Wednesday, 7 October 2015

An Unwarranted Claim About the System Of Identification

Martin (1992: 309):
This interaction between IDENTIFICATION and IDEATION provides a criterion for determining when relations between lexical items are cohesive.  They can be treated as such where one item codes sufficient experiential meaning to be presumed by another, either directly, or indirectly through bridging.

Blogger Comments:

[1] This was not demonstrated to be the case — even if the (previously discussed) confusion between reference and lexical cohesion in the discourse system of IDENTIFICATION is ignored. The examples used to argue the case were all clear cases of lexical cohesion: hyponymy (flowers-roses, insects-mosquitos) and meronymy (stadium-track, chimney-cottage). The system of IDENTIFICATION provided no criterion — it was irrelevant — for determining whether there was a lexically cohesive relation.

[2] In SFL theory, relations between lexical items are cohesive when items, as bundles of lexical features, are related by either repetition, synonymy, hyponymy, meronymy or collocation.

Tuesday, 6 October 2015

Misrepresenting Meronymy As Bridging Meronymy

Martin (1992: 308):
Bridging is also possible with parts and wholes, working in either direction:
BRIDGING: PART FROM WHOLE
[5:23] Ben walked into the stadium, to look at the track
BRIDGING: WHOLE FROM PART
[5:24] Ben saw a chimney. He was close to the cottage now.

Blogger Comments:

These are just clear cases of meronymy (lexical cohesion).  The underlined grammatical reference item the is irrelevant to the cohesiveness of the lexical relation.

Monday, 5 October 2015

Misrepresenting Hyponymy As Bridging Hyponymy

Martin (1992: 308):
Hyponyms do not directly presume their superordinates, but they may presume them indirectly through bridging. … In the following examples hyponyms are bridged from their superordinates:
BRIDGING: HYPONYM FROM HYPERONYM
[5:23]  Ben admired his flowers, especially the roses.  
BRIDGING: HYPONYM FROM HYPERONYM
[5:24]  Ben hated the insects, especially the mosquitos.

Blogger Comment:

These are just clear cases of hyponymy.  The underlined grammatical reference item the is irrelevant to the cohesiveness of the lexical relation.

Sunday, 4 October 2015

Confusing Lexical Cohesion And Reference

Martin (1992: 308):
One way of resolving the question of how taxonomic distance affects cohesion is to make use of IDENTIFICATION and test items to see whether they are experientially close enough for one to have been presumed by the other.  Along these lines, the flower straightforwardly presumes a rose, as the insect presumes a mosquito.  Hyponyms do not directly presume their superordinates, but they may presume them indirectly through bridging.  The reason for this difference is that superordinates contain less information than their hyponyms, while hyponyms encode all of the experiential meaning of their superordinates.  This asymmetry is reflected in definitions:
rose  a beautiful & usually fragrant flower usually of red or yellow or white

Blogger Comments:


[1] This continues the confusion of grammatical reference and lexical cohesion, as previously explained here.

[2] Whether the reference item the in the flower presumes that the identity ('which flower?') is recoverable in a rose depends crucially on the co-text.  On the other hand, what is straightforward is the hyponymic relation between flower and rose.

Likewise, whether the reference item the in the insect presumes that the identity ('which insect?') is recoverable in a mosquito depends crucially on the co-text.  On the other hand, what is straightforward is the hyponymic relation between insect and mosquito.

[3] In SFL theory, lexically cohesive hyponymic relations do not involve presumption.

[4] The relation between superordinates and hyponyms is delicacy.  Superordinates are more general (broader) categories, hyponyms are more specific (narrower) categories.

[5] In terms of the SFL theoretical architecture, hyponymy combines (logical) elaboration with (experiential) attribution.  Accordingly, there is no encoding in hyponymy, because encoding is a direction of coding in identifying relations.  The experiential relation between hyponym and superordinate is class membership, not identity.

[6] Any informational asymmetry in the attributive relation between hyponyms and superordinates (Carriers and Attributes) is not "reflected" in the identifying relation between words and meanings (Tokens and Values).

Saturday, 3 October 2015

Misconstruing Synonymy + Collocation As Relational Meronymy

Martin (1992: 307):
The second type [of collective item] cannot function as a Pre-Numerative: *a cattle of cows and calves or *a furniture of chairs and sofas are nonsense.  These items do nevertheless assemble a potentially heterogenous [sic] collection of individuals into a single group.  They function "cohesively" in examples like Ben put the cutlery, glasses and plates into the sink and washed up the dishes.  This set includes cattle, clergy, furniture, dishes, cutlery, beverages, parts of speech, shrubbery, collection, constellation, galaxy, solar system, compilation, assembly, company, conference, stable, troupe, orchestra, band, conglomeration, portfolio.

Blogger Comments:

[1] At least 12 of the 22 examples can function as Numeratives; these are all extended Numeratives of the type aggregate (collective measure).

[2] The lexical cohesion between dishes and plates is synonymy, and the lexical cohesion between dishes and each of cutlery and glasses is collocation.  Martin would appear to think that 'dishes' refers to an assembly of cutlery, glasses and plates.

[3] This "collective item" is actually a nominal group that includes an extended Numerative: facet (partitive + type) — in contradistinction to aggregates, which are collective + measure.

Friday, 2 October 2015

Misconstruing Ellipsis Of Repetition As Relational Meronymy [3]

Martin (1992: 306):
One set [of collectives] functions in Pre-Numerative position, as with the measure meronymy introduced above.  But here there function is to group together individuals rather than separate them out by parts (thus a member of the flock contrasts with a flock of geese).  Seen from the perspective of English's number system, their function is to reconstruct count nouns as a mass.  Like other items functioning in Pre-Numerative structures, they can be used cohesively between clauses: Did you see the ships? — I saw the whole squadron.

Blogger Comments:

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

[2] In SFL theory, the contrast here is between portion (partitive measure) and aggregate (collective measure).  In partitives, Head < Thing (e.g. member < flock), whereas in collectives, Head > Thing (e.g. flock > geese).


a
member
of
the
flock
Numerative: portion
Deictic
Thing

a
flock
of
geese
Numerative: aggregate
Thing

[3] From the perspective of English's number system, these are all count nouns, not mass nouns.

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

did
you
see
the ships
Finite
Subject
Predicator
Complement

we
saw
the whole squadron of ships
Subject
Finite
Predicator
Complement

Thursday, 1 October 2015

Misconstruing Location (Enhancement) As Possession (Extension)

Martin (1992: 305):
A further distinction can be drawn between alienable and inalienable part/whole relations.  These are not grammatically distinguished in English possessive constructions (e.g. the front garden's trees and the car's boot).  But when the whole is realised as a qualifier, inalienable possessives favour the preposition of, whereas alienable ones are more likely to be introduced with locative prepositions such as in, inside, within etc.
Table 5.6. Alienable and inalienable possession
alienable
(the tree in the garden)
inalienable
(the boot of the car)
garden:tree::
tree:boot::
room:chair::
room:wall::
stream:fish::
fish:gills::
car:spare tire::
car:boot::
cup:coffee
cup:handle

Blogger Comments:

[1] In SFL theory, composition (meronymy) and possession are two distinct subtypes of the expansion category extension (see Halliday & Matthiessen 1999: 146).  Here possession is presented as a subtype of composition.   That is, it misconstrues two SFL co-hyponyms as related by hyponymy.

[2] Here the relation of alienable possession (extension) is confused with the relation of location (enhancement).

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.