Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Introduction and terminology
The meanings of words, and semantic analysis generally, can be discussed in terms of sense variation around a common core, and in terms of the kinds of affinities and contrasts we can discern between meanings.
Sense variation: homophony, homonymy, polysemy
In Chapter 8 we listed and commented on some roots and affixes that can easily be confused. We dealt with them under the umbrella of the neutral term homophony (‘sounding the same’). All of the pairs below count as homophones:
chair: to sit on vs. chair of a department
corn: grain, seed vs. corn on toe
crane: a bird vs. crane a machine
ear: of corn vs. ear organ of hearing
load: of dirt vs. lode in a gold mine
meal: ground up vs. meal at dinner time
mettle: in the sense of courage vs. metal in the sense of iron, copper
pupil: of your eye vs. pupil a student
score: a notch, vs. score a game result, vs. score a group of twenty
sea: body of water vs. see verb of perception
seal: aquatic mammal vs. seal a device for making imprints
sole: fish vs. sole only vs. sole of a shoe, vs. soul in a religious sense
trip: journey vs. trip to obstruct, cause to fall
waist: of a person vs. waste squander
The term homophony, useful as it is, bundles together words of the type chair (to sit on) – chair (of a department) and corn (on the cob) – corn (on toe).
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