Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
Towards a cognitive model of antonymy.
Semantic relations and the lexicon: Antonymy, synonymy, and other paradigms.
Paradigmatic relations of exclusion and opposition I: Gradable antonymy and complementarity.
Markedness and antonymy.
Lexical selection errors are based on semantic relations such as synonymy, antonymy or membership of the same lexical field.
Beyond the expression itself, there are higher-level semantic relations that describe the relationship between units: these include synonymy, antonymy, and hyponymy.
The term antonym (and the related antonymy) is commonly taken to be synonymous with opposite, but antonym also has other more restricted meanings.
Semantic relations between words are of many kinds, for example homonymy, antonymy, meronymy, and paronymy.
Frege's notion of analyticity included a number of logical properties and relations beyond containment: symmetry, transitivity, antonymy, or negation and so on.
Jones, S. (2002), Antonymy: A Corpus-based perspective London and New York: Routledge.
As tools, lexical relations like synonymy, antonymy (opposites), hyponymy and hypernymy - and to a certain degree homonymy as well - are used in this field.
Semantical relations between words are manifested in respect of homonymy, antonymy, paronymy, etc. Semantics usually involved in lexicological work is called 'lexical semantics'.
Collocations can be in a syntactic relation (such as verb-object: 'make' and 'decision'), lexical relation (such as antonymy), or they can be in no linguistically defined relation.
These more restricted meanings may not apply in all scholarly contexts, with Lyons (1968, 1977) defining antonym to mean gradable antonyms, and Crystal (2003) warns that antonymy and antonym should be regarded with care.
A relatively small number of these have come to occupy focal positions in discussions of lexical semantics (such relations as antonymy, hyponymy and synonymy), and they form correspondingly prominent topics of the present and succeeding chapters.
The basic area of study is the meaning of signs, and the study of relations between different linguistic units and compounds: homonymy, synonymy, antonymy, hypernymy, hyponymy, meronymy, metonymy, holonymy, paronyms.
The semantic network includes all the lexico-semantic relations from WordNet (hypernymy and hyponymy, meronymy and holonymy, antonymy and synonymy, etc., totaling around 364,000 relation edges) as well as an underspecified relatedness relation from Wikipedia (totaling around 70 million relation edges).