NMTS-Group1: Difference between revisions
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a) Also phrases and whole sentences can have more than more than one meaning. How is this form of ambiguity called?<br /> | a) Also phrases and whole sentences can have more than more than one meaning. How is this form of ambiguity called?<br /> | ||
1. [[Group1-Ex2-Solution-a-1|Scope Ambiguity]]<br /> | |||
2. [[Group1-Ex2-Solution-a-2|Lexical Ambiguity]] <br /> | |||
3. [[Group1-Ex2-Solution-a-3|Structural Ambiguity]] <br /> | |||
b) Which two meanings does the following sentence contain? Paraphrase them.<br /> | b) Which two meanings does the following sentence contain? Paraphrase them.<br /> | ||
''We need more intelligent administrators''.<br /> | ''We need more intelligent administrators''.<br /> | ||
1. [[Group1-Ex2-b-Solutions|Paraphrases]]<br /> | |||
c) Draw the two different trees of the following paraphrase.<br /> | c) Draw the two different trees of the following paraphrase.<br /> | ||
''poor women and men''<br /> | ''poor women and men''<br /> | ||
--> [[Group1-Ex2-c-Solutions|Trees]]<br /> | |||
d) Draw the two different trees of the following sentence.<br /> | d) Draw the two different trees of the following sentence.<br /> | ||
''Peter saw the girl with binoculars''.<br /> | ''Peter saw the girl with binoculars''.<br /> | ||
--> [[Group1-Ex2-d-Solutions|Trees]]<br /> | |||
e) Think of an ambiguous phrase or sentence on your own and explain its ambiguity.<br /> | e) Think of an ambiguous phrase or sentence on your own and explain its ambiguity.<br /> |
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Ambiguity (Group 1)
Overview
Members
Short description of the topic
Ambiguity is an extremely widespread phenomenon on which many puns and jokes are based on.
It can be differentiated between lexical and structural ambiguity. Lexical ambiguity is defined as words having multiple meanings.
Example:
Is life worth living? It depends on the liver.
Structural ambiguity arises when the syntactic structure of a sentence allows more than one meaning.
Example:
rich women and men: [rich women] and men or rich [women or men]
Anna saw tourists with binoculars.: Anna saw [tourists with binoculars] or Anna saw [tourists] with binoculars.
A double meaning is created on the lexical or structural level of meaning by:
References and links
References
- Bieswanger, Markus & Annette Becker. 2006. Introduction to English Linguistics (3rd edition). Tübingen and Basel: A. Francke Verlag.
- Kortmann, Bernd. 2005. English Linguistics: Essentials. Berlin: Cornelsen Verlag.
- Fromkin, Victoria; Rodman, Robert & Hyams, Nina. 2003. An Introduction to Language (7th edition). Boston: Thomson Heinle.
- Matthias Bauer, Joachim Knape, Peter Koch, Susanne Winkler (2010): Dimensionen der Ambiguität. Zeitschrift für Literaturwissenschaft und Linguistik 158, 7-75.
Links
Our e-learning objects
Our wikipages
- antonym (definition in Basic Glossary)
- entailment (definition in Basic Glossary)
- homograph (definition in Basic Glossary)
- register (definition in Basic Glossary)
- structural ambiguity (definition in Basic Glossary)
Our podcasts
List all the podcasts that were created by your group.
Our materials for an interactive whiteboard
List all the files that your group created for the interactive whiteboard.
Our pictures
Our exercises
Provide links to all the exercises that your group has created.
- Exercise on types of ambiguities. Link to the exercise (only one example so far).
- Exercise I: general definition of ambiguity
a) What is an ambiguous word?
1. a word with only meaning
2. a polysemous word, i.e. a sound sequence that has two or more different, but semantically related meanings
3. a homophone word, i.e. a form that has two or more distinct meanings, but is pronounced in the same way
b) What is the technical term for words that have more than one meaning?
1. scope ambiguity
2. lexical ambiguity
3. structural ambiguity
c) Which word is the ambiguous word in the sentence?
1. I bought it.
2. There is no bank in this town.
d) Can you explain the ambiguity in c) by paraphrasing the sentences?
Check your solution!
e) Think of three sentences in which the word “hot” has different meanings.
Check your solution!
- Exercise II: different types of ambiguity
a) Also phrases and whole sentences can have more than more than one meaning. How is this form of ambiguity called?
1. Scope Ambiguity
2. Lexical Ambiguity
3. Structural Ambiguity
b) Which two meanings does the following sentence contain? Paraphrase them.
We need more intelligent administrators.
1. Paraphrases
c) Draw the two different trees of the following paraphrase.
poor women and men
--> Trees
d) Draw the two different trees of the following sentence.
Peter saw the girl with binoculars.
--> Trees
e) Think of an ambiguous phrase or sentence on your own and explain its ambiguity.