Systematic polysemy in lexicology and lexicography

Abstract

The phenomenon of systematic polysemy offers a fruitful domain for examining the theoretical differences between lexicological and lexicographic approaches to description. We consider here the process that provides for systematic conversion of count to mass nouns in English (a chicken Æ chicken, an oak Æ oak etc.). From the point of view of lexicology, we argue, standard syntactic and pragmatic tests suggest the phenomenon should be described by means of a single unindividuated transfer function that does not distinguish between interpretations (rabbit = "meat" vs. "fur"). From the point of view of lexicography, however, these pragmatically determined"sense precisions" are made part of explicit description via the inclusion of semantic "licenses," a mechanism distinct from lexical rules.

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Geoffrey Nunberg
University of California, Berkeley

Citations of this work

Embedded implicatures.François Recanati - 2003 - Philosophical Perspectives 17 (1):299–332.
It is raining (somewhere).François Recanati - 2005 - Linguistics and Philosophy 30 (1):123-146.

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