Semantics: Difference between revisions
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" Among the important issues in the area of semantics and it's relation to the rest of the grammer, the idea that transformations might be meaning-preserving is one that has an interesting history and one whose fate is far from clear(Holt,Rhinehart,and Winston.1)." | " Among the important issues in the area of semantics and it's relation to the rest of the grammer, the idea that transformations might be meaning-preserving is one that has an interesting history and one whose fate is far from clear(Holt,Rhinehart,and Winston.1)." | ||
(http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~tom7/csnotes/fall02/semantics.gif); | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
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-'''Dictionary.com''' [http://dictionary.reference.com/] | -'''Dictionary.com''' [http://dictionary.reference.com/] | ||
-'''Wikipedia.com''' [http://en.wikipedia.org/] | |||
==Related Subjects== | |||
'''Linguistics'''- In linguistics, ''semantics'' is the subfield that is devoted to the study of meaning, as borne on the syntactic levels of words, phrases, sentences, and sometimes larger units of discourse, generically referred to as texts. As with any empirical science, ''semantics'' involves the interplay of concrete data with theoretical concepts, and specializations have developed that focus on different parts of that interaction, for example, the semantics of natural languages and formal languages, respectively. | |||
Depending on the perspective taken up, ''semantics'' may include the study of connotative sense and denotative reference, truth conditions, argument structure, thematic roles, discourse analysis, and the linkage of all of these to syntax. | |||
The decompositional perspective towards meaning holds that the meaning of words can be analyzed by defining meaning atoms or primitives, which establish a language of thought. An area of study is the meaning of compounds, another is the study of relations between different linguistic expressions (homonymy, synonymy, antonymy, polysemy, paronyms, hypernymy, hyponymy, meronymy, metonymy, holonymy, exocentric, and endocentric). | |||
==Vocabulary== | ==Vocabulary== | ||