In the English (and any other) language, antonymy belongs to the most interesting aspects which linguists may come across. Human beings think and speak in categories. Thus, they classify every word into groups by referring to one or several (suppositionally) equal characteristics of these words. In this respect, antonymy is simply a particular manner of categorization, but a rather keen one for its being based on the strong (albeit rarely logical ) differentiation from other words. Consequently, an antonym cannot occur on its own terms; it always needs another word to which it refers.
Much has been written about antonymy (Lyons 1977, Cruse 1992, Cruse 1995, Murphy 2006 et. al.). Yet, as far as is known, no scientific study has ever been conducted of a phenomenon that is to be called perfect antonymy and is related to the antonymy of entire phrases. This concept means that all single parts of a group of, at least, two words are turned into the opposite, as can bee seen in [1iiid] of the example [Example 1].
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
2. Literature
3. Method
4. Results
5. Theoretical Discussion and Conclusion
6. References
Research Objectives and Key Topics
The primary objective of this study is to examine why speakers of the English language rarely apply the concept of "perfect antonymy"—the reversal of all components in a multi-word phrase—in favor of changing only a single member of a phrase.
- Conceptual definition of "perfect antonymy" in linguistics.
- Analysis of linguistic categorization and antonymic relations.
- Empirical investigation of antonym usage via face-to-face interviews.
- The role of "head" and "modifier" elements in two-word phrases.
- Predicative perception of phrases as a driver for lexical choices.
Excerpt from the Book
Introduction
In the English (and any other) language, antonymy belongs to the most interesting aspects which linguists may come across. Human beings think and speak in categories. Thus, they classify every word into groups by referring to one or several (suppositionally) equal characteristics of these words. In this respect, antonymy is simply a particular manner of categorization, but a rather keen one for its being based on the strong (albeit rarely logical) differentiation from other words. Consequently, an antonym cannot occur on its own terms; it always needs another word to which it refers.
Much has been written about antonymy (Lyons 1977, Cruse 1992, Cruse 1995, Murphy 2006 et. al.). Yet, as far as is known, no scientific study has ever been conducted of a phenomenon that is to be called perfect antonymy and is related to the antonymy of entire phrases. This concept means that all single parts of a group of, at least, two words are turned into the opposite, as can bee seen in [1iiid] of the example [Example 1].
Summary of Chapters
Introduction: This chapter introduces the concept of antonymy and defines "perfect antonymy" as the reversal of all components in a phrase, setting the stage for an investigation into why this phenomenon is rarely used in daily communication.
Literature: This section establishes the theoretical foundation by defining key linguistic terminology, specifically categorizing antonyms into gradable, complementary, and relational types.
Method: The author outlines the empirical approach, which involved face-to-face interviews with 20 participants who were asked to provide antonyms for various words and two-word phrases.
Results: This chapter presents the data collected from the survey, showing that 99.9% of participants did not use perfect antonymy, preferring instead to modify only one element of a phrase.
Theoretical Discussion and Conclusion: The author analyzes the results, concluding that speakers prefer to preserve the "head" of a phrase and view phrases as having a "predicative quintessence," which guides their choice of which word to reverse.
References: A list of academic works used to support the linguistic definitions and methodology presented in the study.
Keywords
Antonymy, Perfect antonymy, Linguistics, Categorization, Gradable antonyms, Complementary antonyms, Relational antonyms, Two-word phrases, Head and modifier, Predicative quintessence, Empirical study, Semantic relations, Lexical semantics, Language production, Cognitive linguistics.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the primary subject of this research paper?
The paper investigates the linguistic phenomenon of "perfect antonymy," which refers to the complete reversal of every word in a multi-word phrase into its opposite.
What are the central themes discussed in the study?
The study centers on lexical semantics, the classification of antonyms, the cognitive process of linguistic categorization, and how speakers handle multi-word expressions during antonymic tasks.
What is the main research question?
The research seeks to understand why English speakers rarely utilize perfect antonymy in two-word phrases and why they instead favor changing only one constituent of the phrase.
Which scientific methodology does the author employ?
The author uses an empirical, qualitative approach consisting of a face-to-face survey with 20 participants, involving open-ended questions to elicit antonyms for both single words and two-word phrases.
What is covered in the main body of the work?
The main body covers the theoretical definitions of different antonym types, the presentation of the interview data, and a theoretical discussion focusing on the syntactic and semantic structure of phrases.
How would you characterize the work using keywords?
Key terms include Antonymy, Perfect antonymy, Lexical constructions, Head-modifier relations, and Predicative quintessence.
How do "head" and "modifier" roles influence the results?
The study finds that speakers tend to keep the "head" of a phrase constant—as it defines the main category—and instead reverse the "modifier," which provides additional, variable information.
What does the author mean by "predicative quintessence"?
It refers to the fact that speakers often interpret simple two-word phrases as complete sentences with a predicate; they feel compelled to reverse the "predicate" or the core information of that implied sentence when asked for an antonym.
- Citation du texte
- Dominik Jesse (Auteur), 2014, Of attractive women and unattractive men. A linguistic study of perfect antonymy in two-word phrases, Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/294745