●Figures and Tables
Preface
Abbreviations and Symbols
Part I Preliminaries
1 Semantics in Linguistics
1.1 Introduction
1.2 Semantics and Semiotics
1.3 Three Challenges in Doing Semantics
1.4 Meeting the Challenges
1.5 Semantics in a Model of Grammar
1.5.1 Introduction
1.5.2 Word meaning and sentence meaning
1.6 Some Important Assumptions
1.6.1 Reference and sense
1.6.2 Utterances, sentences, and propositions
1.6.3 Literal and non-literal meaning
1.6.4 Semantics and pragmatics
1.7 Summary
Exercises
Further Reading
Notes
References
2 Meaning, Thought, and Reality
2.1 Introduction
2.2 Reference
2.2.1 Types of reference
2.2.2 Names
2.2.3 Nouns and noun phrases
2.3 Reference as a Theory of Meaning
2.4 Mental Representations
2.4.1 Introduction
2.4.2 Concepts
2.4.3 Necessary and sufficient conditions
2.4.4 Prototypes
2.4.5 Relations betzveen concepts
2.4.6 Acquiring concepts
2.5 Words, Concepts,and Thinking
2.5.1 Linguistic relativity
2.5.2 The language of thought hypothesis
2.5.3 Thought and reality
2.6 Summary
Exercises
Further Reading
Notes
References
Part Ⅱ Semantic Description
3 Word Meaning
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Words and Grammatical Categories
3.3 Words and Lexical Items
3.4 Problems with Pinning Down Word Meaning
3.5 Lexical Relations
3.5.1 Homonymy
3.5.2 Polysemy
3.5.3 Synonymy
3.5.4 Opposites (antonymy)
3.5.5 Hyponymy
3.5.6 Meronymy
……
Part Ⅲ Theoretical Approaches
Solutions to Exercises
Glossary
Index