.6.2 Distinction between denotation and connotation Consider the following table and identify denotation and connotation via their main features.
  • 30. 32 DENOTATION CONNOTATION what a lexical item means emotions and/or attitudes towards what a lexical item refers to core, central peripheral referential social, affective bachelor unmarried man - still single after the usual age for marrying - decided by himself to stay single - enjoying freedom, friendship, life, etc. - ready for his impending marriage spinster unmarried woman - still singleaftertheusualageformarrying - not decided by herself to stay single - left in an unfavourable state - a symbol for some failure in life December the twelfth month of the year, next after November bad weather (usually rainy or snowy), dark evening, grey sky, slippery streets, holiday season, Christmas, winter break, loneliness, separation from the beloved Ex1. The word fox almost always has a negative connotation in English when it is associated with any person who is cunning or deceitful.
  • 31. 33 Ex2. Some English words usually have positive connotations (+); others usually have neutral connotations (∅); still others usually have negative connotations (−): - mother/mom (+), woman (∅), witch (−); - father/dad (+), man (∅), the old man (−); - slender (+), thin (∅), skinny (−); - plump (+), overweight (∅), fat (−). Ex3. Synonyms, words that have the same basic meaning, do not always have the same emotional meaning. For example, the words stingy and frugal both mean ‘careful with money.’ However, to call a person stingy is an insult, while the word frugal has a much more positive connotation. Similarly, a person wants to be slender but not skinny, and aggressive17 but not pushy. Therefore, you should be careful in choosing words because many so-called synonyms are not really synonyms at all. Exercise 7: Identify all the possible connotations associated with the word Christmas. __________________________________________________ ________________________________________________ 17 Aggressive (often approved) = forceful = (self-)assertive = showing strong and confident personality; expressing one’s views; demands; etc. confidently: A good salesman must be aggressive if he wants to be succeeded. Pushy (also pushing, informally derogative) = trying constantly to draw attention to oneself and gain an advantage: He made himself unpopular by being so pushy.
  • 32. 34 2.7 Multiple senses of lexical items 2.7.1 Primary meaning vs. secondary meaning The first and foremost distinction made in multiple senses of a word is between its primary and secondary meanings. 2.7.1.1 The primary meaning of a word (or, to be more precise, a lexical item) is the first meaning or usage that the word will suggest to most people when it is said in isolation. The primary meaning of the English noun wing, for instance, is ‘either of the pair of feathered limbs that a bird uses to fly.’ 2.7.1.2 Secondary meanings of a word are the meanings besides its primary meaning. They are said to be not central but peripheral. In addition, secondary meanings of a word are context- bound whereas its primary meaning is not. In He usually plays on the wing, for example, wing means ‘side part of the playing area in football, hockey, etc.’ Such a secondary meaning is derived from the context denoted by the verb plays. 2.7.2 Literal meaning vs. figurative meaning It is time to distinguish then within all the possible meanings of the English noun wing, for example, those that are literal and those that are figurative. 2.7.2.1 “The basic or usual meaning of a word” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 527] is usually referred to as its literal meaning.
  • 33. 35 Some literal meanings are identified via context in the noun wing: Part that projects from the side of an aircraft and supports it in the air: the two wings of an airplane; Part of a building that projects from the main part: the east/west wing of a house; Projecting part of the body of a motor vehicle above the wheel: The left wing of his car was damaged in the collision; Part of a political party that holds certain views or has a particular function: the radical wing of the Labour Party. 2.7.2.2 The figurative meaning of a word is one which is different from its usual (literal) meaning and which create vivid mental images to readers or listeners. Below are some figurative meanings of the noun wing: - We hope college life will help him to spread his wings a bit. (= extend his activities and interests) - Having a new baby to look after has clipped her wings a bit. (= has prevented her from achieving her ambition) - She immediately took the new arrivals under her wing. (= looked after the new arrivals) - He retires as chairman next year; his successor is waiting in the wings. (= is ready to replace him) Wing is an English word that has several closely related but slightly different meanings. It is said to be polysemous.
  • 34. 36 2.8 Figures of speech A figure of speech is “a word or phrase which is used for special effect, and which does not have its usual or literal meaning.” [Richards et al, 1987: 105] 2.8.1 Simile and metaphor 2.8.1.1 Definition Simile is “the use of comparison of one thing with another, eg. as brave as a lion, a face like a mask. [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 848] It is incredible to notice that not all comparisons belong to simile, eg. He is much taller than his elder brother. Only the comparisons clearly employed as examples of figures of speech do. Metaphor is “the use of a word or phrase to indicate something different from (though related in some way to) the literal meaning, as in I’ll make him eat his words or She has a heart of stone.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 564] 2.8.1.2 Distinction between a simile and a metaphor A simile is an explicit or direct comparison in which something is compared to something else by the use of a function word such as like or as: - My hands are as cold as ice. (= My hands are very cold.) - Tom eats like a horse. (= Tom eats as much as a horse does. In other words, Tom’s appetite IS explicitly COMPARED TO that of a horse.)
  • 35. 37 A metaphor is an implicit or indirect comparison in which no function word is used. Something is described by stating another thing with which it can be compared: - She has a heart of stone. (= She has a pitiless and unfeeling nature.) - I’ll make him eat his word. (= I’ll make him admit that what he’s said is wrong.) - He was a lion in the fight. (= He fought bravely and successfully just like a lion in the fight for food.) - His words stabbed at her heart. (= Like a knife, his words are so sharp that they can cause great pain or much unhappiness for her. In other words, his words did not actually stab, but their effect IS implicitly COMPARED TO the stabbing of a knife.) 2.8.1.3 Distinction between dead metaphors18 and live metaphors Dead metaphors are used so often that they have lost their metaphoric characteristics: the leg/face of the table, the back of the chair, the mouth of the river, the head of the state, the childhood of the earth, etc. Dead metaphors are in fact idioms19 or fixed expressions that native speakers of a language give special meanings and use 18 Dead metaphors are also called either unconscious or fossilized metaphors. 19 An idiom is an expression which functions as a single unit and whose meaning cannot be worked out from its separate parts. Thus, we cannot understand an
  • 36. 38 naturally and unconsciously: these speakers do not pay attention to the implicit comparison found in any dead metaphor; they just think directly of its meaning used in a given context: - He looks as though he hasn’t had a square meal for months. (= a large and satisfying meal) - He washed his hand out of the matter. (= refused to have anything more to do with the matter) Live metaphors20 are implied or indirect comparisons which have a variety of figurative meanings through their endless use: Tom is a pig may be interpreted as Tom is short and fat, Tom is slow and lazy, Tom is greedy, Tom is not intelligent, Tom is neither intelligent nor ambitious, etc. Live metaphors can only be understood after the implicit comparison found in any of them is seriously considered and fully appreciated. Native speakers of a language use live metaphors intentionally and creatively in order to make their speech more vivid, figurative, concise, etc.: You are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes. (= You are implicitly compared to a mist that does not last long, i.e. you come and leave quickly.) idiom just by looking at the separate meanings or the word classes of its members. We have to consider an idiom as a whole and figure out its meaning in context. - His excuses cut no ice with me. (= had little or no effect on me) - The project has been going great guns.(=proceeding vigorously successfully) 20 Live metaphors are also called conscious metaphors.
  • 37. 39 2.8.2 Personification Personification is a special kind of metaphor in which some human characteristic is attributed to an inanimate object or abstract notion; that is, a lifeless thing or quality is stated as if it were living, as in pitiless cold, cruel heat, a treacherous calm, a sullen sky, a frowning rock, the thirsty ground, the laughing harvest, the childhood of the world, the anger of the tempest, the deceitfulness of riches, etc. 2.8.3 Metonymy 2.8.3.1 Definition Metonymy is the substitution of the name of one thing for that of another to which it is related/with which it is associated. (In Greek, meta- means ‘substitution’ and onyma means ‘name’.) (a) A sign substitutes for the person or the object it signifies or symbolizes. - He succeeded to the crown (= the royal office). - She is a fighter against red tape (= bureaucracy, office routine). - The new proposal might affect the cloth (= the clergy) in some way. - Backstairs did influence. (= intrigues, secret plans to do something bad, secret arrangements) - Can you protect your children from the cradle to the grave? (= from childhood to death)
  • 38. 40 (b) An instrument substitutes for an agent. -The pen (= the writer) has more influence than the sword (= the soldier). - He is the best pen (= the best writer) of the day. - Who brought fire and sword (= adestructive war) into our country? - We need a force of a thousand rifles (= soldiers). - Sceptre and crown (= kings) Must tumble down, And in the dust be equal made With the poor crooked scythe and spade (= peasants). [James Shirley] (= Like peasants, kings must die.) (c) A container substitutes for the thing contained. - The kettle (= the water in the kettle) is boiling. - He drank the cup. (= the coffee, the tea, the chocolate, etc. in the cup) - He is too fond of the bottle (= the liquor in the bottle). - The conquerors smote the city (= the inhabitants of the city). - Why don’t you recognize the power of the purse? (= the money kept in the purse) (d) The concrete, like an organ of the human body, substitutes for the abstract such as love, hatred, sincerity, a mental ability, a natural talent, etc.
  • 39. 41 - She has an ear for music. (= She possesses a remarkable talent for learning, imitating, appreciating, etc. music.) - She has a good head of business. (= She is gifted in/is clever at dealing with business.) (e) The abstract substitutes for the concrete: - His Majesty (= the king) died a year ago. - His Holiness (= the Pope) has just come back to Rome. - The authorities put an end to the riot. (= the group of people who have the power to give orders or take action) (f) The material substitutes for the thing made. - The marble (= the marble statue21 ) speaks. - All our glass is kept in the cupboard. (= vessels and articles made of glass) - He was buried under this stone. (= this tomb made of stone, this tombstone) (g) An author/a producer/a place where goods are made substitutes for his work(s)/its product(s). - I have never read Keat (= Keat’s poems). - Have you ever read Homer (= the works of Homer)? - I love old china (= crockery made in China). 21 A scene found in a fairly tale shows the prince of a kingdom going for a walk in his garden. When passing by the marble statue, he notices a sweet call: “My dear prince!”
  • 40. 42 2.8.3.2 Distinction between metaphor and metonymy On the one hand, metaphor is based on the associated similarity shared by the two things being implicitly compared. In other words, only if A and B are similar to each other in some way can the name commonly referred to A be metaphorically used to refer to B. On the other hand, metonymy does not depend on such similarity. Let’s consider the two following sentences: (1) The organization is keeping the brake on pay rises. (2) No man is an island: entire of itself; every man is a piece of the continent. The sentence marked (1) exemplifies a metaphor: the core meaning of keep the brake on a certain vehicle in order to reduce its speed or to stop it has been changed to its metaphoric meaning: control pay rises or cause pay rises to slow down. The whole sentence means the organization is controlling the increase in the amounts/sums of money paid for its current activities. This sentence marked (2) consists of two metonymies: respectively, an island and the continent, which are both [+concrete], stand for isolation and community, which are both [+abstract]. The whole sentence means no one can isolate himself from the community he has been living in.
  • 41. 43 2.8.4 Synecdoche 2.8.4.1 Definition Synecdoche is a special kind of metonymy in which “a part or aspect of a person, object, etc. is meant to refer to the whole person, object, etc.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 925] - They organized a fleet of fifty sails (= ships). - He is a man of seventy winters (= years of age). - He managed to earn his bread (= necessaries). - This is a village of only more than one hundred souls (= people). - Gray hairs (= old or elderly people) should be respected. Synecdoche also involves a whole or genus used to substitute for a part or species: vessel for ship, the smiling year for the smiling season of the year, especially the spring, the Christian world for the Christian Church as a whole, etc. 2.8.4.2 Distinction between metonymy and synecdoche Let’s consider the four following sentences: (1) The princess captures the hearts of the nation. The hearts, which is [+organ of the human body] and thus [+concrete], is used to stand for the love, which is [+emotional experience] and thus [+abstract]. The hearts in this case is a metonymy. The sentence means all the people of that country love the princess.
  • 42. 44 (2) He has a kind heart. A heart, which is [+organ of the human body], [+concrete] and [+part], is used to stand for a person, which is [+human], [+concrete] and [+whole]. A kind heart in this case is a synecdoche. The sentence means he is a kind/kind-hearted person who is concerned for others around him. (3) Spare the rod and spoil the child. The rod, which is [+thing] and thus [+concrete], is used to stand for the punishment, which is [+human activity], [+intention] and thus more or less [+abstract]. The rod in this case is a metonymy. The sentence means if you do not punish a child when he does wrong, you will spoil his character. (4) All hands on deck did help. Hands, which is [+organ of the human body], [+concrete] and [+part], is used to stand for people, which is [+human], [+concrete] and [+whole]. In this case, hands must be a synecdoche. This sentence means all the people on one of the floors of the ship worked hard to accomplish a certain task. 2.8.5 Hyperbole Hyperbole, which is also called overstatement, is the use of “exaggerated statement that is made for special effect and is not meant to be taken literally.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 446]
  • 43. 45 Below are a few hyperboles or overstatements: - I’ve invited millions of (= a lot of) people to my party. - She sheds floods of tears (= cries a lot) whenever she is upset. - Don’t live in such a sea of doubt! (= Don’t be too suspicious!) - Never in a million years will he admit defeat. (= He will never admit defeat.) - I haven’t seen you for ages. (= for a few weeks, for a couple of months, for a while) 2.8.6 Litotes Litotes, which is also called meiosis, is the use of deliberately gentler, milder or weaker statements to express something in a controlled way. - I don’t think I would agree with you. (= I disagree with you.) - I am afraid that no passenger is allowed to smoke in here. (= You are not allowed to smoke in here.) Quite often, an expression of litotes is an “ironical understatement, especially using a negative to emphasize the contrary.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 527] - It’s not bad. (= It is fine.) - It wasn’t easy. (= It was very difficult.) - Always remember that she is no fool. (= She is worldly-wise, in fact.) - Jim was rather upset when he again failed in the final exam. (= very upset)
  • 44. 46 2.8.7 Irony Irony is the “expression of one’s meaning by saying the direct opposite of one’s thoughts in order to be emphatic, amusing, sarcastic, etc.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 479] Below are a few expressions of irony: - What a lovely day it was! Everything I had went wrong. - He is so intelligent that no examiner has agreed to pass him so far. - He is lucky to have such an ugly and awkward wife. - She is extremely unlucky to be born in such a prosperous family in a developed European country. - Your plan is really tricky. The other team will figure it out in about one play. 2.8.8 Euphemism 2.8.8.1 Definition Euphemism is “the use of pleasant, mild or indirect words or phrases in place of more accurate or direct ones.” [Crowther (ed.), 1992: 305] Respectively, morticians (also called undertakers) and a garbage man may be euphemistically replaced by funeral directors and a sanitation engineer. 2.8.8.2 Distinction between a taboo word and a euphemism. A taboo word, a ‘dirty’ word, is the word or the linguistic expression that refers to a taboo act or behaviour in a society, a culture or a speech community while a euphemism is the word or the linguistic expression that replaces a taboo word or serves to avoid a frightening or unpleasant subject.
  • 45. 47 It is crucial to recognize that a taboo word and its euphemism share the same denotative meaning but they differ in their connotative meanings: the taboo word has a negative connotation whereas its euphemism has a positive connotation. Below are a number of common euphemisms and theirtaboo words: Euphemisms Taboo words social disease syphilis criminal assault rape handicapped crippled mentally ill insane underprivileged poor developing or less developed (country) poor (country) (more) developed (country) rich (country) senior citizens the aged laid to rest buried perspiration sweat intoxicated drunk abdomen belly odour stink or smell expectorate spit retarded or unusual mentally defective hard of hearing deaf love child bastard
  • 46. 48 Below are a few expressions of euphemism: - Pass away is a euphemism for die. - He was his Majesty’s guest for two years is a euphemism for He was in jail for two years. 2.8.9 Onomatopoeia Onomatopoeia is the imitation of natural sounds by means of words or groups of words. Hiss, cuckoo, thud, moo, baa, hush, pop, etc. are onomatopoeic words. Growl, splash, crackle, etc. exemplify semi-onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeia can be identified in the following sentences: - She is always squeaking and squawking. - We could hear the enemy guns booming (away) in the distance. - He felt a tap on his shoulder. - Rain was dripping down from the trees. Its steady drip kept me awake all night long. Exercise 8: Interpret the meaning the following sentences and state what kind of figures of speech (also called figurative language) used in each of them. 1. When he gets going, Jack is a streak of lightning. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 47. 49 2. I found the fifty-two pounds of books you left for me to carry. Your kindness really moved me. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3. The man is a demon for work. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 4. When you take that course, plan to study thirty hours a day. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 5. The wind howled angrily around the house all night. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 6. When the White House called, the ambassador went at once. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 7. My dormitory room is like a cave. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 48. 50 8. Come to the dormitory and see what a cave I live in. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 9. Dick was fairly pleased when he won the brand-new car in the contest. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 10. If you are not happy with the service, go and talk to the City Hall. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 11. Man does not live by bread alone. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 12. We now live under the same roof. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 13. Albert was as sharp as a tack this morning. He answered every question as soon as it was asked. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 49. 51 14. The river ate the bank away. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 15. Keep overeating like that and pretty soon you’ll weigh a thousand pounds. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 16. After she heard the good news, she grinned like a mule eating briars. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 17. The captain was in charge of one hundred horses. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 18. Joe cried a little when he lost the thousand dollars. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 19. You can depend on Gina; she is a rock when trouble comes. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 50. 52 20. Life is a dream. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 21. He’s so hardheaded that he won’t listen to anyone. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 22. Research says that these methods are best. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 23. Right at this minute, I could drink a barrel of water without stopping. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 24. It is amazing what a great mind he is. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 25. Alice came in gently, like a May breeze. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 51. 53 26. Susie is a picture of loveliness in her new dress. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 27. A thousand thanks are for your kindness. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 28. I walked past the big sad mouth which didn’t know what to say then. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 29. We are tired to death of such movies. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 30. Give every man thine ears, bid a few thy voice. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 31. There was a storm in Parliament last night. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 52. 54 32. I’m afraid he has misrepresented the facts. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 33. He worked and worked until he breathed his last. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 34. We’ll just have to go our separate ways. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 35. They were vital, unforgettable matches that gave us a new window on the game. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 36. I’ve told you a thousand times not to touch that again. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 37. He is as mute as a fish. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 53. 55 38. We stopped to drink in the beautiful scenery. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 39. His words can be trusted. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 40. The police team has cemented close ties with the hospital staff. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 41. The boss gave her a hot look. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 42. He could not bridle his anger. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 43. He attacked every weak point in my argument. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 54. 56 44. In 1940, after the fall of France, England had no defense left but her ancient valor. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 45. The fire snaps and crackles like a whip; its sharp acrid smoke stings the eyes. It is the fire that drives a thorn of memory in my heart. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 46. The organization is keeping the brake on pay rises. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 47. Her father is a captain of industry. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 48. I am the captain of my soul. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 49. To fall out of a tree in one’s early childhood is not a particularly reassuring experience. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 55. 57 50. Nomanis anisland: entire of itself; everymanis apiece of the continent. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 2.9 Hyponymy 2.9.1 Definition Hyponymy is a relation in which the referent of a word is totally included in the referent of another word. In other words, hyponymy is the relationship between each of the hyponyms22 (the “lower” word) and its superordinate23 (the “higher” word): cook grill toast boil fry24 roast bake smoke ……… stir-fry sauteù deep-fry 2.9.2 Distinction between a hyponym and a superordinate 22 Hyponyms are also referred to as subordinates or specific lexical items. 23 Superordinates are also referred to as hyper(o)nyms or generic lexical items. 24 stir-fry = fry (vegetables, meat, etc.) for a short time in very hot oil while stirring them sauteù = fry (food like potatoes) quickly in a little fat deep-fry = fry (food like potatoes) quickly in hot fat that completely covers them
  • 56. 58 A hyponym is a word “whose referent is totally included in the referent of another word (the prefix hypo- in hyponym means ‘below’).” [Finegan, 1994: 165] Accordingly, a superordinate is a word whose referent covers all the referents of its hyponyms. (The prefix hyper- in hyper(o)nym means ‘over.’) Ex1. plant tree bush (shrub) flowering plant moss grass ……… Hyponyms often exist at more than one level, resulting in multiple layers of hyponymic relationships: Ex2. colour blue red yellow green black ……… turquoise25 aquamarine royal blue In this case, blue is a word that has a hyponym and a superordinate at the same time. Since turquoise, aquamarine and royal blue refer to different shades of blue, these words are IMMEDIATE hyponyms [Palmer: 1981: 87] of blue. The word blue in its turn is, along with many other colour terms, an IMMEDIATE hyponym of colour. We thus obtain a hierarchy of 25 Turquoise = greenish blue; aquamarine = bluish green; royal blue = deep bright blue
  • 57. 59 terms related to each other through hyponymic relationships. Similar hierarchies can be established for many lexical fields: Ex3. physical entity plant animal rock fish bird insect bug reptile mammal ……… sparrow hawk crow fowl ……… human animal (beast) chicken turkey quail ……… dog cat cow ……… Note in this case that the word animal appears on two different levels. English speakers indeed use the word to refer to at least two different referents: animals as distinct from plants and rocks, and animals (generally mammals other than humans) as distinct from humans. 2.9.3 Hyponymy and inclusion “HYPONYMY involves us in the notion INCLUSION in the sense that tulip and rose are included in flower, and lion and elephant in mammal (or perhaps animal). Similarly, scarlet is included in red. Inclusion is thus a matter of class membership. The ‘super’ term is the SUPERORDINATE and the ‘lower’ term is the HYPONYM.” [Palmer, 1981: 85]
  • 58. 60 Exercise 9: Each of the following sentences presents a pair of words. Which of them is a superordinate and which, a hyponym? 1. She reads books all day – mostly novels. 2. A crocodile is a reptile. 3. There’s no flower more beautiful than a tulip. 4. He likes all vegetables except carrots. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Exercise 10: Draw a chart to show the relationship between a superordinate and a hyponym. 1. luggage and suitcase xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 2. green vegetable and bean
  • 59. 61 3. animal and foal 4. animal and child 5. fowl and rooster 6. plant and coconut 7. plant and rose
  • 60. 62 8. vocal organ and tongue tip 9. head and eyelash 10. furniture and dressing table 11. vehicle and convertible 12. vocalize and croon
  • 61. 63 2.10 Synonymy 2.10.1 Definition Synonymy is a relation in which various words have different (written and sound) forms but have the same or nearly the same meaning. Ex1: The two English verbs hide and conceal are synonyms; they both mean keep somebody/something from being seen or known about. Ex2: The four English nouns kind, type, sort and variety are synonyms; they all refer to a group having similar characteristics. 2.10.2 Distinction between true synonymy and partial synonymy 2.10.2.1 True synonymy There are few true synonyms in the lexicon of a language. Ex1. Movie, film, flick26 and motion picture may be considered as synonyms because they all refer to the same set of referents in the real world. In other words, they have the same denotative meaning. However, these lexical items differ in their connotative meanings: movie may strike you as American while film may strike you as British or as appropriate for movie classics or art movies; flick is used chiefly in very informal contexts whereas motion picture is quaintly outdated and has connotations as a term from the thirties or forties of the 20th century. 26 flick n [C] (dated, informal) cinema film
  • 62. 64 In brief, movie, film, flick and motion picture are not true synonyms. Ex2. Fast, quick and rapid may be considered as synonyms because they may be used interchangeably in reference to someone’s running speed: He’s a fast/quick/rapid runner. However; a fast talker, one who is able to get out of trouble by talking cleverly, is different from a quick talker, one who usually talks in a rapid manner; some people may lead their lives in the fast lane, not in the rapid lane or in the quick lane; he has a quick mind, not a rapid mind or a fast mind; he gave her a quick glance, not a rapid glance or a fast glance; and rapid is the usual term when reference is made to a person’s strides, especially metaphorical strides: Tom has made rapid strides in his math this term. In brief, fast, quick and rapid are not true synonyms. Quite often, words that appear synonymous at first glance actually refer to slightly different sets of concepts or are used in different situations. “The fact that there are few true synonyms in the lexicon of a language reflects the general tendency of language users to make most of what is available to them. If two terms have the same referent, the meaning of one of them is usually modified to express differences in referential, social or affective meaning27 . Although true synonymy is rare, the notion is useful because it helps describe similarities between the meanings of different terms in the lexicon.” [Finegan, 1994: 168] 27 In other words, synonyms usually have different connotations: mother, Mum, Mom, Mummy, and Mommy.
  • 63. 65 2.10.2.2 Partial synonymy Partial synonymy is a relation in which a polysemous word shares one of its meanings with another word. For example, one meaning of deep is synonymous with profound in the pair of sentences marked (1)a-b. In other words, deep and profound can be used interchangeably in (1)a-b. No such interchange can be found in (2)a-b: (1)a. You have my deep sympathy. (1)b. You have my profound sympathy. (2)a. The river is very deep at this point. (2)b. *The river is very profound at this point. Partial synonymy leads to collocations: a bunch of keys, a herd of sheep, a school of ants, a flock of birds, a group of teachers, a gang of thieves, etc. Exercise 11: The following pairs of words are partial synonyms, i.e. they do not share all their senses. For each pair, (a) gives a sentence in which the two can be used interchangeably; (b) gives another sentence in which only one of them can be used. 1. strong/powerful (a) ________________________________________________ (b) ________________________________________________ 2. ripe/mature (a) ________________________________________________ (b) ________________________________________________
  • 64. 66 3. broad/wide (a) ________________________________________________ (b) _______________________________________________ 4. soil/earth (a) ________________________________________________ (b) ________________________________________________ 5. edge/side (a) ________________________________________________ (b) ________________________________________________ 6. permit/allow (a)_________________________________________________ (b)_________________________________________________ Exercise 12: Identify various meanings of each of the two given polysemous words and then point out which meaning exemplify partial synonymy. 1. deep (i) This is a deep well. (ii) He only gave a deep sigh. (iii) You have my deep sympathy. (iv) With his hands deep in his pockets, he went away. The ________ meaning of deep is synonymous with __________.
  • 65. 67 2. broad (i) The river is very broad at this point. (ii) He just gave a broad smile. (iii) Luckily, my boss is a man of broad views. (iv) He speaks English with a broad Yorkshire accent. The _________ meaning of broad is synonymous with ________. 2.11 Antonymy 2.11.1 Definition Antonymy is a relation in which two words have different (written and sound) forms and are opposite in meaning. Ex1: Pass--fail, hot--cold and thinner--fatter are three pairs of antonyms. Ex2: True--false, big--small and buy--sell are three pairs of antonyms. 2.11.2 Classification 2.11.2.1 Binary antonymy28 and gradable antonymy 2.11.2.1.1 Below is probably a common way of telling binary antonymy from gradable antonymy: Binary antonymy is a relation in which two members of a pair of antonyms: 28 Binary antonymy is also referred to as complementary antonymy.
  • 66. 68 (a) are mutually exclusive: not alive is dead and not dead is alive. (b) cannot be used in a comparative or superlative sense: *He is more single/more married than his brother. (c) cannot be used in questions with how to ask about degrees: *How single/How married is he? Thus, alive--dead and married--single are two pairs of binary antonyms. Gradable antonymy is a relation in which two members of a pair of antonyms: (a) are gradable: between hot and cold are three “intermediate terms” [Palmer, 1981: 95] warm, tepid (or lukewarm) and cool. (b) can be used in a comparative or superlative sense: wider is less narrow, more difficult is less easy, etc. (c) can be used in questions with how to ask about degrees: How difficult is the test?29 Thus, hot--cold and difficult--easy are two pairs of gradable antonyms. 2.11.2.1.2 The distinction between binary antonymy and gradable antonymy is sometimes blurred by language users. In English, for example, it is reasonable to assume that whatever is alive is not dead and that whatever is dead is not alive, and thus 29 How easy is the test? is also possible, but its context is very restricted, e.g. to show that one can manage to pass the test without any difficulty.
  • 67. 69 that the adjectives dead and alive form a pair of binary antonyms. However, we do have expressions like half-dead, barely alive, and more dead than alive, which suggest that, in some contexts, we see alive and dead as gradable antonyms. Nevertheless, the distinction between the two types of antonyms is useful in that it describes an important distinction between two types of word relationships. 2.11.2.2 Relational antonymy Two members of a pair of relational antonyms30 display symmetry in their meaning. The “if…, then …” formula can be used to test and identify relational antonyms: if Mr. Brown is Jack’s employer, then Jack is Mr. Brown’s employee; if Jenny is thinner than Mary, then Mary is fatter than Jenny; if John bought a car from Fred, then Fred sold a car to John; etc. Thus, buy--sell, employer--employee, and thinner--fatter are three pairs of relational antonyms. Relational antonyms belong to various word classes: Verbs: buy--sell, give--receive, lend--borrow, import-- export, own--belong to, etc. Nouns: employer--employee, grandparent--grandchild, father/mother--son/daughter, fianceù--fianceùe, parent--child/offspring, professor--student, teacher--pupil, doctor--patient, debtor--creditor, landlord/landlady--tenant, husband--wife, uncle/aunt--nephew/niece, etc. 30 Relational antonyms are also called converses.
  • 68. 70 Comparative adjectives: thinner--fatter, cheaper -- more expensive, greater than--less than, etc. Comparative adverbs: more efficiently--less efficiently, faster--more slowly, etc. Prepositions: above--below, in front of--behind, over--under, before--after, north of--south of, west of--east of, etc. 2.11.3 Antonymy and (un)markedness Words that are in an antonymous relationship often do not have equal status with respect to markedness. In a pair of antonyms, one member is more unmarked (or less marked) and the other is more marked (or less unmarked), e.g. high--low, tall- -short, heavy--light, far--near, expensive--cheap, hot--cold, long--short, wide--narrow, deep--shallow, difficult--easy, married--single, well--badly, etc. The unmarkedness of one member of any pair of antonyms enables it to occur in questions of degree like How heavy is it? (not How light is it?), How tall are you? (not How short are you?), How deep is the canal? (not How shallow is the canal?), How expensive is this bracelet? (not How cheap is this bracelet?), How well can you speak English? (not How badly can you speak English?), etc. Similarly, since married is less marked than single, we say we talk about one’s marital status, and not about one’s single status.
  • 69. 71 Exercise 13: Are the following pairs of words binary antonyms? (1) chalk--cheese Yes / No (4) dead--alive Yes / No (2) same--different Yes / No (5)married--unmarried Yes / No (3) copper--tin Yes / No (6) cheap--expensive Yes / No Exercise 14: Are the following pairs of words relational antonyms? (1) below--above Yes / No (4)grandparent--grandchild Yes / No (2) love--hate Yes / No (5) greater than--less than Yes / No (3) conceal--reveal 31 Yes / No (6) own--belong to Yes / No Exercise 15: Identify the continuous scale of values between the two given words. 1. love--hate: _________________________________________ 2. hot -- cold: _________________________________________ 3. big -- small: _________________________________________ 4. rich -- poor: ________________________________________ 5. none -- all: _________________________________________ 6. possibly -- certainly: ________________________________ 7. never--always: ______________________________________ 31 Conceal sb/sth (from sb/sth) = keep sb/sth from being seen or known about: - He tried to conceal/did not reveal his heavy drinking from his family. Reveal sth (to sb) = make sth known (to sb): - The doctor did not reveal the truth to him/concealed the truth from him.
  • 70. 72 Exercise 16: State whether the following pairs of antonyms are binary, gradable or relational by writing B (binary), G (gradable) or R (relational): 1. good--bad: ______________ 9. import--export: ________________________________ 2. pass--fail: ______________ 10. better than--worse than: _________________________ 3.deciduous--evergreen:_____ 11. easy--difficult: ________________________________ 4.expensive—cheap: ________ 12. hot--cold: ________________________________ 5.parent--offspring: ________ 13. legal--illegal: ________________________________ 6. beautiful--ugly: __________ 14. asleep--awake: ________________________________ 7. false--true:______________ 15. rude--polite: ________________________________ 8. lessor--lessee: ___________ 16. husband--wife: ________________________________ 2.12 Homonymy 2.12.1 Distinction between homonymy, homophony and homography 2.12.1.1 Homonymy is a relation in which various words have the same (sound and written) form but have different meanings. Ex1: Classified as two homonyms are the noun bank1, which means a financial institution, and the noun bank2, which means the shore of a river; both being pronounced /b`7k/ in RP32 . 32 Received Pronunciation (usually abbreviated to RP) “is most familiar as the accent used by most announcers and newsreaders on serious national and international BBC broadcasting channels.” Also, it “is often most recommended for foreign learners studying British English.” [Roach, 1991: 4]
  • 71. 73 Ex2: Classified as three homonyms are the noun bear, which refers to a large heavy animal with thick fur, the verb bear1, which means give birth to, and the verb bear2, which means tolerate; all being pronounced /be6(r)/ in RP. 2.12.1.2 Homophony is a relation in which various words have the same sound form33 but have different meanings and written forms. Ex1: Classified as two homophones are the noun hour, which means a twenty-fourth part of a day and night, and the possessive adjective our, which means belonging to us; both being pronounced /aυ6(r)/ in RP. Ex2: Classified as two homophones are the noun place, which means a particular area or position in space, and the noun plaice, which means a type of fish; both being pronounced /ple1s/ in RP. 2.12.1.3 Homography is a relation in which various words have the same written form34 but have different meanings and sound forms. Ex1: Classified as two homographs are the verb lead /li:d/ in Does this road lead to town and the noun lead /led/ in Lead is a heavy metal. Ex2: Classified as two homographs are the bare infinitive form read /ri:d/ and the past tense form read /red/. 33 also referred to as pronunciation 34 also referred to as spelling
  • 72. 74 2.12.2 Homophones as a distinct type of homonyms “The terminological relationship between homonymy, homography, and homophony is not entirely clear. For instance, homophones that are not homographs are sometimes classified as a distinct type of homonyms, but the formal identity of homonyms may also be defined so strictly as to exclude non- homographic homophones from the class of homonyms (at least for those languages that have written records). The very fact that homonyms are different words (i.e., that they are distinct entities in the lexicon) implies that they are semantically distinct.” [Asher and Simpson, 1994: 1595] Consider the following table and identify antonymy, synonymy, homonymy, homophony, and homography via their main features. Written form Sound form Meaning antonymy − − − − − − − − − − − − synonymy − − − − − − − − + homonymy + + − − − − homophony − − − − + − − − − homography + − − − − − − − − + : the same or nearly the same; − − − − : different or opposite
  • 73. 75 Among a number of linguists who regard non-homographic homophones as a distinct type of homonyms are Fromkin and Rodman [1993: 129]: “Homonyms are different words that are pronounced the same, but may or may not spelled the same. To, two and too are homonyms because they are pronounced the same, despite their spelling differences.” These authors and many others may require homonymy re- defined: Homonymy is a sense relation in which various words are written the same way and/or sound alike but have different meanings, e.g. feat (strength or courage) and feet (plural of foot), know (have something in one’s mind) and no (not any), row (a quarrel) and row (a line), wound (an injury) and wound (past of wind), etc. Exercise 17: Give the phonemic transcription shared by two members of each of the given pairs of words to identify them as a pair of homophones: The first one is done as an example. 1. altar /‘0:lt6(r)/ alter 11. herd __________ heard 2. beech __________ beach 12. knight _________ night 3. boar ___________ bore 13. nose __________ knows 4. coarse _________ course 14. leek ____________ leak 5. crews ___________ cruise 15. maid ___________ made 6. deer ____________ dear 16. pail _____________ pale 7. draft ___________ draught 17. reign ___________ rain
  • 74. 76 8. fare ____________fair 18. scene __________ seen 9. flour ___________ flower 19. thrown ________throne 10. grate _________ great 20. whole ___________ hole Exercise 18: Give the phonemic transcription shared be two members of each of the given pairs of words to identify them as a pair of homonyms: The italic words in bracket are to clarify the meaning in question of the given words. The first one is done as an example. 1. lie1 (meaning tell lies) lie 2 (meaning put one’s body on a horizontal surface) Classified as two homonyms are the verb lie1, which means tell lies, and the verb lie2, which means put one’s body on a horizontal surface; both being pronounced /la1/ in RP. 2. bat (meaning a tool for hitting in baseball) bat (meaning the small mouse-like animal that flies at night and feeds on fruit and insects) ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3. too (meaning more than should be) too (meaning also) ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 75. 77 4. might (meaning great strength or power) might (expressing possibility) ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 5. bare (meaning without the usual covering or protection) bare (meaning uncover or reveal something) ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 6. sound (meaning thing that can be heard) sound (meaning healthy or in good condition) ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 7. lead (as in Does this road lead to town) lead (as in He’s the chief trouble-maker; the others just follow his lead) ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Exercise 19: What is the relationship between the words in the following pairs? If the words are antonyms, specify what kind of antonyms they are. The italic words in bracket are to clarify the meaning in question of the given words.
  • 76. 78 The first one is done as an example. 1. true -- false: binary antonymy 2. gloom -- darkness: __________________ 3. dark (as in a dark room) -- dark (as in Don’t look on the dark side of things): __________________ 4. wind (as in The wind is blowing hard) -- wind (as in wind one’s watch): __________________ 5. deny -- admit: __________________ 6. host -- guest: __________________ 7. sow (as in sow a field with wheat) -- sow (meaning a female pig): __________________ 8. pupil (at a school) -- pupil (of an eye): __________________ 9. cheap -- expensive: __________________ 10. coarse -- course: __________________ 2.13 Polysemy 2.13.1 Definition Polysemy is a relation in which a single word has two or more slightly different but closely related meanings. Ex1: The noun chip has the three following meanings: (i) a small piece of some hard substance which has been broken off from something larger: a chip of wood/glass.
  • 77. 79 (ii) a small cut piece of potato which is fried for eating: Can I try one of your chips? (iii) a small but vital piece of a computer: This computer has got a faster chip than the old one. The three meanings are closely related because they all contain the semantic feature [+small piece]. Ex2: The verb break has the two following meanings: (i) separate into two or more parts as a result of force or strain (but not cutting): He broke that cup. (ii) become unusable by being damaged; make (something) unusable by damaging: My watch is broken. The two meanings are closely related because both contain the semantic feature [+can no longer be used]. 2.13.2 Distinction between polysemy and homonymy A well-known problem in semantics is how to decide whether we are dealing with a single polysemous word (like plain) or with two or more homonyms (like port1, as in The ship left port, and port2, as in He drank port). In other words, how do you know when you have separate lexical items rather than a single word with different meanings? Using SPELLING as a criterion is misleading: many sets of words are obviously distinct but have the same spelling as, for example, the noun sound meaning noise and the adjective sound meaning healthy, or the noun bank1 meaning financial institution and the noun bank2 meaning shore of a river.
  • 78. 80 One modestly reliable criterion is the word’s ETYMOLOGY, or historical origin. Take as an example the two English words which derive from different Anglo-Saxon roots: bank1 meaning financial institution is an early borrowing from French while bank2 meaning shore of a river has a Scandinavian origin. The various ANTONYMS and SYNONYMS of a word provide a different kind of criterion that can be useful in distinguishing between HOMONYMY and POLYSEMY. Since the two senses of plain, which are (1) clear or easy and (2) undecorated, share a synonym in simple and an antonym in complex. This fact suggests that they are indeed two meanings of one and the same POLYSEMIC word. No such shared synonym or antonym can be identified for the two meanings of sound, which is, by chance, the form of two different words, sound1 and sound2, which have the same spelling and thus, also sound alike. Another interesting question is whether there is any COMMONALITY between the different meanings of what appears to be the same word. The two meanings of plain can be characterized as devoid of complexity, which suggests that they are related, but no such description exists for bank1 and bank2. Thus plain in these two senses is POLYSEMIC, while the two senses of bank reflect HOMONYMIC lexical items. There is no doubt that it is often difficult to decide whether a particular pair of look-alike and sound-alike word forms are two separate homonymous words or simply a polysemic word with different meanings. Though HOMONYMY and POLYSEMY can be distinguished as different notions, the boundary between them is not clear-cut.
  • 79. 81 Also notice that homonyms like bank1 and bank2, port1 and port2, sound1 and sound2, etc. are treated in distinct dictionary entries whereas two or more closely related meanings of the polysemous word foot, chip, or plain are linked together within only one dictionary entry. 2.14 Ambiguity 2.14.1 Structural ambiguity A sentence is considered as structurally ambiguous when its structure permits more than one interpretation. For example, we can consider the prepositional phrase with binoculars in We watched the hunters with binoculars either as an adjectival to be the post-nominal modifier of the noun phrase the hunters or as an adverbial to be the optional adjunct of means of the verb watched. S S NP1 VP NP1 VP1 Pro Vgrp NP2 Pro VP2 AdvP [mono-trans] [dO] [opA of Means] Vgrp NP2 NP3 AdjP [mono-trans] [dO] PP We watched the hunters with binoculars. We watched the hunters with binoculars.
  • 80. 82 2.14.2 Lexical ambiguity Any ambiguity resulting from the ambiguity of a word is lexical ambiguity. Ex1. We can interpret the sentence They were waiting at the bank in two different ways because the two nouns bank — bank1, which means financial institution and bank2, which means shore of the river — are two homonyms. Ex2. We can interpret the sentence That robot is bright in two different ways because the adjective bright is a polysemous word which has two slightly different but closely related meanings: shining and intelligent. Thus, both polysemy and homonymy contribute to lexical ambiguity. Exercise 20: Explain the lexical ambiguity in each of the following sentences by providing two sentences that paraphrase its two different meanings. The first one is done as an example. 1. They were waiting at the bank. Meaning one: They were waiting at the financial institution. Meaning two: They were waiting at the shore of the river. 2. The long drill is boring. Meaning one: ______________________________________ Meaning two: ______________________________________
  • 81. 83 3. When he got the clear title to the land, it was a good deed. Meaning one: ______________________________________ Meaning two: ______________________________________ 4. The proprietor of the fish store was the sole owner. Meaning one: ______________________________________ Meaning two: ______________________________________ 5. We like the ball. Meaning one: ______________________________________ Meaning two: ______________________________________ 6. They passed the port at night. Meaning one: ______________________________________ Meaning two: ______________________________________ 7. The captain corrected the list. Meaning one: ______________________________________ Meaning two: ______________________________________ 8. He was knocked over by the punch. Meaning one: ______________________________________ Meaning two: ______________________________________ 9. The camel swallowed the chocolate and then ate it. Meaning one: ______________________________________ Meaning two: ______________________________________
  • 82. 84 Exercise 21: Does polysemy or homonymy contribute to the lexical ambiguity in each of the two given sentences. (1) She cannot bear children. (2) The cat sat on the mat. ________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Exercise 22: In what way are homonyms related to lexical ambiguity? ________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Exercise 23: In what way is a polysemous word related to lexical ambiguity? ________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 83. 85 Exercise 24: Explain the structural ambiguity in each of the following sentences: 1. The drunkard visitor rolled up the carpet. 6. They are cooking bananas. 2. Is he really that kind? 7. They are moving sidewalks. 3. My fianceùe is reserved. 8. John loves Richard more than Martha. 4. I saw her slip. 9. Old men and women will be served first. 5. I saw her duck. 10. The thing that bothered Bill was crouching under the table. 1(a) The drunkard visitor rolled up the carpet. 1(b) The drunkard visitor rolled up the carpet. 2(a) Is he really that kind? 2(b) Is he really that kind? 3 (a) My fianceùe is reserved. 3(b) My fianceùe is reserved.
  • 84. 86 4(a) I saw her slip. 4(b) I saw her slip. 5(a) We saw her duck. 5(b) We saw her duck. 6(a) They are cooking bananas. 6(b) They are cooking bananas. 7(a) They are moving sidewalks. 7(b) They are moving sidewalks. 8(a) John loves Richard more than Martha. 8(b) John loves Richard more than Martha.
  • 85. 87 9(a) Old men and women will be served first. 9(b) Old men and women will be served first. 10(a) The thing that bothered Bill was crouching under the table. 10(b)ThethingthatbotheredBill wascrouchingunderthetable. 2.15 Anomaly 2.15.1 Definition Anomaly is “a violation of semantic rules to create nonsense.” [Finegan, 1993: 148] Ex1. That bachelor is pregnant is semantically anomalous because bachelor is [+male] whereas pregnant is [+female]. Ex2. My brother is the only child in the family is an English sentence that is grammatically correct and syntactically perfect; however, it is semantically anomalous because it represents a contradiction. The meaning of brother includes the semantic feature [+having at least one sibling] whereas the only child in the family is [+having no other sibling].
  • 86. 88 2.15.2 Anomaly and contradiction Anomaly involves us in the notion contradiction in the sense that semantically anomalous sentences constitute a type of contradictory sentences. For example, John killed Bill, who remained alive for many years after is semantically anomalous because the so-called sentence represents a contradiction: no living organism can remain alive after being killed. In fact, Bill died right at the moment John killed him. Exercise 25: Explain the anomaly of each of the following sentences. 1. Christopher is killing phonemes. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 2. My brother is a spinster. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3. The boy swallowed the chocolate and then chewed it. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 4. Babies can lift one ton. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 87. 89 5. Puppies are human. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 6. My unmarried sister is married to a bachelor. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 7. The bigger key and John opened the door. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 8. James sliced the ideas. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 9. Jack’s courage chewed the bones. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 10. I hear the cloud. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 11. The tiger remained alive for an hour after the hunter killed it.
  • 88. 90 ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Exercise 26: How can each of the given sentences be changed to avoid anomaly? 1. ____________________________________________________ 2. ____________________________________________________ 3. ____________________________________________________ 4. ____________________________________________________ 5. ____________________________________________________ 6. ____________________________________________________ 7. ____________________________________________________ 8. ____________________________________________________ 9. ____________________________________________________ 10. ___________________________________________________ 11. __________________________________________________
  • 89. 91 Section 3 3 3 3 SENTENCE MEANING “SENTENCE MEANING is what a sentence means, regardless of the context and situation in which it may be used.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 269] 3.1 Proposition, utterance and sentence 3.1.1 “A PROPOSITION is that part of the meaning of the utterance of a declarative sentence which describes some state of affairs. The state of affairs typically involves persons or things referred to by expressions in the sentence. In uttering a declarative sentence a speaker typically asserts a proposition.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 19] Ex1. The following pair of sentences expresses the same proposition: 1(a) Harry took out the garbage. 1(b) Harry took the garbage out. The following pair of sentences expresses different propositions: 2(a) Isobel loves Tony. 2(b) Tony loves Isobel.
  • 90. 92 Ex2. The following pair of sentences expresses the same proposition: 3(a) John gave Mary a book. 3(b) Mary was given a book by John. The following pair of sentences expresses different propositions: 4(a) George danced with Ethel. 4(b) George didn’t dance with Ethel. Exercise 27: Do the two following sentences have the same proposition? (1) Mr Dindlay killed Janet. (2) Mr Dindlay caused Janet to die. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ Exercise 28: Explain why the two members of each of the following pairs of sentences35 do not share the same proposition. 35 This means the two members of each pair are not paraphrases of each other.
  • 91. 93 1(a) John is the parent of James. 1(b) James is the parent of John. 3(a) The fly was on the wall. 3(b) The wall was under the fly. 2(a) The hunter bit the lion. 2(b) The lion bit the hunter. 4(a) Jack was injured by a stone. 4(b) Jack was injured with a stone. ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 3.1.2 Distinction between a proposition and a sentence “Propositions, unlike sentences, cannot be said to belong to any particular language. Sentences in different languages can correspond to the same proposition, if the two sentences are perfect translations of each other.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 21-22] For example, English I’am cold, French J’ai froid, German Mir ist kalt and Vietnamese Toâi laïnh can, to the extent to which they are perfect translations of each other, be said to correspond to the same proposition.
  • 92. 94 3.1.3 Distinction between an utterance and a sentence “An UTTERANCE is the USE by a particular speaker, on a particular occasion, for a particular purpose, of a piece of language, such as a sequence of sentences, or a single phrase, or even a single word.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 15] “A SENTENCE is neither a physical event nor a physical object. It is conceived abstractly, a string of words put together by the grammatical rules of a language. A sentence can be thought of as the IDEAL string of words behind various realizations in utterances and inscriptions.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 16] Jane: ‘Coffee?’ ← Would you like some coffee? Steve: ‘Sure!’ ← I’m sure to love it. Jane: ‘White?’ ← Would you like (black coffee or) white coffee? Steve: ‘Black.’ ← I’d like black coffee, please. (One-word utterances) (Well-formed sentences) “The distinction between sentence and utterance is of fundamental importance to both semantics and pragmatics. Essentially, we want to say that a sentence is an abstract theoretical entity defined within a theory of grammar, while utterance is the issuance of a sentence.” [Levinson, 1983: 18] “Utterances of non-sentences, e.g. short phrases or single words, are used by people in communication all the time. People do not converse wholly in (tokens of) well-formed sentences. But the abstract idea of a sentence is the basis for understanding even those expressions, which are not
  • 93. 95 sentences. In the overwhelming majority of cases, the meaning of non-sentences can be best analysed by considering them to be abbreviations, or incomplete versions, of whole sentences.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 18] “The term ‘utterance’ can be used to refer either to the process (or activity) of uttering or to the product of that process (or activity). Utterances in the first of these two senses are commonly referred to nowadays as speech acts; utterances in the second sense may be referred to — in a specialized sense of the term — as inscriptions36 .” [Lyons, 1995: 235] 3.1.3 Distinction between a proposition, a sentence and an utterance 3.1.3.1 “It is useful to envisage the kind of family tree relationship between the three notions shown in the diagram. For example, a single proposition could be expressed by using several sentences (say The Monday Club deposed Mrs Thatcher, or Mrs Thatcher was deposed by The Monday Club) and each of these sentences could be uttered an indefinite number of times.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 23] PROPOSITION SENTENCE SENTENCE SENTENCE UTTERANCE UTTERANCE UTTERANCE UTTERANCE UTTERANCE UTTERANCE 36 The term ‘inscriptions’ is “not widely used by linguists. It must be interpreted as being more appropriate to the written than it is to the spoken language.” [Lyons, 1995: 235]
  • 94. 96 3.1.3.2 Also, it is interesting to note that the same proposition can be expressed by different sentences and that the same sentence can be realised by different utterances on particular occasions. Exercise 29: Fill in the following chart given by Hurford and Heasley [1984: 23] with ‘+’ or ‘–’ as appropriate. Thus, for example, if it makes sense to think of a proposition being a particular regional accent, put a ‘+’ in the appropriate box; if not put a ‘–.’ Utterances Sentences Propositions Can be loud or quiet Can be grammatical or not Can be true or false In a particular regional accent In a particular language 3.2 Sentence types (classified according to truth value37 ) 37 “You can understand well-formed sentences of your language without knowing their truth value. Knowing the truth conditions is not the same as knowing the actual facts. Rather, the truth conditions, the meaning, permit you to examine the world and learn the actual facts … Knowing a language includes knowing the semantic rules for combining meanings and the conditions under which sentences are true or false.” [Fromkin and Rodman, 1993: 146]
  • 95. 97 3.2.1 “An ANALYTIC sentence is one that is necessarily TRUE, as a result of the senses of the words in it.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 91-92] Ex1. All elephants are animals. The truth of this sentence follows from the senses of elephants and animals. Ex2. Sam’s wife is married. The truth of this sentence follows from the senses of wife and married. 3.2.2 A contradictory sentence, which is also called “A CONTRADICTION38 , is a sentence that is necessarily FALSE, as a result of the senses of the words in it. Thus a contradiction is in a way the opposite of an analytic sentence.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 93] Ex1. This animal is a vegetable is a contradictory sentence; it must be false because of the senses of animal and vegetable. Ex2. Sam is older than himself 39 is a contradictory sentence; it must be false because of the senses of older than and himself. In fact, Sam can be older (or younger) than somebody else, but not than himself. 38 A contradictory sentence is also referred to as a contradiction by Peccei [1999: 9] and Hurford and Heasley [1984: 93]. Goddard [1998: 17] uses the term contradiction to refer to a somewhat different notion: “Contradiction is where a sentence must be false because of the meanings involved.” 39 Notice that Sam looks older than he is proves to be a synthetic sentence.
  • 96. 98 3.2.3 “A SYNTHETIC sentence is one which is NOT analytic, but may be either true or false, depending on the way the world is.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 92] Ex1. John is from Ireland. There is nothing in the senses of John, Ireland or from which makes the sentence necessarily true or false. Ex2. Sam’s wife is German. There is nothing in the senses of Sam’s, wife or German which makes the sentence necessarily true or false. Exercise 30: Circle the following sentences A for analytic, S for synthetic or C for contradiction, as appropriate. 1. John’s nine-year-old brother is a boy. A / S / C 2. John’s brother is nine years old. A / S / C 3. Cats are not vegetables. A / S / C 4. No cats like to bathe. A / S / C 5. Cats never live more than 20 years. A / S / C 6. My watch is slow. A / S / C 7. My watch is a device for telling the time. A / S / C 8. That girl is her own mother’s mother. A / S / C 9. That boy is his own father’s son. A / S / C 10. Alice is Ken’s sister. A / S / C 11. Some typewriters are dusty. A / S / C 12. If it breaks, it breaks. A / S / C 13. John killed Bill, who remained alive for many years after. A / S / C 14. Bachelors cannot form lasting relationships. A / S / C 15. Bachelors are lonely. A / S / C
  • 97. 99 3.3 Paraphrase 3.3.1 Definition 3.3.1.1 PARAPHRASE is “the relationship between a word and a combination of other words with the same meaning. For instance, many people would agree that loud means something like can be heard from far away. Ultimately, the whole project of describing or explaining word-meanings depends on paraphrase because we must use words — or other equivalent symbols — to explain other words.” [Goddard, 1998: 18] 3.3.1.2 “When asked what a sentence means, people usually provide another sentence that has virtually the same meaning, a paraphrase.” [Peccei, 1999: 3] 3.3.1.3 “A sentence which expresses the same proposition as another sentence is a paraphrase of that sentence.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 104] 3.3.1.4 “Sentences are paraphrases if they have the same meaning (except possibly for minor differences in emphases).” [Fromkin and Rodman, 1993: 132] Consider the two following sentences: (1) The girl kissed the boy. (2) The boy was kissed by the girl. Although there may be a difference in the emphasis in these two sentences — in the second the emphasis is on what happened to the boy, whereas in the first the emphasis is on what the girl did — the meaning relations between the verb kiss and the two noun
  • 98. 100 phrases the girl and the boy are the same in both cases, and on this basis the two sentences are paraphrases of each other. 3.3.2 Possible ways to paraphrase a sentence There are a variety of ways that we could paraphrase a sentence: (1) Change individual words: 1(a) using synonyms: Cats DRINK cream. ⇔ Domestic felines CONSUME the liquid fat of milk. 1(b) using relational antonyms (also called converses): I LENT that book to Jim. ⇔ Jim BORROWED that book from me. (2) Change sentence structure: Cats DRINK cream. ⇔ Cream IS DRUNK by cats. (3) Change both individual words and sentence structure: Cats DRINK cream. ⇔ The liquid fat of milk IS DRUNK by domestic felines. To provide a paraphrase we use our knowledge of both the meanings of individual words and of the English grammar. Exercise 31: The following pairs are paraphrases of each other. Identify the way employed to paraphrase them. 1(a) The house was CONCEALED by the tree. 1(b) The house was HIDDEN by the tree.
  • 99. 101 2(a) The needle is too short. 2(b) The needle is not long enough. 3(a) Some countries have no coastline. 3(b) Not all countries have a coastline. 4(a) Watching television is not a waste of time. 4(b) Watching television is a good way to spend one’s time. 5(a) My friend LOATHES string beans. 5(b) My pal HATES pole beans. 6(a) I’ll LOOK FOR that book right now. 6(b) I’ll SEEK FOR that book at once/immediately. 7(a) Steve HUGGED Jane. 7(b) Steve GAVE Jane a hug. 8(a) John is the parent of James. 8(b) James is the child of John. 9(a) My father OWNS this car. 9(b) This car BELONGS TO my father. 10(a) John SOLD the book to David. 10(b) David BOUGHT the book from John. 11(a) Steve HUGGED Jane. 11(b) Jane WAS HUGGED by Steve.
  • 100. 102 12(a) We HAD hardly BEGUN our work when it rained. 12(b) Hardly HAD we BEGUN our work when it rained. 13(a) Sitting in one place for so long is very uncomfortable. 13(b) It is very uncomfortable to sit in one place for so long 14(a) I saw Ted at the party. 14(b) It was Ted that I saw at the party. 15(a) The nearest service station is 50 miles away. 15(b) It is 50 miles to the nearest service station. 16(a) Jenny and Kevin are twins. 16(b) Kevin and Jenny are twins. 17(a) They had a wonderful holiday even though the weather was bad. 17(b) Despite/In spite of the bad weather, they had a wonderful holiday. 17(c) They had a wonderful holiday, despite the bad weather. 17(d) They had a wonderful holiday in spite of the bad weather. 18(a) Bachelors PREFER red-haired girls. 18(b) Girls with red hair ARE PREFERRED by unmarried men. 19(a) Sam SLICED the salami with a knife. 19(b) Sam USED a knife to slice the salami.
  • 101. 103 20(a) Considering your condition, we won’t press charges. 20(b) Under the circumstances, we won’t press charges. 21(a) The laser HAS a wide variety of applications. 21(b) As we have seen, the use of the laser IS numerous. 22(a) In order to make a good impression at a job interview, you should prepare well for the interview. 22(b) As you can see, it is necessary to be well prepared for the job interview. 23(a) Synonyms, words that have the same basic meaning, do not always have the same emotional meaning. 23(b) Many so-called synonyms are not really synonyms at all. 24(a) The composition proficiency requirements as now stated should not apply. 24(b) I would propose that the standard used to judge international student papers be relaxed or done away with. 25(a) Although Grants Pass, Oregon, is a fairly small town, it offers much to amuse summer visitors. 25(b) If you want to give your family a nice, wholesome vacation, try visiting Grants Pass, Oregon.
  • 102. 104 3.4 Entailment 3.4.1 Definition 3.4.1.1 “Entailment is a relationship that applies between two sentences40 , where the truth of one implies the truth of the other because of the meanings of the words involved.” [Goddard, 1998: 17] For example, John was killed entails John died. Obviously, John died could not be true any time before it was true that John was killed. 3.4.1.2 “An entailment is something that logically follows from what is asserted in the utterance.” [Yule, 1996: 25] Shirley: ‘It’s so sad. George regrets getting Mary pregnant.’ Jean: ‘But he didn’t get her pregnant. We know that now.’ In the above conversation, Jean’s utterance of ‘he didn’t get her pregnant’ actually entails ‘George didn’t get Mary pregnant’ as a logical consequence. “The entailment (a necessary consequence of what is said) is simply more powerful than the presupposition (an earlier assumption41 ).” [Yule, 1996: 32] 3.4.1.3 “Entailments are inferences that can be drawn solely from our knowledge about the semantic relationships 40 For brevity here, as elsewhere in the little textbook, we speak of entailment between sentences, rather than, more strictly, between the propositions underlying sentences. 41 Quite contrary to the entailment ‘George didn’t get Mary pregnant’ is the earlier assumption that ‘George got Mary pregnant’.
  • 103. 105 in a language. This knowledge allows us to communicate much more than we actually ‘say’.” [Peccei, 1999: 14] 3.4.2 Characteristics 3.4.2.1 “Entailment applies cumulatively. Thus if X entails Y and Y entails Z, then X entails Z.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 108] Take the following as an example: X, Some boys ran down the street entails Y, Some kids ran down the street. Y, Some kids ran down the street entails Z, Some kids went down the street. Therefore X, Some boys ran down the street entails Z, Some kids went down the street. 3.4.2.2 “Hyponymy involves entailment. To say This is a tulip entails This is a flower, and This is scarlet entails This is red.” [Palmer, 1981: 87] The relation between tulip and flower and between scarlet and red brings out the HIERARCHICAL CLASSIFICATION involved in hyponymy. 3.4.3 Types of entailment There are two types of entailment: (i) One-way entailment: The entailments of this first type come about because of hyponymic relations between words: Ex1. Alfred saw a bear asymmetrically entails Alfred saw an animal.
  • 104. 106 If Alfred saw a bear then he necessarily saw an animal; but if Alfred saw an animal, he could have seen a bear but not necessarily. It could be a big bad wolf, for example. Ex2. Max ate the pizza asymmetrically entails Max did something to the pizza. Since the meaning do something to is found in eat, the sentence Max ate the pizza asymmetrically entails Max did something to the pizza; but if Max did something to the pizza, he could have eaten it but not necessarily. He could have baked or bought it, for example. (ii) Two-way entailment42 : The entailments between a pair of sentences are mutual since the truth of either sentence guarantees the truth of the other. Ex1. Paul borrowed a car from Sue symmetrically entails Sue lent a car to Paul. Ex2. The police chased the burglar symmetrically entails The burglar was chased by the police. It is interesting to notice that hyponymic relations between words result in a great number of one-way entailments; paraphrases are two-way entailments; and relational pairs of antonyms such as sell--buy, lend--borrow, own--belong to, etc. do contribute to two-way entailments. 42 Two-way entailment is also referred as mutual entailment by Peccei [1999: 12].
  • 105. 107 Exercise 32: Use ⇒ to show one-way entailment and ⇔ to show two-way entailment in each of the following pairs of sentences: 1(a) John is a bachelor. 1(b) John is a man. 11(a) Eliza plays the flute. 11(b) Someone/Eliza plays a musical instrument. 2(a) I’m wearing black boots. 2(b)I’m wearing black footwear. 12(a) Alan planted roses. 12(b) Someone/Alan planted flowers. 3(a) Mary owns three houses. 3(b) Mary owns a house. 13(a) All dogs have fleas. 13(b) My dog has fleas./Some dogs have fleas. 4(a) Alvin is Mary’s husband. 4(b) Mary is married. 14(a) My uncle teaches at the community college. 14(b) My uncle is a teacher. 5(a) The wolf killed the bear. 5(b) The bear is dead. 15(a) My pet cobra likes the taste of chocolate. 15(b) My pet cobra finds chocolate tasty. 6(a) My father owns this car. 6(b) This car belongs to my father. 16(a) The Jones sold their house to the Cruses. 16(b) The Cruses bought the house from the Jones. 7(a) I gave Erin the summons. 7(b) I gave the summons to Erin. 17(a) Some countries have no coastline. 17(b) Not all countries have a coastline. 8(a) John is the parent of James. 8(b) James is the child of John. 18(a) I saw Ted at the party. 18(b) It was Ted that I saw at the party. 9(a) Jenny and Kevin are twins. 9(b) Kevin and Jenny are twins. 19(a) It is 50 miles to the nearest service station. 19(b) The nearest service station is 50 miles away. 10(a) The bear killed the wolf. 10(b) The wolf was killed by the bear 20(a) Bachelors prefer red-haired girls. 20(b) Girls with red hair are preferred by unmarried men.
  • 106. 108 Exercise 33: What sense relation holds between the two sentences in each of the following pairs: 1(a) Tom is married to Mary. 1(b) Mary is married to Tom. 6(a) Jim is fatter than Ed and Ed is fatter than Bob. 6(b) Jim is fatter than Bob. 2(a) John is the father of Neil. 2(b) Neil is the father of John. 7(a) Some of the students came to my party. 7(b) Not all of the students came to my party. 3(a) Dick is a bachelor. 3(b) Dick is a man. 8(a) The fly was over the wall. 8(b) The wall was under the fly. 4(a) Gina plays tennis. 4(b) Someone/Gina plays sports. 9(a) Jane is a spinster. 9(b) Jane is married. 5(a) Kevin boiled an egg. 5(b) Kevin cooked an egg. 10(a) The beetle is alive. 10(b) The beetle is dead.
  • 107. 109 Section 4 4 4 4 UTTERANCE MEANING “UTTERANCE MEANING is what a speaker means when he makes an utterance in a particular situation.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 269] 4.1 Presupposition43 4.1.1 Definition and characteristics 4.1.1.1 Presupposition is “what a speaker or writer assumes that the receiver of the message already knows.” [Richards et al, 1987: 228] Thus, ‘John doesn’t write poems anymore’ presupposes that John once wrote poetry. And ‘Would you like another beer?’ presupposes that the person called you here has already had at least one beer. 4.1.1.2 “Presuppositions are inferences about what is assumed to be true in the utterance rather than directly asserted to be true: ‘Faye has looked for the keys’ directly asserts Faye has looked for the keys 43 “It is proved very difficult for authors in the area to agree on a definition for it. This definition problem is partly a reflection of the fuzzy boundary between pragmatics and semantics.” [Peccei, 1999: 19]
  • 108. 110 ‘Where has Faye looked for the keys? ’ presupposes Faye has looked for the keys ‘Annie has a sofa’ directly asserts Annie has a sofa ‘Don’t sit on Annie’s sofa’ presupposes Annie has a sofa.” [Peccei, 1999: 19] 4.1.1.3 “Speakers often make implicit assumptions about the real world, and the sense of an utterance may depend on those assumptions, which some linguists term presuppositions.44 ” [Fromkin and Rodman, 1993: 161] In the following dialogue, for example, both A and B know (1) who Simon and Monica are; that (2) Simon has a vehicle, most probably a car; and that (3) Monica has no vehicle at the moment. A: ‘What about inviting Simon tonight?’ B: ‘What a good idea; then he can give Monica a lift.’ 4.1.1.4 Presuppositions can be used to communicate information indirectly. If someone says My brother is rich, we assume that the person has a brother, even though that fact is not explicitly stated. Much of the information that is exchanged in a conversation or discourse is of this kind. Often, after a conversation has ended, we will realize that some fact imparted to us was not specifically mentioned. That fact is often a presupposition. 44 “Other linguists describe the same phenomenon as implication. Presupposition is used here because it seems to be more widely accepted usage.” [Fromkin et al, 1990: 193]
  • 109. 111 4.1.2 Characteristics 4.1.2.1 The presupposition of an utterance remains the same under its NEGATION: (1)a. ‘John stopped smoking. (1)b. ‘John didn’t stop smoking.’ (1)a-b both presuppose that John once smoked cigarettes. (2)a. ‘The dog’s tail was cut.’ (2)b. ‘The dog’s tail wasn’t cut.’ (2)a-b both presuppose that the dog had a tail. (3)a. ‘I like his car.’ (3)b. ‘I don’t like his car.’ (3)a-b both presuppose that he owns a car. 4.1.2.2 The presupposition of an utterance remains the same under its INTERROGATION: (4)a. ‘John stopped smoking.’ (4)b. ‘Did John stop smoking?’ (4)c. ‘Why did John stop smoking?’ (4)a-c all presuppose that John once smoked cigarettes. 4.1.2.3 The presupposition of an utterance may be cancelled under its EXTENSION: (5)a. ‘She didn’t feel regret at the over-cooked meat.’ (5)b. ‘She didn’t feel regret at the over-cooked meat because it was in fact well-done.’
  • 110. 112 (5)a presupposes that the meat was overcooked while (5)b presupposes that the meat was well-done. 4.1.3 Classification There exist a number of different types of presupposition. 4.1.3.1 The existential presupposition A possessive45 noun phrase (abbreviated to NP) ⇒ a complete statement: X had / has / will have + an indefinite46 NP 1. ‘They haven’t spoken to each other since their last week’s quarrel.’ (countable noun: singular) their last week’s quarrel The utterance presupposes that they had a quarrel last week. 2. ‘I lost my watch yesterday at Beán Thaønh market.’ (countable noun: singular) my watch The utterance presupposes that I had a watch. 3. ‘That her turtle ran away made Emily very sad.’ (countable noun: singular) her turtle The utterance presupposes that Emily had a (pet) turtle. 4. ‘John’s sister has been in hospital for a week.’ (countable noun: singular) John’s sister The utterance presupposes that John has a sister. 45 My, your, their, John’s, the book’s, etc. make a noun phrase possessive. 46 The indefinite article a/an makes a singular noun phrase indefinite. Respectively, to signal that a noun phrase whose head noun is either uncountable or plural is indefinite, one may use some or a number of instead of a/an.
  • 111. 113 5. ‘Could you come to our party this weekend?’ our party (countable noun: singular) The utterance presupposes that we are going to47 have a party this weekend. 6. ‘This is my youngest sister.’ my youngest sister The utterance presupposes that I have a number of younger sisters. 7.‘Itrytohand in this assignment ontime.’ (countable noun: singular) an assignment of mine = my assignment = this assignment The utterance presupposes that I have an assignment. 8. ‘Her mother’s death was a great blow to Mary.’ ‘Mary can’t get over her mother’s death.’ The utterance presupposes that Mary’s mother died. (intransitive verb) Mary’s mother is dead. (be + adjective) A definite48 NP ⇒ a complete statement There is/was/are/were (not)+ an indefinite NP (+adjunct of place) There exist/exists/existed + an indefinite NP (+adjunct of place) 47 Are going to is [+future], [+near], and [+arrangement]. 48 The definite article the as well as the demonstrative adjectives this, that, these, and those make a noun phrase definite.
  • 112. 114 9. ‘The American girl next door is having a party.’ the American girl next door (countable noun: singular) The utterance presupposes that there is an American girl next door. there is a girl from the USA living next door. 10. ‘Children like all the pictures in this book very much.’ all the pictures in this book (countable noun: plural) The utterance presupposes that there are/exist a number of pictures in this book. a number of pictures can be found in this book. 11. ‘The king of Sweden has just left for France.’ (countable noun: plural) the king of Sweden The utterance presupposes that there is/exists a king in Sweden. The utterance presupposes that the king of Sweden exists. 12. ‘They searched everywhere for the missing child.’ (countable noun: singular) the missing child The utterancepresupposesthatthere wasa child who wasmissing. The utterance presupposes that a child was missing. A definite NP ⇒ an indefinite NP 13. ‘The book you gave me is worth reading. the book (= which/that) you gave me The utterance presupposes that you gave me a book.
  • 113. 115 4.1.3.2 The factive presupposition 14. ‘Nobody realized that Kelly was ill.’ The utterance presupposes that Kelly was ill. 15. ‘Ed realized/didn’t realize that he was in debt.’ The utterance presupposes that Ed was in debt. 16. ‘I was aware/wasn’t aware that she was married.’ The utterance presupposes that she was married. 17. ‘It is odd/isn’t odd that he left early.’ The utterance presupposes that he left early. 18. ‘I am glad that it’s over.’ The utterance presupposes that it’s over. 19. ‘We regret(ted) telling him the truth.’ The utterance presupposes that we told him the truth. 20. ‘He regretted/didn’t regret not booking the ticket in advance.’ Theutterancepresupposesthathedid not book theticketinadvance. (The speaker assumes that the hearer already knows what the ticket is.) 4.1.3.3 The non-factive presupposition 21. ‘I imagined that Kelly was ill.’ The utterance presupposes that Kelly was not ill. 22. ‘I dreamed that I was rich.’ The utterance presupposes that I was not rich.
  • 114. 116 23. ‘We imagined that we were in Hawaii.’ The utterance presupposes that we were not in Hawaii. 24. ‘He pretends to be ill.’ The utterance presupposes that he is not ill. 25. ‘She pretended that he had understood what she meant.’ The utterance presupposes that he did not understand what she meant. 4.1.3.4 The lexical presupposition 26. ‘You’re late again.’ The utterance presupposes that you were late before. 27. ‘The Brazilian team beat the French team again.’ The utterance presupposes that the Brazilian team beat/had beaten the French team before. 28. ‘I’m not going to let him come under my roof anymore.’ The utterance presupposes that he often comes under my roof/to my house.’ 29. ‘I ’m going to change job.’ The utterance presupposes that I have a job already. 30. ‘My sister’s going to change job. ’ The utterance presupposes that my sister has a job already. The utterance presupposes that I have a sister and she has a job already. 31. ‘I’ve just got a driving license.’
  • 115. 117 The utterance presupposes that I had no driving license before. The utterance presupposes that I did not have a driving license before. 32. ‘Jim wants more popcorn.’ The utterance presupposes that Jim has had/has eaten some popcorn. 33. ‘She managed/didn’t manage to pay her debt.’ The utterance presupposes that she tried to pay her debt. The utterance presupposes that she owed a debt and she tried to pay it. 34. ‘Can you stop making that noise?’ The utterance presupposes that you are making that noise. The utterance presupposes that there is some noise and you are making it. 35. ‘He stopped smoking.’ The utterance presupposes that he used to smoke/he once smoked. 36. ‘After a while they stopped arguing.’ The utterance presupposes that they had been arguing. 37. ‘The police ordered the teenagers to stop drinking.’ The utterance presupposes that the teenagers had been drinking. (The speaker assumes that the hearer already knows who the teenagers are.)
  • 116. 118 38. ‘They started complaining.’ The utterance presupposes that they had never complained before. 4.1.3.5 The structural presupposition A Wh-question ⇒ a complete statement 39. ‘Where did you buy the bike?’ The utterance presupposes that you bought a bike. (The speaker assumes that the hearer already knows what the bike is.) 40. ‘How long has your grandfather been in hospital?’ The utterance presupposes that your grandfather has been in hospital. 41. ‘When did he leave?’ The utterance presupposes that he left. 42. ‘What do you usually do in your free time?’ The utterance presupposes that you have some free time and that you do something at leisure. 43. ‘When did you get your bachelor degree?’ The utterance presupposes that you got a bachelor degree. 44. ‘How long have you been selling cocaine?’ The utterance presupposes that you have been selling cocaine.
  • 117. 119 45. ‘Why don’t pigs have wings?’ The utterance presupposes that pigs don’t have wings. 46. ‘How did you know the defendant had bought a knife?’ The utterance presupposes that you knew the defendant had bought a knife. (The speaker assumes that the hearer already knows who the defendant is.) 47. ‘Who is going to give me a lift to the airport?’ The utterance presupposes (1) that the speaker needs to go to the airport, (2) that the hearers already know what the airport is and where it is located, and (3) that the hearers own a vehicle, most probably a car, and are able to drive.’ A Wh-embedded clause ⇒ a complete statement 48. ‘I was eating popcorn when Mike smashed the television set.’ The utterance presupposes that Mike smashed the television set. (The speaker assumes that the hearer already knows what the television set is.) 49. ‘I don’t know why I’ve got an average mark.’ The utterance presupposes that I’ve got an average mark. 50. ‘How fast was the car going when it ran the red light?’ The utterance presupposes that the car ran the red light. (The speaker assumes that the hearer already knows what the car is.)
  • 118. 120 51. ‘It is odd how proud he was.’ The utterance presupposes that he was proud. 52. ‘I wonder how he managed49 to get the job.’ The utterance presupposes that he managed to get a job. (The speaker assumes that the hearer already knows what the job is.) 4.1.3.6 The counter-factual presupposition An if clause ⇒ a complete statement 53. ‘If I had enough money, I would buy that house.’ if I had enough money The utterance presupposes that I do not have enough money. 54. ‘If I had had enough money, I would have bought that house.’ if I had had enough money The utterance presupposes that I did not have enough money. 55. ‘If you were my friend, you’d have helped me.’ if you were my friend The utterance presupposes that you are not my friend. 56. ‘If he hadn’t made such a terrible mistake, we would be very happy now.’ if he hadn’t made such a terrible mistake 49 The utterance ‘He managed to get the job’ presupposes that he tried to get the job.
  • 119. 121 The utterance presupposes that he did make/made a terrible mistake. An embedded clause after ‘wish’ ⇒ a complete statement 57. ‘They wish they could go on vacation now.’ they could go on vacation now The utterance presupposes that they cannot go on vacation now. 58. ‘I wish I had studied medicine.’ I had studied medicine The utterance presupposes that I did not study medicine. A clause with a modal perfect verb form ⇒ a complete statement 59. ‘You shouldn’t have seen such a horror film.’ The utterance presupposes that you did see/saw a horror film. 60. ‘You could have talked to the dean.’ The utterance presupposes that you did not talk to the dean. In brief, it is believed that “presuppositions are closely linked to the words and grammatical structures that are actually used in the utterance and our knowledge about the way language users conventionally interpret them” and that “presuppositions can be drawn when there is little or no surrounding context.” [Peccei, 1999: 22]
  • 120. 122 Exercise 34: Identify the presupposition(s) in each of the following sentences. 1. ‘I am sorry I cannot find your book right now.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 2. ‘On the occasion of my friend's birthday, I intend to buy her a new vase.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 3. ‘The exam is not so difficult.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 4. ‘She is not happy about the chemistry course she's taking.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 5. ‘We haven't heard anything from Barbara.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 6. ‘They were rich.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 7. ‘Can you stop playing with your cat?’
  • 121. 123 The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 8. ‘She was not aware that her son had an accident.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 9. ‘The explosion was so loud that it could be heard from miles away.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 10. ‘I wish I had not booked the tickets.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 11. ‘Tom might find the chocolate cake in the kitchen.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 12. ‘You will be amazed when you see the view.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 13. ‘I am so sorry, I am in a hurry and I can't answer your question right now.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________
  • 122. 124 14. ‘She was not aware that it would hurt her so much.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 16. ‘Could you drive me to the airport?’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 17. ‘It took us two days to come back from Hanoi by train.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 18. ‘It is going to rain for a long time.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 19. ‘I am going to have a final examination in Semantics.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 20. ‘We are going to be teachers of English.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 21. ‘I think I will pass the exam.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________
  • 123. 125 22. ‘I hope to have a good result for this exam.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 23. ‘But before your encouragement, we would have given up.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 24. ‘I got an excellent mark for my essay last time.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 25. ‘I missed my class on Monday because I overslept.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 26. ‘My sister is going to graduate from university.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 27. ‘I've got a good mark for the exam in American Literature.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 28. ‘I am going to have a new grammar book.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________
  • 124. 126 29. ‘When did you give up teaching?’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 30. ‘When did you stop beating your wife?’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 31. ‘Fred continued/didn't continue speaking.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 32. ‘I cleaned/didn't clean the room.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 33. ‘He killed/didn't kill the bird.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 34. ‘What was John worried about?’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 35. ‘Bill drank another glass of beer?’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________
  • 125. 127 36. ‘Could you lend me the novel when you finish it?’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 37. ‘I can't guess when the rain stops?’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 38. ‘Please take me to the circus again.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 39. ‘He pretended to be pleased with the gift.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ 40. ‘If only you had taken his offer.’ The utterance presupposes that _________________________ ________________________________________________ Exercise 35: Which of the following utterances share the same presupposition? (1) ‘Did Mike smash the television set?’ (2) ‘When did Mike smash the television set?’ (3) ‘I was eating popcorn when Mike smashed the television set.’ (4) ‘Why did Mike smash the television set?’
  • 126. 128 (5) ‘I don’t understand why Mike smashed the television set.’ (6) ‘I wonder if Mike smashed the television set.’ (7) ‘I wonder how Mike smashed the television set.’ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ 4.2 Conversational implicature 4.2.1 Introduction In the middle of their lunch hour, one woman asks another how she likes the hamburger she is eating, and receives the answer in (1): (1) ‘A hamburger is a hamburger.’ When the listener hears the utterance marked (1), she first has to assume that the speaker is being co-operative and intends to communicate something. “That something must be more than just what the words mean. It is an additional conveyed meaning, called an implicature.” [Yule, 1996: 35] The notion implicature, which is the shortened form of the notion conversational implicature (although distinctions between this and another kind of implicature namely conventional implicature should be introduced later, in Section 4.3), provides some explicit account of how it is possible to mean more than what is really ‘said’:
  • 127. 129 (2) A: ‘I hope you brought the bread and the cheese.’ B: ‘Ah, I brought the bread.’ B’s utterance may implicate that B did not bring the cheese, since what is not mentioned was not brought. 4.2.2 Definition Conversational implicature promises to bridge “the gap between what is literally said and what is conveyed.” [Levinson, 1983: 98] (3)a A: ‘Coffee?’ B: ‘It would keep me awake all night.’ B’s utterance may implicate that B would rather not drink coffee. (4)a A: ‘Have you finished the student’s evaluation form and reading list?’ B: ‘I’ve done the reading list.’ B’s utterance may implicate that B has not done the evaluation form, since what is not mentioned has not been done yet. (5)a Phil: ‘Are you going to Mark’s barbecue?’ Jean: ‘Well, Mark’s got those dogs now.’ Jean’s utterance may implicate that she is not going to Mark’s barbecue. 4.2.3 Characteristics
  • 128. 130 4.2.3.1 People may draw somewhat different conversational implicature from a certain utterance. For example, not everyone infers from (6)a that Mike was not very keen on the dessert and from (7)a that Mary does not like the hat: (6)a Annie: ‘Was the dessert any good?’ Mike: ‘Annie, cherry pie is cherry pie.’ Mike’s utterance may implicate that he was not very keen on the dessert. (7)a Virginia: ‘Do you like my new hat?’ Mary: ‘It’s pink.’ Mary’s utterance may implicate that she does not like the hat. Respectively compare (3-7)a with (3-7)b to see that a different conversation implicature may be drawn despite the fact that the content of the second speaker’s utterance remains the same. (3)b A: ‘We went to see The Omen last night but it wasn’t very scary.’ B: ‘It would keep me awake all night.’ B’s utterance may implicate that B thinks The Omen is scary.’ (4)b A: ‘You look very pleased with yourself.’ B: ‘I’ve done the reading lists.’ B’s utterance may implicate that B’s pleased with himself because he’s done the reading lists.
  • 129. 131 (5)b Phil: ‘His garden looks awful.’ Jean: ‘Well, Mark’s got those dogs now.’ Jean’s utterance may implicate that Mark’s dogs have wrecked the garden. (6)b Annie: ‘I thought the pie would cheer you up.’ Mike: ‘Annie, cherry pie is cherry pie.’ Mike’s utterance may implicate that it takes more than cherry pie to cheer him up. (7)b Virginia: ‘Try the roast pork.’ Mary: ‘It’s pink.’ Mary’s utterance may implicate that she is not having the roast pork. In brief, “unlike presuppositions and entailments, implicatures50 are inferences51 that cannot be made in isolated utterances. They are dependent on the context of the utterance and shared knowledge between the speaker and the hearer.” [Peccei, 1999: 30] 4.2.3.2 Conversational implicature can be suspended or denied. Since conversational implicature is part of what is 50 This is true only for conversational implicatures, not for conventional implicatures. 51 “An INFERENCE is any conclusion that one reasonably entitled to draw from a sentence or utterance. All entailments are inferences, but not all inferences are entailments. Implicature … is another kind of inference, distinct from entailment.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 279-280]
  • 130. 132 communicated and not said, the speaker can explicitly suspend or deny that he/she intended to communicate such meaning in different ways. The speaker can suspend the implicature that the hearer only won five dollars by using the expression at least, as in (8)b; the speaker can deny the implicature by either adding further information, often following the expression in fact, as in (8)c or reinforcing the implicature with additional information, as in (8)d: (8)a. ‘You have won five dollars.’ b. ‘You have at least won five dollars.’ c. ‘You have won five dollars, in fact, you’ve won ten!’ d. ‘You have won five dollars, that’s four more than one.’ 4.2.3.3 Conversational implicatures are “conclusions drawn from utterances on particular occasions and not from isolated sentences … In this respect the problem of implicature resembles the problem of how a hearer arrives at the indirect illocutions of utterances.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 280] 4.2.4 Grice’ theory of conversational implicature Grice [1975, 1978]52 has proposed a way of analysing conversational implicature based on the co-operative principle and its four basic maxims of Quality, Quantity, Relevance, and Manner. 52 The key ideas concerning conversational implicature “were proposed by Grice in the William James lectures delivered at Harvard in 1967 and still only partially published.” [Levinson, 1983: 100]
  • 131. 133 The co-operative principle, which can be stated simply as “be as helpful to your hearer as you can” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 281] and which “controls the way in which a conversation may proceed” [Palmer, 1981: 173], and its maxims, which are “guidelines for the efficient and effective use of language in conversation” [Levinson, 1983: 101], are expressed as follows: “The co-operative principle make your contribution such as is required, at the stage at which it occurs, by the accepted purpose or direction of the talk exchange in which you are engaged The maxim of Quality try to make your contribution one that is true, specifically: (i) do not say what you believe to be false (ii) do not say that for which you lack adequate evidence The maxim of Quantity (i) make your contribution as informative as required for current purposes of the exchange (ii) do not make your contribution more informative than is required The maxim of Relevance make your contribution relevant The maxim of Manner be perspicuous53 , and specifically: (i) avoid obscurity54 (ii) avoid ambiguity (iii) be brief (iv) be orderly 53 Be perspicuous means ‘express yourself clearly’. 54 Obscurity means ‘state of being unclear’.
  • 132. 134 In short, these maxims specify what participants have to do in order to converse in a maximally efficient, rational, co-operative way: they should speak sincerely, relevantly and clearly, while providing sufficient information.” [Levinson, 1983: 101-102] In fact, these conversational maxims are not always observed. One way, Grice believes, in which conversational implicatures may be derived is where the speaker observes the maxims in a fairly direct way: he may amplify what he says by some straightforward inferences: (9) A (to a passer-by): ‘I am out of petrol.’ B: ‘Oh; there is a garage just around the corner.’ B’s utterance may implicate that the garage is probably open and A may obtain petrol there. Another way in which implicatures may be derived is where the speaker deliberately and ostentatiously breaches or (as Grice put it) flouts the maxims: (10) A: ‘Let’s get the kids something.’ B: ‘Okay, but I veto I-C-E C-R-E-A-M-S.’ B’s utterance may implicate that it is not allowed to mention ice-cream directly in front of the kids. In this example, “B ostentatiously infringes the maxim of Manner (be perspicuous) by spelling out the word ice-creams, and thereby conveys to A that B would rather not have ice-creams mentioned directly in the presence of the children, in case they are thereby prompted to demand some.” [Levinson, 1983: 104-105] 4.2.5 Classification
  • 133. 135 The two following types of conversational implicature are both of great interest. 4.2.5.1 Those that derive from the observation of conversational maxims: Maxim of Quantity: Make your contribution as informative as required and do not make your contribution more informative than is required. (11) Mother: ‘Have you finished your homework and put your books away?’ Son: ‘I have finished my homework.’ B’s utterance may implicate that B has not put his books away or the books have not been put away yet. Maxim of Relevance: Make your contribution relevant. (12) A: ‘Can you tell me the time?’ B: ‘Well, the milkman has come.’ B’s utterance may implicate that B does not know the exact time of the present moment, but B can provide some information from which A may be able to deduce the approximate time, namely the milkman has come. 4.2.5.2 Those that derive from the violation of conversational maxims: Maxim of Quality: Make your contribution one that is true. (13) A: ‘John has two PhDs.’ B: ‘John has two PhDs but I don’t believe he has.’ B’s utterance may implicate that A should be suspicious of the true value of John’s two PhDs.
  • 134. 136 Here B’s contribution, taken literally, is pragmatically anomalous because, by violating the maxim of Quality, “it contradicts the standard Quality implicature55 that one believes what one asserts.” [Palmer, 1981: 105] At some deeper (non-superficial) level, however, B’s contribution should not in fact be anomalous for “implicatures (as we shall see) are deniable.” [Levinson, 1983: 105] (14) A: ‘Does your farm contain 400 acres56 ?’ B: ‘I don’t know that it does, and I want to know if it does.’ B’s utterance may implicate that B does not think that his/her farm contains 400 acres. B’s contribution violates the maxim of Quality by pointing out that since A does not ask sincerely and hence does not lack and require the requested information, B does not need to try to make his/her response one that is true, i.e. B is also free to say what he/she believes to be false. Maxim of Relevance: Make your contribution relevant. (15) A: ‘Where’s Bill?’ B: ‘There’s a yellow VW outside Sue’s house.’ B’s utterance may implicate that if Bill has a yellow VW, he is now in Sue’s house. B’s contribution, taken literally, fails to answer A’s question, and thus seems to violate at least the maxims of Quantity and Relevance. Despite this apparent failure of co-operation, there could be possible connection between the location of Bill and that 55 Levinson [1983: 104] calls the inferences that arise from observing the four basic maxims of conversation ‘standard implicatures’. 56 An acre is a measure of land which equals 4,050 square meters or 4,840 square yards.
  • 135. 137 of a yellow VW. Thus, at some deeper (non-superficial) level, B’s contribution is in fact co-operative since it implicates that Bill is probably in Sue’s house. Exercise 36: Write down one implicature that can be drawn from the second speaker’s response in each of the following conversations: (1) Mary: ‘Did you manage to fix that leak?’ Jim: ‘I tried to.’ Jim’s utterance may implicate that ______________________ ________________________________________________________ (2) Steve: ‘What happened to your flowers?’ Jane: ‘A dog got into the garden.’ Jane’s utterance may implicate that ______________________ ________________________________________________________ (3) Laura: ‘Who used all the printer paper?’ Dick: ‘I used some of it.’ Dick’s utterance may implicate that _____________________ ________________________________________________________ (4) Gina: ‘I hear you’re always late with the rent.’ Robin: ‘Well, sometimes I am.’ Robin’s utterance may implicate that ____________________ ________________________________________________________ (5) Jenny: ‘Mike and Annie should be here by now. Was their plane late?’ Alfred: ‘Possibly.’
  • 136. 138 Alfred’s utterance may implicate that ____________________ ________________________________________________________ (6) Gwen: ‘This cheese looks funny. The label said not to store the cheese in the freezer.’ Alvin: ‘Yeah, I did see the label.’ Alvin’s utterance may implicate that _____________________ ________________________________________________________ (7) Mat: ‘What’s with your mother?’ Bob: ‘Let’s go to the garden.’ Bob’s utterance may implicate that ______________________ ________________________________________________________ (8) Carmen: ‘Did you buy the car?’ Maria: ‘It cost twice as much as I thought it would.’ Patricia’s utterance may implicate that ___________________ ________________________________________________________ (9) Robert: ‘Where’s the salad dressing?’ Gabriela: ‘We’ve run out of olive oil.’ Gabriela’s utterance may implicate that __________________ ________________________________________________________ (10) Maggie: ‘The bathroom’s flooded!’ Jim: ‘Someone must have left the tap on.’ Jim’s utterance may implicate that ______________________ ________________________________________________________ (11)Austin: ‘Want some fudge brownies?’ Jenny: ‘There must be 20,000 calories there.’
  • 137. 139 Jenny’s utterance may implicate that _____________________ ________________________________________________________ (12)Alice: ‘Have you seen my sweater?’ Max: ‘There’s a sweater on the sofa.’ Max’s utterance may implicate that ______________________ ________________________________________________________ (13)Phil’s mother: ‘How did you do on these exams?’ Phil: ‘I failed physics.’ Phil’s utterance may implicate that ______________________ ________________________________________________________ (14) Paul: ‘I didn’t take it.’ Virginia: ‘Why do you always lie?’ Virginia’s utterance may implicate that ___________________ ________________________________________________________ (15)Tom: ‘It works now.’ Janet: ‘When did Eric fix it?’ Janet’s utterance may implicate that _____________________ ________________________________________________________ (16)Liza: ‘I hear you’ve invited Mat and Chris.’ Ed: ‘I didn’t invite Mat.’ Ed’s utterance may implicate that _______________________ ________________________________________________________ (17) A: ‘What are the Nelsons like?’ B: ‘They were rich.’
  • 138. 140 B’s utterance may implicate that ________________________ ________________________________________________________ (18) A: ‘What is this examination in Semantics like?’ B: ‘It is so easy this time.’ B’s utterance may implicate that ________________________ ________________________________________________________ (19)A: ‘Did you get the milk and the eggs?’ B: ‘I got the milk.’ B’s utterance may implicate that ________________________ ________________________________________________________ (20)A: ‘Did Carmen like the party?’ B: ‘She left after an hour.’ B’s utterance may implicate that ________________________ ________________________________________________________ Exercise 37: In each case below decide which maxim has not been observed and what conversational implicature might be drawn. Background information is given in square brackets. (1)A: ‘I really like that dinner.’ B: ‘I’m a vegetarian.’ ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ (2) A: ‘Would you like a cocktail? It’s my own invention.’ B: ‘Well, mmm uh it’s not that we don’t drink.’
  • 139. 141 ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ (3) A: ‘How are you?’ B: ‘I’m dead.’ ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ (4) A: ‘We’re going to the movies.’ B: ‘I’ve got an exam tomorrow.’ ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ (5) A: ‘Are you going to Steve’s barbecue?’ B: ‘A barbecue is an outdoor party.’ ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ (6) Teacher [towards the end of a lecture]: ‘What time is it?’ Student: ‘It is 10: 44 and 35.6 seconds.’ ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ (7) Policeman [at the front door]: ‘Is your father or your mother at home?’ Small boy [who knows that his father is at home]: ‘Either my mother’s gone out shopping or she hasn’t.’
  • 140. 142 ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ (8) Mother: ‘Now tell me the truth. Who put the ferret in the bathtub?’ Son [who knows who did it]: ‘Someone put it there.’ ________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________ 4.2.6 Distinction between presupposition and conversational implicature 4.2.6.1 A presupposition is “anything the speaker assumes to be true before making the utterance” [Peccei, 1999: 19] while a conversational implicature is an inference or an additional unstated meaning drawn from any conversation. (1) A: ‘What happened to my calculator?’ B: ‘Someone used it this morning.’ A’s utterance presupposes that A has a calculator and that the calculator worked well before. B’s utterance may implicate that it is not B who broke the calculator. (2) A: ‘Will your brother go to the conference this afternoon?’ B: ‘He’s gone to Hanoi.’ A’s utterance presupposes that B has a brother and that there will be a conference this afternoon.
  • 141. 143 B’s utterance may implicate that B’s brother will not go to the conference. 4.2.6.2 Compare their few main properties to distinguish presupposition from conversational implicature: PRESUPPOSITION CONVERSATIONAL IMPLICATURE Presupposition is more straightforward and more objective. It is easily drawn before making an utterance. Conversational implicature is less straightforward and more subjective/personal. It is derived from observing or violating one or more maxims and drawn after a conversation is over. Ex: ‘Is the Pope Catholic?’ The utterance presupposes that the Pope does exist in the world. Ex: A: ‘Do you like apples?’ B: ‘Is the Pope Catholic?’ B’s utterance may implicate that he/she does like apples. Exercise 38: In each of the following decide whether each of the inferences in brackets is a presupposition (P) or an implicature (I) derived from the underlined utterance. (1) A: ‘My girlfriend lives in New York.’ B: ‘My girlfriend lives in Boston.’ (I have a girlfriend.) (2) A: ‘What?’ B: ‘Why are you laughing at me?’ (You are laughing at me.) (3) A: ‘Why is she eating those?’ B: ‘Her father didn’t give her any supper.’ (She didn’t have any supper.)
  • 142. 144 (4) A: ‘Is John engaged?’ B: ‘He’s bought a ring.’ (John is engaged.) (5) A: ‘You look pleased.’ B: ‘I managed to pass the exam.’ (I tried to pass the exam.) (6) A: ‘Did you finish that report?’ B: ‘I started it.’ (I didn’t finish it.) (7) Paul: ‘I didn’t take it.’ Virginia: ‘Why do you always lie?’ (You always lie.) Exercise 39: In each of the following decide whether each of the inferences in brackets is a presupposition (P) or an implicature (I). (1) A: ‘What’s with Jean?’ B: ‘She discovered that her central heating is broken.’ (Her central heating is broken.) (2) A: ‘How do you like your bath?’ B: ‘Warm.’ (I don’t like it hot.) (3) A: ‘What do you think of this necklace and bracelet?’ B: ‘The bracelet is beautiful.’ (The necklace is not beautiful.) (4) A: ‘Has the kitchen been painted?’ B: ‘Tom’s away.’ (No.) (5) A: ‘How come Mary’s all dressed up? B: ‘We’re going to the D-E-N-T-I-S-T.’ (Mary hates the dentist.)
  • 143. 145 (6) A: ‘It works now.’ B: ‘When did Eric fix it?’ (Eric fixed it.) 4.3 Conventional implicature Unlike conversational implicatures, conventional implicatures “don’t have to occur in conversation, and they don’t depend on special contexts for their interpretation. Not unlike lexical presuppositions, conventional implicatures are associated with specific words and result in additional conveyed meanings when those words are used.” [Yule, 1996: 45] Among these words are and, but, even, and yet. (1) ‘Linda suggested black, but I chose white.’ The utterance may implicate that the speaker does something in contrast to what has been suggested. (2) ‘Even John came to the party.’ The utterance may implicate that contrary to the speaker’s expectation, John came. (3) ‘Jenny isn’t here yet.’ The utterance may implicate that the speaker expects that Jenny should be there by then. (4) ‘She put on her clothes and left the house.’ The utterance may implicate that there are two action occurring in sequence, i.e. one after another.
  • 144. 146 4.4 Speech acts “An important part of the meaning of utterances is what speakers DO by uttering them.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 334] 4.4.1 Definition “A speech act is an UTTERANCE as a functional unit in communication.” [Richards et al, 1985: 265] “Quite contrary to the popular belief that actions and words are entirely distinct, many actions can actually be performed with words.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 235] 4.4.2 Characteristics A speech act has two kinds of meaning: (a) locutionary meaning (also known as propositional meaning), which is its basic literal meaning conveyed by its particular words and structure(s); (b) illocutionary meaning (also known as illocutionary force), which is the effect the utterance might have on the hearer. [Richards et al, 1985: 265] Consider the two following sample dialogues: (1) Sam: ‘I am thirsty.’ (= ‘Give me something to drink, please.’) Annie: ‘I’ll bring you a glass of water.’ The locutionary meaning of ‘I am thirsty’ is I am suffering from my thirst. The illocutionary meaning of ‘I am thirsty’ is Sam indirectly requests Annie to give him something to drink.
  • 145. 147 (2) Jane: ‘Can you shut the window?’ (= ‘Shut the window, please.’) Jane’s husband: ‘Certainly.’ The locutionary meaning of ‘Can you shut the window?’ is I wonder whether you are able to shut the window. The illocutionary meaning of ‘Can you shut the window?’ is Jane indirectly requests her husband to shut the window. 4.4.3 Classification There are five main types of speech acts, according to Searl [1981]: 4.4.3.1 The representative describes a state of affairs in the world: asserting, stating, claiming, affirming, making hypotheses, describing, predicting, reporting, etc. The representative can generally be characterized as being true or false. (3) Tom: ‘Where are you from?’ David: ‘I’m from Canada.’57 ‘I’m from Canada’ is a representative: David directly gives a piece of information concerning where he was born and grew up. 57 Describing a state of affairs requested by its preceding question, a response is usually classified as a representative.
  • 146. 148 (4) Teacher: ‘There are only two seasons in the south: the dry season and the rainy season.’58 Student 1: ‘Then, each season is exactly six months long?’ Student 2: ‘Is there any transitional period between them?’ ‘There are only two seasons in the south: the dry season and the rainy season’ is a representative: the teacher directly informs his/her students of what the weather is like in the south. 4.4.3.2 The commissive commits the speaker to a course of action: promising, vowing, threatening, offering, etc. (5) Jenny: ‘If you don’t stop fighting, I’ll call the police.’ Bill: ‘Call them at once to turn your brother in.’ ‘I’ll call the police’ is a commissive: Jenny directly threatens to call the police if Bill and her brother don’t stop fighting. (6) Alice: ‘When will I receive my reimbursement?’ Victor: ‘Authors always pay their debts.’ (= ‘I’ll pay you back later.’) ‘Authors always pay their debts’ is a commissive: Victor indirectly promises to pay Alice back later. 4.4.3.3 The declarative changes the world by bringing about or altering the state of affairs it names: dismissing, sentencing, naming, announcing marriage, etc. 58 The teacher’s statement is true when it is used to describe the weather in the south of Vietnam, for example. This statement may be false when it refers to the weather in the south of China.
  • 147. 149 (7) Vicar: ‘I now pronounce you man and wife.’ [at the wedding ceremony held in a church] ‘I now pronounce you man and wife’ is a declarative: the vicar is directly announcing the legal and permanent union between a man and a woman as husband and wife, simultaneously changing their marital status. (8) Minister of Education: ‘I resign.’ Prime Minister: ‘You’ll be free from tomorrow.’ (= ‘I dismiss you from your current position.’) ‘I resign’ is a declarative: the Minister of Education directly declares to give up his/her current position. ‘You’ll be free from tomorrow’ is also a declarative: the Prime Minister indirectly declares to dismiss the Minister of Education from his/her current position. This type of speech acts is quite special that it can only count if the speaker has the appropriate authority to perform the type of acts. 4.4.3.4 The directive intends to get the listener to carry out an action: commanding, requesting, begging, warning, challenging, inviting, suggesting, giving advice, etc. (9) Ed: ‘The garage is a mess.’ Faye: ‘Clean it up.’ ‘Clean it up’ is a directive: Faye directly orders Ed to make the garage tidy.
  • 148. 150 (10) George: ‘How about a dinner out?’ Beth: ‘My essay is due tomorrow morning.’ (= ‘Leave me alone to write my essay.’) ‘My essay is due tomorrow morning’ is a directive: Beth indirectly asks/requests George to leave her alone, writing her essay. 4.4.3.5 The expressive indicates the speaker’s psychological state(s) or feeling(s)/attitude(s) about something: greeting, apologizing, complaining, thanking, etc. (11)Desk clerk: ‘I beg your pardon. I’ll be right back.’ Client: ‘No problem.’ ‘I beg your pardon’ is an expressive: the desk clerk directly apologizes to the client for his/her absence for a while. (12)Jack’s friend: ‘This beer is disgusting.’ Jack: ‘Why don’t you learn to take the bad with the good?’ ‘This beer is disgusting’ is an expressive: Jack’s friend directly shows that he/she extremely dislikes the beer. Leech (1983) proposed an extra category, which is called the rogative. 4.4.3.6 The rogative refers to a special kind of directives which deals with requests for information and which is typically in form of a question. (13)Tom: ‘Where are you from?’ David: ‘I’m from Canada.’
  • 149. 151 ‘Where are you from’ is a rogative: Tom directly asks/requests David for some information on his nationality or origin. Peccei [1999: 54] gives the following linguistic expressions typically related to various types of speech acts: Speech-act category Typical expression Example Declaratives declarative structure with speaker as subject and a performative verb in simple present tense We find the defendant guilty. I resign. Representatives declarative structure Tom’s eating grapes. Bill was an accountant. Expressives declarative structure with words referring to feelings I’m sorry to hear that. This beer is disgusting. Directives imperative sentence Sit down! Fasten your seat belts. Rogatives interrogative sentence Where did he go? Is she leaving? Commissives declarative structure with speaker as subject and future time expressed I’ll call you tonight. We ’re going to turn you in. 4.4.4 Distinction between direct and indirect speech acts “Speech acts can be classified as direct or indirect. In a direct speech act there is a direct relationship between its linguistic structure and the work it is doing. In indirect speech acts the speech act is performed indirectly through the performance of another speech act.” [Peccei, 1999: 56] Performing a direct speech act, the speaker utters a sentence which means exactly what he or she says:
  • 150. 152 1(a) ‘Come in, please.’ is a direct request. 2(a) ‘It is quite wrong to condone robbery.’ is a direct assertion against robbery. 3(a) ‘You should go to the doctor.’ is a direct piece of advice. Performing an indirect speech act, the speaker utters a sentence which does not mean exactly what he or she says: 1(b) ‘Won’t you come in?’ is not merely a Yes-No question. It is an indirect request made in a very concerned manner. 2(b) ‘Is it right to condone robbery?’ is an indirect assertion against robbery though it is in form of a Yes-No question. 3(b) ‘Why don’t you go to the doctor?’ is not used to ask for any reason. Instead, it is used to give an indirect piece of advice though it is in form of a Wh-question. Indirect speech acts are often felt to be more polite ways of performing certain kinds of speech acts, such as requests and refusals. It is crucial for any language learner to approach indirect speech acts and learn how to recognize them and then use them in context. Exercise 40: Give a situation in which each of the following utterances occurs, interpret its meaning and then classify it according to different types of speech acts. 1. ‘Let’s go to our place for a beer.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 2. ‘I don’t know how to answer this question.’
  • 151. 153 A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 3. ‘Mind your head!’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 4. ‘How nice to see you!’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 5. ‘Who will believe this story?’ A: ________________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 6. ‘Is it right to cheat in any exam?’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 7. ‘Would you like a cup of coffee?’ A: _____________________________________________
  • 152. 154 B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 8. ‘I was so sorry to hear about your loss.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 9. ‘I’m dead tired now!’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 10. ‘I’m awfully sorry I wasn’t at the meeting this morning.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 11. ‘If you don’t try your best, you’ll fail in the exam.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 12. ‘Why don’t you take a seat?’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ ______________________________________________________
  • 153. 155 13. ‘How dare you speak to her like that?’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 14. ‘You look lovely today in your new dress.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 15. ‘I’d sell it if I were you.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 16. ‘I’ll be right back.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 17. ‘I beg you to reconsider your decision.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 18. ‘Do you think I’m an idiot?’ A: _____________________________________________
  • 154. 156 B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 19. ‘May I hand in my final paper the day after tomorrow.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 20. ‘We select Alfred as the head of our group.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 21. ‘I’ll pay you back in two days.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 22. ‘We are going to turn you in.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 23. ‘I would appreciate it if you went away.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________
  • 155. 157 24. ‘Can I help you?’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 25. ‘I’ve stopped smoking.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 26. ‘Goodness!’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 27. ‘Drink a cup of coffee.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ ______________________________________________________ 28. ‘That doesn’t sound very serious.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 29. ‘I’ve got to go now.’ A: _____________________________________________
  • 156. 158 B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 30. ‘Someone said you got fired.’ A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ Exercise 41: For each of the following utterances, provide two situations so that one utterance performs two different acts. Interpret the utterances and identify the acts performed in the light of the situations you provide. 1. ‘Do you feel better today?’ SITUATION 1: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 2. ‘I beg your pardon.’ SITUATION 1: A: _____________________________________________
  • 157. 159 B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 3. ‘It’s going to rain.’ SITUATION 1: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 4. ‘It’s snowing.’ SITUATION 1: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2: A: _____________________________________________
  • 158. 160 B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 5. ‘I said I didn’t.’ SITUATION 1: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 6. ‘There’s a bend ahead.’ SITUATION 1: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 7. ‘Keep off the grass.’ SITUATION 1:
  • 159. 161 A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 8. ‘I’m very upset that so many of you are talking.’ SITUATION 1: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 9. ‘Be aware of dogs.’ SITUATION 1: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2:
  • 160. 162 A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 10. ‘What else do you want?’ SITUATION 1: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ SITUATION 2: A: _____________________________________________ B: ______________________________________________ _____________________________________________________ 4.4.5 Distinction between locution, illocution and perlocution 4.4.5.1 “A locutionary act is the saying of something which is meaningful and can be understood. For example, saying the sentence Shoot the snake is a locutionary act if hearers understand the words shoot, the, snake and can identify the particular snake referred to. 4.4.5.2 An illocutionary act is using a sentence to perform a function. For example, ‘Shoot the snake’ may be intended as an order or a piece of advice. 4.4.5.3 A perlocutionary act is the results or effects that are produced by means of saying something. For example, shooting the snake would be a perlocutionary act.
  • 161. 163 The above-mentioned three-part distinction by Austin [1962] is less frequently used than a two-part distinction between the propositional content of a sentence (the PROPOSITION(S) which a sentence expresses or implies) and the illocutionary force or intended effects of speech acts.” [Richards et al, 1985: 168-169] In brief, the LOCUTION of an utterance is producing an utterance, which is “a meaningful linguistic expression” [Jule, 1996: 48]; the ILLOCUTION of an utterance is using such an utterance “to perform a function” [Richards et al, 1985: 168]; the PERLOCUTION of an utterance is “causing a certain effect on the hearer or others.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 243] Exercise 42: Using the locution, illocution, perlocution analysis, analyse the underlined utterance in each of the following dialogues. (1) Mrs Smith’s neighbour: ‘I was so sorry to hear about your loss.’ Mrs Smith:‘Thankyou. Itwas a greatshock,butImustgetusedtoit.’ Locution:_______________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Illocution:_____________________________________________ _______________________________________________________
  • 162. 164 Perlocution:____________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ (2) A: ‘Would you like a cup of coffee?’ B: ‘Yes, please.’ Locution:_______________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Illocution:_____________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Perlocution:____________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ (3) Son: ‘Can I go out for a while, Mum?’ Mother: ‘You can play outside for half an hour.’ Locution:_______________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Illocution:_____________________________________________ _______________________________________________________ Perlocution:____________________________________________ _______________________________________________________
  • 163. 165 4.4.6 Felicity conditions “FELICITY CONDITIONS are the conditions which must be fulfilled for a speech act to be satisfactorily performed or realized. The felicity conditions necessary for promises are: (a) A sentence is used which states a future act of the speaker. (b) The speaker has the ability to do the act. (c) The hearer prefers the speaker to do the act rather than not to do it. (d) The speaker would not otherwise usually do the act. (e) The speaker intends to do the act.” [Richards et al, 1987: 104] 4.5 Performatives and constatives 4.5.1 Definition A performative is “one that actually describes the act that it performs, i.e. it PERFORMS some act and SIMULTANEOUSLY DESCRIBES that act.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 235] For example, ‘I promise to repay you tomorrow’ is a performative because in saying it the speaker actually does what the utterance describes, i.e. he promises to repay the hearer the next day. The utterance both describes and is a promise. A constative asserts something that is either true or false.
  • 164. 166 For example, ‘John promised to repay me tomorrow’ is a constative because the utterance does not simultaneously do what it describes, i.e. John promised to repay the hearer the next day. The utterance describes a promise but is not itself a promise. Exercise 43: Are the following utterances performative59 (P) or constative (C)? 1. ‘I NAME this ship Hibernia.’ P / C 2. ‘I BELIEVE in the dictatorship of the Proletariat.’ P / C 3. ‘I ADMIT I was hasty.’ P / C 4. ‘I THINK I was wrong.’ P / C 5. ‘I hereby INFORM you that you are sacked.’ P / C 6. ‘I GIVE you supper every night.’ P / C 7. ‘I WARN you not to come any closer.’ P / C 8. ‘I TRY to get this box open with a screwdriver.’ P / C 9. ‘I PRONOUNCE you man and wife.’ P / C 10. ‘I SENTENCE you to be hanged by the neck.’ P / C Exercise 44: Also note that the most reliable test to determine whether an utterance is performative is to insert the word hereby and see if the modified utterance is acceptable. Can hereby be acceptably inserted in the following utterances? 59 Note that direct performative utterances contain A PERFORMATIVE VERB, “one which, when used in a simple positive present tense sentence, with a 1st person singular subject, can make the utterance of that sentence performative.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 237]
  • 165. 167 1. ‘I ( ) GIVE notice that I will lock these doors in 60 seconds.’ Yes/No 2. ‘I ( ) PROMISED him that I would be at the station at 3:00pm.’Yes/No 3. ‘It ( ) GIVES me great pleasure to open this building.’ Yes/No 4. ‘I ( ) WARN you not to talk to my sister again.’ Yes/No 5. ‘I ( ) WARN you that you will fail.’ Yes/No 6. ‘They ( ) WARN her that she will fail.’ Yes/No 7. ‘I ( ) COMMAND you to teach first-year Semantics.’ Yes/No 8. ‘Tokyo ( ) IS the captain of Japan.’ Yes/No 9. ‘I ( ) ASK you to mind your head.’ Yes/No 10. ‘I ( ) BELIEVE in God the Father Almighty, Creator of Heaven and Earth.’ Yes/No 4.5.2 Characteristics “Performative utterances contain a performative verb and many have 1st person singular subjects and are in the present tense.” [Hurford and Heasley, 1984: 238] But there are exceptions to this pattern. Some performatives do not have a 1st person singular subject. 4.5.2.1 To make his/her utterance more polite, the speaker tends to replace an active performative with the 1st person singular subject by its passive version with the 2nd or 3rd person singular/plural subject: 1(a) ‘You ARE hereby FORBIDDEN to leave this room.’ 1(b) ‘I hereby FORBID you to leave this room.’
  • 166. 168 2(a) ‘Spitting IS hereby FORBIDDEN.’ 2(b) ‘I hereby FORBID you to spit.’ 3(a) ‘All passengers on flight number forty-seven ARE REQUESTED to proceed to gate ten.’ 3(b) ‘I REQUEST all passengers on flight number forty-seven to proceed to gate ten.’ 4(a) ‘Listeners ARE (hereby) REMINDED that BBC wireless licenses expire on April 9th .’ 4(b) ‘I (hereby) REMIND listeners that BBC wireless licenses expire on April 9th .’ 4.5.2.2 The 1st person singular subject, which is I, can be replaced by the 1st person plural subject, which is we: 5(a) ‘We hereby THANK you for the compliments you have paid us.’ 5(b) ‘My wife and I hereby THANK you for the compliments you have paid us.’ 4.5.2.3 The 1st person singular subject, which is I, can be replaced by the 3rd person plural subject, which is the management, for example: 6(a) ‘The management hereby WARN customers that mistakes in change cannot be rectified once the customer has left the counter.’
  • 167. 169 6(b) ‘I hereby WARN customers that mistakes in change cannot be rectified once the customer has left the counter.’ 4.5.3 Distinction between explicit performatives and implicit performatives Explicit performatives are those that contain A PERFORMATIVE VERB while implicit performatives are those that do not contain A PERFORMATIVE VERB. Ex1. ‘I hereby WARN you that you will fail’ is an explicit performative (i.e. a verbalized warning) while ‘If you do not try your best, you’ll fail in the exam’ is an implicit performative (i.e. an implied warning). Ex2. ‘I PROMISE to give you a helpful hand when you are in need’ is an explicit performative (i.e. a verbalized promise) while ‘If you need me at any time, just call’ is an implicit performative (i.e. an implied promise). Exercise 45: Fill in each of the blanks with an appropriate word. The first one is done as an example. 1. Semantics is a branch of linguistics which deals with meaning. 2. __________ is a relation in which various words have the same written form but have different meanings and sound forms. 3. A ________ is a sentence that is necessarily false, as a result of the senses of the words in it. 4. _________ is a relation in which the referent of a word is totally included in the referent of another word.
  • 168. 170 5. A ______ is an ideal string of words put together by the grammatical rules of a language. 6. _________ is a relation in which two words have different (written and sound) forms and are opposite in meaning. 7. A _________ is that part of the meaning of the utterance of a declarative sentence which describes some state of affairs. 8. ___________ is a relation in which various words have the same sound form but have different meanings and written forms. 9. An ________ is the use by a particular speaker, on a particular occasion, for a particular purpose, of a piece of language, such as a sequence of sentences, or a single phrase, or even a single word. 10. The _____ of a word or an expression is the relationship between that word or expression and the thing, the action, the event, the state of affairs, etc. it refers to. 11. _________ is a violation of semantic rules to create nonsense. 12. Semantic _______ are the smallest units of meaning in a word. 13. _________ is a relation in which various words have the same (sound and written) form but have different meanings. 14. Any ambiguity resulting from the ambiguity of a word is __________ ambiguity. 15. ________ synonymy is a relation in which a polysemous word shares one of its meanings with another word. 16. A sentence is considered as __________ ambiguous when its structure permits more than one interpretation. 17. ________ is a relation in which a single word has two or more slightly different but closely related meanings.
  • 169. 171 18. An _____ sentence is one that is necessarily true, as a result of the senses of the words in it. 19. Semantic meaning is context-free whereas ______________ meaning is context-dependent. 20. _________ is a relation in which various words have different (written and sound) forms but have the same or nearly the same meaning. 21. A ______ performs some act and simultaneously describes that act. 4.6 Politeness, co-operation and indirectness 4.6.1 The principle of politeness Leech [1983] proposes two maxims concerning the principle of politeness: - The approbation maxim: Minimize dispraise of the other; maximize praise of the other. - The tact maxim: Minimize the cost to the other; maximize the benefit to the other. Accordingly, some utterances seem more polite than others. The higher the cost of the direct act, the more likely it is for the speaker to use an indirect form. (1) ‘Set the table.’ (the least polite) (2) ‘Can you set the table?’ (3) ‘Could I possibly ask you to set the table?’ (the most polite)
  • 170. 172 4.6.2 Politeness and co-operation There is no doubt that politeness and co-operation are often in conflict with each other. Language users must be consciously aware of this conflict and flexibly apply both of the principles in face-to-face conversation. (1) Tom: ‘Do you like the wine I picked out?’ Gina: ‘Not really.’ (+direct, +negative) (2) Tom: ‘Do you like the wine I picked out?’ Gina: ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’ (−direct, +negative) In (2), ‘It’s Italian, isn’t it?’ implies a less than whole-hearted endorsement of the wine by failing to be relevant since the topic was the wine’s taste not its country of origin. Still, Gina was being more polite than coming right out with the fact that she did not like the wine as in (1), though she has proved to observe the maxim of Relevance of the co-operation principle strictly. 4.6.3 Politeness and indirectness Politeness and indirectness are closely related to each other and that is why indirect negative responses are more polite than direct ones: (1) Jenny: ‘Well, I’ve done this. I’ve dyed my hair blonde.’ Ed: (a) ‘You look awful.’ (+direct, +negative) (b) ‘You look amazing.’ (−direct, ±negative)
  • 171. 173 (2) Jean: ‘What did the students say about my teaching?’ Kate: (a) ‘Pretty bad.’ (+direct, +negative) (b) ‘Let’s hope none of them are lawyers.’ (−direct, +negative) (c) ‘Some students are very positive.’ (−direct, +negative) In (1), the ambiguity of amazing (amazing for its beauty or amazing for its awfulness) in ‘You look amazing’ allows the speaker to be truthful and yet somewhat more polite than the direct answer ‘You look awful.’ In (2), ‘Let’s hope none of them are lawyers’ and ‘Some students are very positive’ both imply rather than directly state that overall the student evaluations were not good and therefore are more polite than ‘Pretty bad.’ 4.7 Deixis 4.7.1 Definition “Deixis is a technical term (from Greek) for one of the most basic things we do with utterances. It means ‘pointing’ via language. Any linguistic form used to accomplish this ‘pointing’ is called a deictic expression. When you notice a strange object and ask, ‘What’s that?’, you are using a deictic expression (‘that’) to indicate something in the immediate context. Deictic expressions are also sometimes called indexicals.” [Yule, 1996: 9] 4.7.2 Classification
  • 172. 174 Deixis consists of three notions: (i) Personal deixis “can mark a number of overlapping distinction: person, gender, number, and social relations.” [Finegan, 1994: 178] Pronouns and their alternative forms are usually markers of personal deixis. The system of English pronouns contrasts in person between first person, second person and third person and in number between singular and plural. The gender distinction is made in English in the third person singular only: he for masculine referents and she for feminine referents. Unlike French, for example, the choice of an English pronoun in the second person does not clearly reflect the social status of referents: (1) ‘In this family, we rarely smoke or drink.’ (2) ‘Did you get the carton of milk I asked you to?’ (ii) Spatial deixis is “the marking in language of the orientation or position in space of the referent of a linguistic expression.” [Finegan, 1994: 179] Common markers of spatial deixis in English are demonstratives (this vs. that) and such adverbs of place as here, there and the like: (3) ‘I’m over here.’ (4) ‘Would you like this one or that one?’ (iii) Temporal deixis is “the orientation or position of the reference of actions and events in time.” [Finegan, 1994: 180] In English, temporal deixis can be marked either by such words and phrases as before, last time, now, then, tomorrow, and the like or through tense, encoded on the verb with affixes or expressed in an independent morpheme:
  • 173. 175 (5) ‘I walked to school every day.’ (6) ‘Tomorrow is a holiday.’ 4.7.3 Complexity in the use of deictic expressions 4.7.3.1 As for the first person plural in (7), “there is, in English, a potential ambiguity in such uses which allows two different interpretations. There is an exclusive ‘we’ (speaker plus other(s), excluding addressee) and an inclusive ‘we’ (speaker and addressee included).” [Yule, 1996: 11] (7) ‘We clean up after ourselves around here.’ 4.7.3.2 “The distance associated with third person forms” [Yule, 1996: 11] is also used to make potential accusations (for example, ‘you didn’t clean up’) less direct, as in 8(a), or make a potential personal issue seem like an impersonal one, based on a general rule, as in 8(b): 8(a) ‘Somebody didn’t clean up after himself.’ 8(b) ‘Each person has to clean up after him or herself.’ 4.7.3.3 If here means the place of the speaker’s utterance and now means the time of the speaker’s utterance, an utterance such as (9) should be nonsense: (9) ‘I am not here now.’ However, one can say (9) into the recorder of a telephone answering machine, projection that now will apply to anytime someone tries to call him/her, not to when he/she actually records the word.
  • 174. 176 4.7.3.4 Then applies to both past in 10(a) and present in (10)b time relative to the speaker’s present time: (10)a ‘April 29th , 1999? I was in Hanoi then.’ (10)b ‘Dinner at 8:30 on Friday? Okay, I’ll see you then.’ 4.7.3.5 “The present tense is the proximal form and the past tense is the distal form.” [Yule, 1996: 15] Treated as distant from the speaker’s current situation are both, typically, something that has taken place in the past, as in 11(a), and, less obviously, something that is treated as extremely unlikely, as in 11(b): (11)a ‘At ten, I could ride a bicycle.’ (11)b ‘I could buy the house, if I had enough money.’ 4.7.3.6 “There exists in English a distinction between “the ‘near speaker’ meaning of direct speech and the ‘away from speaker’ meaning of indirect speech.” [Yule, 1996: 16] (12)a ‘I’ll call you tonight.’ (12)b ‘He promised to call me that night.’