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Meaning and Language Part 1

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Page 1: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Meaning and Language

Part 1

Page 2: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Plan• We will talk about two different types of meaning,

corresponding to two different types of objects:– Lexical Semantics: Roughly, the meaning of individual words– Compositional Semantics: How larger objects (clauses,

sentences) come to mean what they do. Relatedly, how formal logic can be used as a tool to study language

• However: These two fit together, as discussed in the reading (Partee)

• That is, aspects of what we want to say about what words mean will interact with what we say about larger structures

• Today:– Some distinctions– Basic sets and truth conditions– Working towards logic for language

Page 3: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Some Initial Points

• Remember that for (content) words like cat, tree, horse, etc. there is an arbitrary connection between sound form and meaning:

Page 4: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Sound and Meaning

• This pairing of sound and meaning is one component of language – “arbitrary” component: stressed by de Saussure– “predictable” component: logic, etc.

• Rock bottom: basic connections in small units (morphemes,words) between sound and meaning

• The full range of things that we associate with human language is found only when such connections are part of a generative system for creating larger units from smaller ones, i.e. the syntax (remember last week)

Page 5: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Outline

• Traditional distinctions for sound/meaning connections (homophony, polysemy)

• Words and sets (as in set theory)

• Basic cases (nouns and adjectives)

• Wednesday: Using formal logic to model meaning relations in language

Page 6: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Some Distinctions

• First: cases in which the “one to one” mapping between sound forms and meanings is not so direct.– Homophony: A cases in which two words

have the same sound form, but distinct and unrelated meanings

• Bank-1 ‘side of a river’• Bank-2 ‘financial institution’

Page 7: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Representation

• In any case, with homophony we are dealing with distinct words; that is:– Bank-1 is to Bank-2 as cat is to dog or bank-1is to

cat

• This is equivalent to saying that in such cases, the identity in sound form is an accident

• In other cases of the same sound form but differing meaning, this is not the case

Page 8: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Polysemy

• We speak of polysemy ‘many meanings’ in cases in which we have the same word but with distinct yet related senses; one case:– Pool: water on the ground– Pool: swimming pool

• In this case, there is no need to say that there are different words; perhaps really different senses of the same word

Page 9: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Polysemy, cont.• Sometimes with polysemy the intuition is that the word is

basically ‘vague’, and that its fuller meanings are supplied by context

• Something similar is found with verbs, where the context comes from the syntactic structure:– The whistle sirened lunch time.– The police car sirened the speeder to a stop.

• Cases like this indicate that the basic meaning of words can be augmented with information from the syntactic structure – John shinned the ball.– Mary shinned the ball to John.– Etc.

• The “core”meaning of the word shin or siren exists, but is augmented by what happens in the syntactic structure

Page 10: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Words and Sets

• Let’s take an example of how we think of word meanings…

• More interesting: how meanings of combinations of words are derived

• We can think of the meaning of some words as relating to a system of categories, some more general, some more specific

• This lends itself to representation in terms of sets• A set is, for our purposes, an abstract collection

Page 11: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Examples

• Consider the relationship between dog and mammal:– All dogs are mammals. (true)

dogsdogs

mammals

Page 12: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Examples, cont.

• The set relationship is one of inclusion; the set denoted by dog is a subset of the set denoted by mammal

• Other relationships are possible as well, both in terms of ‘some’ and ‘no’

• We will formalize an extension to this in the next lecture

Page 13: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

‘Some’ and overlapping

• It is not true that all snakes are poisonous:– All snakes are poisonous. (false)

• But some are:– Some snakes are poisonous. (true)

• In cases like this, the set denoted by snake and the set denoted by poisonous overlap:

snakes

Poisonousthings

Page 14: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Non-overlapping: ‘No’

• It can also be the case that sets do not overlap, in addition to overlapping in very small ways

• Consider the following:– No mammals are poisonous.

• Ok, we want to know what no means, but is this a good example (is it true)?

Page 15: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

As far as I know…

• As far as I know, the statement ‘No mammals are poisonous’ is false

• The duck-billed platypus has a kind of poisonous thing on its leg

Page 16: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Sets

• So we need another example of sets that don’t overlap– No dogs are reptiles. (true)

dogs reptiles

Page 17: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Truth Conditions

• One way of approaching meanings is to look at the truth conditions of sentences

• The truth conditions specify in precise terms the circumstances that obtain in order for a sentence to be true (or false)

• Specifying the truth conditions is a necessary component of the study of meaning; if we can show that two sentences are true under different conditions, then we would like to say that they have different meanings

Page 18: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Some examples

• Sometimes it seems like the specification of truth conditions is trivial:– The cat is on the mat.– The dog is on the mat.– Different truth conditions

• But what about more complex cases? Consider:– The glass is half full.– The glass is half empty.

Page 19: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

The ‘Glass’ Example

• On the face of it, ‘half full’ and ‘half empty’ seem to have the same truth conditions.

• But: Consider the following examples:– The glass is almost half full. (e.g. 48%)– The glass is almost half empty. (e.g. 53%)

• These have different truth conditions– Assuming that ‘almost’ is the same in the two

sentences, it must be the case that ‘half full’ and ‘half empty’ actually have different meanings

– If these two phrases were not different in meaning, where else could the difference come from??

Page 20: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Other fractions

• As a further point, consider what happens when we replace ‘half’ by other fractions:– The glass is three eighths full.– The glass is three eighths empty.

• These do not mean the same thing• It looks as if ‘half full’ and ‘half empty’ mean

different things, but sometimes can be true under the same circumstances

Page 21: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

More on Adjectives

• Some further cases from the study of adjectives illustrate– The relevance of our use of sets above– The interaction of lexical meaning with

compositional meaning

• Let’s take another simple example:– poisonous snake

Page 22: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Interpreting poisonous snake

• One way of thinking of the adjective meaning with respect to the noun follows on what we were doing above

• What we would like are some general rules that tell us how to interpret certain syntactic objects in terms of the semantics we are using

• Rule (informal): When an adjective A modifies a noun N ([A N]), the interpretation of this object is the set defined by the intersection of A’s meaning with N’s meaning

Page 23: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

On the interpretation, cont.

• This is just like the rule we saw above:

snakesPoisonousthings

•With poisonous snake, we are indicating a member of the overlap between two sets

•This can be indicated in a logical notation as well

Page 24: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Some notation

• We need a notation for sets and their interaction– || X || = the set of things denoted by property X

• Example: || red || = the set of red things• This can also be written as {x| x is red}, read as ‘the set

of all things x such that x is red’

– What about how adjectives and nouns combine by the reasoning above?

• We need notation for ‘and’; why? Because the things that are poisonous snakes are the set of things that are (1) poisonous AND (2) snakes

Page 25: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

Putting the pieces together

• So, for poisonous snake:– || poisonous || = {x|x is poisonous}– || snake || = {x|x is a snake}– || poisonous snake || = {x| x is poisonous

AND x is a snake}

• We can also use set notation for this, e.g.:– || poisonous || || snake ||

Page 26: Meaning and Language Part 1. Plan We will talk about two different types of meaning, corresponding to two different types of objects: –Lexical Semantics:

So…

• Is it always so simple? Consider:– Reasoning 1:

• Larry is a poisonous snake• Larry is a chess player.• Therefore: Larry is a poisonous chess player (valid…but

this is more complicated than it looks)

– Reasoning 2:• Larry is a skillful artist.• Larry is a chess player• Therefore: Larry is a skillful chess player. (invalid!!)