Glossary:Negated Antonymy: Difference between revisions

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==General definition==
==General definition==
'''Negated Antonymy''' is used to emphasize one term by denying the other. This sort of antonym is part of the minor classes (see [[Glossary:Interrogative_Antonymy|Interrogative]],[[Glossary:Negated_Antonymy|Negated]], [[Glossary:Transitional_Antonymy|Transitional]] and [[Glossary:Comparative_Antonymy| Comparative Antonymy]].
'''Negated Antonymy''' is used to emphasize one term by denying the other. This sort of antonym is part of the minor classes (see [[Glossary:Interrogative_Antonymy|Interrogative]],[[Glossary:Distinguished_Antonymy|Distingished]], [[Glossary:Transitional_Antonymy|Transitional]] and [[Glossary:Comparative_Antonymy| Comparative Antonymy]].


==General pattern==
==General pattern==

Revision as of 15:16, 26 March 2013

Negated Antonymy

Pronounciation

/nɪˈɡeɪtɪt ˈæntənɪmi/

General definition

Negated Antonymy is used to emphasize one term by denying the other. This sort of antonym is part of the minor classes (see Interrogative,Distingished, Transitional and Comparative Antonymy.

General pattern

X, not Y

Example

That's not little, it's big.
The public has cause for pessimism, not optimism.

References

  • Jones, Stephen; Murphy, M. Lynne (2005). Using corpora to investigate antonym acquisition. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics 10:3. John Benjamin Publishing Company.
  • Murphy, M. Lynne; Jones, Stephen (2008 November). Antonyms in children's and child-directed speech. First language 28 (4[87]).