Semantic Change
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Transcript of Semantic Change
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Semantic Change
Mary Angelica Q. dela Cruz MAE-LE
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-is the study of meaning
to make the form, nature, content, future course, etc.,
Of (something) different from what it is or fro
m what it would be if left alone:
Semantics
Change
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Semantic Change Changes in meaning are as common as changes in form. Like the latter they can be internally or externally motivated. The equivalent to the paradigm in morphology is, in semantics, the word field in which words and their meanings stand in a network of relationships. The alteration of meaning occurs because words are constantly used and what is intended by speakers is not exactly the same each time. If a different intention for a word is shared by the speech community and becomes established in usage then a semantic change has occurred.
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*The following graphs show two further cases of
semantic shift in which the increase in the scope of one
word is paralleled by the reduction in scope of a related
word.
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•Gentle was borrowed in Middle English in the sense of ‘born of a good-family, with a higher social standing’. Later the sense ‘courteous’ and then ‘kind, mild in manners’ developed because these qualities were regarded as qualities of the upper classes. Lewd (Old English læwede) originally meant ‘non-ecclesiastical, lay’, then came to mean ‘uneducated, unlearned’ from which it developed into ‘vulgar, lower-class’ and then through ‘bad-mannered, ignorant’, to ‘sexually insinuating’.
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•Sophisticated meant ‘unnatural, contaminated’ but now has the sense of ‘urbane, discriminating’. The word sophistry (from Old French sophistrie) still has its original meaning of ‘specious, fallacious reasoning’. Artificial originally meant ‘man-made, artful, skill fully constructed’, compare artifice ‘man-made construction’. But by comparison with ‘natural’ the word came to acquire a negative meaning because everything which is natural is regarded positively.
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Nice (Latin nescius ‘not knowing') is recorded from the 13th century in the sense of ‘foolish’, then it shifted to ‘coy, shy’ and by the 16th century had the meaning ‘fastidious, dainty, subtle’ from which by the 18th century the sense ‘agreeable, delightful’ developed.
Fast (OE fæste ‘firm') later developed the meaning ‘quick’. The original sense is still seen in steadfast ‘firm in position’.
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Silly (Old English sēlig ‘happy, fortuitous') had by the 15th century the sense of ‘deserving of pity’ and then developed to ‘ignorant, feeble-minded’ and later ‘foolish’.
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Kinds of Semantic
Change
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1. SEMANTIC EXPANSION (BROADENING) -Here a word increases its range of meaning over time. Old Meaning New Meaning
bird Small fowl Any winged creature
barn Place to store
barley
Farm building for
storage and shelter
aunt Father’s sister Father or mother’s
sister
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2. SEMANTIC RESTRICTION (NARROWING) - This is the opposite to expansion.
Old Meaning New Meaning
hound Any dog A hunting dog
meat Any type of food Flesh of an
animal/human
disease Any unfavorable
state An illness
fowl Any bird A domesticated bird
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3. SEMANTIC DETERIORATION (PEJORATION) -A disapprovement in the meaning of a word.
Old Meaning New Meaning
silly Happy,
prosperous foolish
wench girl Wanton woman,
prostitute
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4. SEMANTIC AMELIORATION -An improvement in the meaning of a word.
Old Meaning New Meaning
Pretty Tricky, sly,
cunning attractive
Knight boy A special tile or
position
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5. RISE OF METAPHORICAL USAGE -A very common semantic development is for literal expressions to acquire figurative usages.
Word Metaphorical meaning
Grasp understand
yarn story
high On drugs
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6. TRUNCATION (shortening/deleting) -An element is deleted without substitution. Developments in word formation often show this with some elements understood but not expressed:
Origin Usual Usage
Miniskirt mini
Documentary
film/
Feature film
film
Eau de Cologne cologne
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7. WEAKENING -Weakening of meaning frequently occurs. For example, our word soon used to mean ‘immediately’ but now simply means ‘in the near future’
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8. SEMANTIC SHIFT -Semantic shift is a process in which a word loses its former meaning and takes on a new, but often related, meaning
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Generalizations about semantic change
BAD MEANINGS REPLACE GOOD MEANINGS Pejoration is more usual than amelioration, i.e there are more instances of words developing a negative meaning than the opposite case.
MEANINGS TEND TO BECOME SUBJECTIVE The word feel originally meant only ‘touch’ but has shifted to a general term referring to the sentiments of the speaker.
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CURRENT SEMANTIC CHANGE Present-day English shows quite a number of semantic changes which consist of expansions, restrictions, ameliorations and deteriorations.
Students used to be an exclusive term for those
studying at universities and other institutions of
higher education. But more and more the term is
also being used for pupils perhaps to attribute
more adult status to those still at school.
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Thank you
Charitas Cristi Urget Nos!!!