generative grammar - small and finite set of rules that can be used to generate a potentially unlimited number of well-formed structures, surface structure - different syntactic forms that sentences have as individual English sentences, deep structure - abstract level of structural organization in which all the elements determining structural interpretation are represented , structural ambiguity - two distinct underlying interpretations that have to be represented differently in deep structure , conceptual meaning - includes basic, essential components of meaning conveyed by the literal use of a word; similar to dictionary meaning (needle-thin, sharp object, steel instrument), associative meaning - the type of meaning people might connect with the use of words that is not part of conceptual meaning (needle- pain, illness, painful, blood, drugs) , connotation - names these aspects of meaning that don't affect the word's sense, reference or denotation, level of formality, emotional force, synonymy - two or more different words with closely related meanings almost\nearly, big\large, broad\wide, antonymy - two forms with opposite meaning are called.....nyms , gradable antonyms - can be used in comparative constructions, the negative don't imply the the opposite , non-gradable antonyms - not used in comparative constructions, the negative implies the opposite , reversives - do the reverse of the word like enter\exit, pack\unpack , hyponymy - the lexical relation in which the meaning of one word is included in the meaning of another word animal\horse, homophone - when two or more different written forms have the same pronounciation flour\flower, homonyms - when one form (written or spoken) has two or more unrelated meanings bat-bat,separate dictionary entry for a word , polysemy - when two or more words have the same form and related meanings, multiple meanings under a single entry , metonymy - a type of relationship between words based on a close relationship in everyday life eg. He drank the whole bottle , collocation - a relationship between words that frequently occur together, deixis - words which cannot be interpreted if the context is not known eg. You'll have to bring it back tomorrow because she's not here today, deictic expression - used for pointing people, places and times, they have to be interpreted in terms of which person, place or time the speaker has in mind , reference - an act by which a speaker or a writer uses language to enable a listener or a reader to identify sth , inference - an additional information used by the listener to create a connection between what is said and what must be meant , anaphora - a type of referential relationship , use of pronouns and noun phrases to refer back to sth already mentioned , cataphora - the reversal of antacedent -anaphora relationship, antecedent - the first mention , direct speech act - an action in which the form used eg. interrogative directly matches the function performed by a speaker (a question), indirect speech act - an action in which the form used does not directly match the function performed by a speaker ,
0%
syntax&semantics&pragmatics
共享
共享
共享
由
Skrzynka
编辑内容
打印
嵌入
更多
作业
排行榜
显示更多
显示更少
此排行榜当前是私人享有。单击
,共享
使其公开。
资源所有者已禁用此排行榜。
此排行榜被禁用,因为您的选择与资源所有者不同。
还原选项
匹配游戏
是一个开放式模板。它不会为排行榜生成分数。
需要登录
视觉风格
字体
需要订阅
选项
切换模板
显示所有
播放活动时将显示更多格式。
打开成绩
复制链接
QR 代码
删除
恢复自动保存:
?