SEMANTICS
What is “Semantics”?
Semantics is the study of meaning that is used to understand human expression through language. Semantics is perhaps the most difficult part of the grammar of a language to learn. The reason is because, basically, meanings in a language are indefinite/undetermined.
Synonymy and Antonymy of Semantics
SYNONYMY
- Synonymy is the state or phenomenon in which the words that sound different (different in pronunciation) but have the same or identical meaning as another word or phrase.
- The concrete form of synonymy is called “synonym”
- Examples: small = little, big = large, mother and father = parents, politician = statesman
ANTONYMY
- Antonymy is the state or phenomenon in which the words have the sense relation which involve the opposite of meaning.
- The concrete form of antonymy is called “antonym” (opposite).
- The words pairs of antonymy can be divided into several types:
- Implicitly Gradable Pairs (Graded Antonym) refers to the words related to the words related to the object they modify. The words themselves do not provide an absolute scale.
Examples: big = small, good = bad, fast = slow, young = old
- Complementary Pairs (Complementarity) refers to the existence of pairs that the denial of one, implies the assertion of the other.
Examples: male = female, alive = dead, present = absent, awake = asleep
- Relation Pairs (Converseness) refers to the pair of words that display symmetry in their meaning.
Examples: buy = sell, push = pull, command = serve, give = take, teach = learn
master = servant, teacher = pupil, doctor = patient, ect.
References : https://www.slideshare.net/Andriyanieka12/13-semantics-synonym-antonym- homonym-hyponym-polyseme-idioms-18509523
References : https://www.slideshare.net/Andriyanieka12/13-semantics-synonym-antonym- homonym-hyponym-polyseme-idioms-18509523