Semantics: Difference between revisions

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'''Semantics''': The study of the way language signals meanings and their changes. A much broader use and application of [[semiotics]], semantics includes the way words relate to what they signify  (Frye et al. 425). The study of linguistic development by classifying and examining changes in meaning and form. The meaning, or an interpretation of the meaning, of a word, sign, sentence, etc.: ''Let's not argue about semantics.'' The study of the relationships between various signs and symbols and what they represent.
'''Semantics''': The study of the way language signals meanings and their changes. A much broader use and application of [[semiotics]], semantics includes the way words relate to what they signify  (Frye et al. 425). The study of linguistic development by classifying and examining changes in meaning and form. The meaning, or an interpretation of the meaning, of a word, sign, sentence, etc.: ''Let's not argue about semantics.'' The study of the relationships between various signs and symbols and what they represent.


Semantics has a strong basing on syntax being that semantics is the way language signals relate to general meanings, or symbolic logic  (Frye et al. 425).
Semantics has a strong basing on [[syntax]] being that semantics is the way language signals relate to general meanings, or symbolic logic  (Frye et al. 425).





Revision as of 20:08, 21 September 2006

Semantics: The study of the way language signals meanings and their changes. A much broader use and application of semiotics, semantics includes the way words relate to what they signify (Frye et al. 425). The study of linguistic development by classifying and examining changes in meaning and form. The meaning, or an interpretation of the meaning, of a word, sign, sentence, etc.: Let's not argue about semantics. The study of the relationships between various signs and symbols and what they represent.

Semantics has a strong basing on syntax being that semantics is the way language signals relate to general meanings, or symbolic logic (Frye et al. 425).


Citation

Frye, Northrop, Sheridan Baker, George Perkins, and Barbara Perkins.The Harper Handbook To Literature. 2nd ed. New York: Longman, 1997.