Wednesday, 30 September 2015

Misconstruing Ellipsis Of Repetition As Relational Meronymy [2]

Martin (1992: 305):
Alongside this set [of items realising relational meronymy], there are two groups of items which function in what Halliday (1985: 174) calls Pre-Deictic and Pre-Numerative position.  Those in Pre-Deictic position name components with respect to their location in time or space (e.g. the top of the wall): top, inside, side, bottom, edge, middle, outside, environs, start, finish, beginning, end.  These items may function "cohesively" in text: We played well that set.  — Not at the start.
Those in Pre-Numerative position measure out some portion of the whole (e.g. a sip of beer): jar, bottle, schooner, glass, midi, jug, can, loaf, mouthful, spoonful, pound, ounce, kilo, yard, metre.  These are also used "cohesively": Would you like a beer? — Just a midi thanks. 

Blogger Comments:

[1] In SFL theory, this nominal group function is termed 'extended Numerative: facet', which is the cross-classification of 'partitive' and 'type'.  See Halliday & Matthiessen (2004: 333).

the
top
of
the
wall
Numerative: facet
Deictic
Thing


[2] Not all of these items necessarily represent parts of wholes.


[3] The cohesive function here is the ellipsis of the potential lexical repetition (set).

we
played
well
that set
Subject
Finite
Predicator
Adjunct
Complement

not
at the start of the set
mood Adjunct: polarity
circumstantial Adjunct


[4] In SFL theory, this nominal group function is termed 'extended Numerative: quantum', which is the cross-classification of 'quantitative' and 'measure'.  See Halliday & Matthiessen (2004: 333).

a
sip
of
beer
Numerative: quantum
Thing


[5] The cohesive function here is the ellipsis of the potential lexical repetition (beer).

would
you
like
a beer
Finite
Subject
Predicator
Complement

I
would
like
just
a middy of beer
Subject
Finite
Predicator
mood Adjunct: intensity
Complement

Tuesday, 29 September 2015

Misconstruing Ellipsis Of Repetition As Relational Meronymy [1]

Martin (1992: 305):
As with hyponymy, the relationship between part and whole may be named.  Thus a kind of chair is proportional with a part of the chair, but with the name of the relational [sic] filling a Pre-Numerative (Halliday 1985: 174) rather than a Pre-Classifier position.  The relational items may function cohesively between clauses, as in The chair's broken. — Which part?  The following items are among those realizing relational meronymy:
part, content, ingredient, fitting, member, constituent, stratum, rank, plane, element, factor, component, faction, excerpt, extract, selection, piece, segment, section, portion, measure

Blogger Comments:

[1] In SFL theory, this nominal group function is termed 'extended Numerative: portion', which is the cross-classification of 'partitive' and 'measure'.  See Halliday & Matthiessen (2004: 333).

a
part
of
the
chair
Numerative: portion
Deictic
Thing


[2] The cohesion in the response is ellipsis of the potential lexical repetition of chair (and of the Finite and Residue).

the chair
’s
broken
Subject
Finite
Complement

which part of the chair
’s
broken
Subject
Finite
Complement

The notion of a 'relational meronymy' therefore arises from not recognising a cohesive relation.


[3] Not all of these items necessarily represent parts of wholes.

Monday, 28 September 2015

Misconstruing Antonymy

Martin (1992: 301-2):
One further category that needs to be brought in here is antonymy.  Whereas synonyms are co-hyponyms for which differences in meaning may not matter, antonyms are co-hyponyms for which they must — because the items in question are opposed in meaning rather than complementing each other

Blogger Comments:

[1] Definitionally, synonyms are not types (hyponyms) of co-hyponyms.  In SFL theory, synonymy is a lexical means of creating cohesion in discourse.

[2] Definitionally, antonyms are not types (hyponyms) of co-hyponyms.  In SFL theory, antonymy is a lexical means of creating cohesion in discourse.

[3] Complementing is most generally concerned with completion, and often involves not just opposites (e.g. art: complementary colours), but contradiction (e.g. physics: particle-wave-field).  Halliday (2008: 84):
In the most general sense, complementarity is a special form of complexity; one can think of it perhaps as the management of contradiction.

Sunday, 27 September 2015

Confusing Lexis With Grammar

Martin (1992: 301):
Setting aside the fact that for many texts these fine differences in meaning do not matter, it could be argued that the only true synonymy is repetition, including a lexical item's formal scatter (e.g. defeat, defeats, defeated, defeating).  But even here, an item's derivational scatter gives one pause.  Looked at from the point of view of repetition, the difference between synonymy and co-hyponymy can be thought of as an [sic] a kind of scale, graded along the following lines:

same meaning




defeat:defeat
repetition
defeat:defeats
inflectional difference
defeating:defeat
derivational difference
defeat:down
synonym
defeat:trounce
attitudinal difference
defeat:subjugate
co-hyponyms
another meaning




Blogger Comments:

[1] In SFL theory, synonymy is a means of lexical cohesion, where 'a speaker or writer creates cohesion in discourse through the choice of lexical items' (Halliday & Matthiessen 2004: 570).

[2] Synonymy and repetition are both relations of identity; that is what they have in common.  In synonymy, the token and value are different lexical items, whereas in repetition, the token and value are the same lexical item; that is how they differ.  Repetition is not 'the only true synonymy', it is a limiting case of synonymy.

[3] This confuses the two abstractions, lexical and grammatical, of the notion of 'word'.  The variation in the form of words according to their grammatical function is the word as one the ranks in grammatical systems, not the word as lexical item or lexeme.  See Halliday & Matthiessen (1999: 568).

[4] The difference between synonymy and co-hyponymy is that synonyms are similar in meaning, whereas co-hyponyms are members of the same class.  Dogs and cats are co-members of many classes (domestic pets, carnivores), but they are not synonyms.  Cf co-meronyms: parts of the same whole (brain, stomach).

[5] The 'grading' confuses a number of variables, including lexis vs grammar, and experiential vs interpersonal meaning.

[6] The difference between 'defeat' and 'defeating' (note the change in order) is inflectional rather than derivational, except in the comparatively rare case where the latter functions as a nominal.

[7] The words 'defeat' and 'trounce' are also synonyms (experiential meaning), whatever their difference in attitude (interpersonal meaning).

[8] The words 'defeat' and 'subjugate' are also synonyms; a specific class of which their meanings are both hyponyms is less obvious.

Saturday, 26 September 2015

Misconstruing Synonymy

Martin (1992: 300, 301):
Closely related to hyponymy is the category of synonymy.  Indeed, synonyms might well be defined as co-hyponyms for which differences in meaning do not matter. The difference between synonyms and co-hyponyms is in other words largely a question of delicacy with respect to a particular field.

Blogger Comments:

[1] In SFL theory, the difference between hyponymy and synonymy is the difference in elaboration between class membership (attributive relation) and identity (identifying relation).  See Halliday & Matthiessen (2004: 572).

[2] The focus shifts here from the ("vertical") relation of hyponymy to the ("horizontal") relation between co-hyponyms — as if the latter is also hyponymy.

Co-hyponyms, like co-meronyms, can be synonyms or not; synonyms can co-hyponyms, or co-meronyms, or not.

Friday, 25 September 2015

Misconstruing Ellipsis Of Repetition As Relational Hyp(er)onymy

Martin (1992: 299):
Depending on the field the relationship between hyponym and hyperonym has different names.  These are commonly realised through Pre-Classifier structures (for which see Martin 1988): a class of noun, a make of car, a breed of dogs etc.  And they are used cohesively as well: Like my new car? — Yes, what make is it?  A cohesive relationship between one of these items and the hyponym it relates to a hyperonym will be referred to as relational hyponymy/hyperonymy.  Typical realisations include: class, kind, type, form, breed, make, sort, style, species, order, family, variety, genre, grade, brand, caste, category.

Blogger Comments:

[1] In SFL theory, this nominal group function is termed 'extended Numerative: variety', which is the cross-classification of 'collective' and 'type'.  See Halliday & Matthiessen (2004: 333).

a
make
of
car
Numerative: variety
Thing
Premodifier
Head
Postmodifier


[2] The cohesion in the response includes ellipsis of an entire clause, and anaphoric personal reference of it to my new car.  But most pertinent here is the ellipsis of the potential lexical repetition of car.

do
you
like
my new car
Finite
Subject
Predicator
Complement

yes
I
do
like
your new car
mood Adjunct: polarity
Subject
Finite
Predicator
Complement


what make of car
is
it
Subject
Finite
Complement

[3] The notion of a 'relational hyponymy/hyperonymy' therefore arises from not recognising a cohesive relation.