Ministry of higher education, science and innovation bukhara state university foreign languagesfaculty


Phonetic coincidence and semantic differentiation


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4. Phonetic coincidence and semantic differentiation
Very often one symbol may serve to render several different meanings. The phenomenon may be said to be the reverse of synonymy where several symbols correspond to one meaning.
Two or more words identical in sound and spelling but different in meaning, distribution and origin are called homonyms. The term is derived from Greek ( homos-“similar”, onoma-“name”).
E.g.,there is an obvious difference between the meanings of the symbol “fast” in such combinations asrun fast(quickly) andstand fast(firmly).
The difference is even more pronounced if we observe cases wherefastis a noun or a verb, as in the following proverbs:A clean fast is better than a dirty breakfast; who feasts till he is sick, must fast till he is well.
E.g.,liver (a living person and organ of body).—Is life worth living? –It depends on the liver.
Very seldom ambiguity of this kind interferes with understanding.
Homonyms exist in many languages, but in English they are particularly frequent, especially among monosyllabic words.
The most widely accepted classification is that recognizing homonyms proper, homophones and homographs.
Homonyms properare words identical in pronunciation and spelling, likefast, liver, or scale– a basis for the system of measuring, andscale– one of the thin plates that form the outer covering of most fishes and reptiles.
Homophonesare words of the same sound but of different spelling and meaning:air –heir, arms –alms, buy – bye, knight –night, not – knot, reign – rain, etc.
E.g., The man on my right thinks it right that some conventional rite should symbolize the right of every man to write as he pleases.
The difference may be confined to the use of a capital letter as in billandBillin the following sent. -- Haw much is my milk bill? – Excuse me, Madam, but my name is John.
Homographsare words different in sound and meaning but accidentally identical in spelling:bow [bou] – bow [bau], lead [li:d] – lead [led], row [rou] – row [rau],etc.
It has been argued that homographs are such a phenomenon that should be kept apart from homonymy as the object of linguistics is sound language. It can hardly be accepted because written English is a generalized national form of expression. A speaker does not separate the written and oral form. He is even more likely to analyze words in terms of letters than in terms of phonemes with which he is less familiar. That is why a linguist must take into consideration both the spelling and the pronunciation of words when analyzing cases of identity of form and diversity of content.
The intense development of homonymy in the English language is due not to only one single factor, but to several interrelated causes, such as monosyllabic character of English and its analytical structure. Inflections have almost disappeared in present-day English and have been superseded by separate words of abstract character (prepositions, auxiliaries) stating the relations that were once expressed by terminations.
The abundance of homonyms is also closely connected with such a feature of English as the predominance of free forms among the most frequent roots.
Different causes by which homonymy may be brought about are subdivided into two main groups:
1. homonymy through convergent sound development, when two or three words of different origin accidentally coincide in sound form.
2. homonymy developed from Polysemy through divergent sense development.
Both may be combined with loss of endings and other morphological processes.
E.g., O.E. gesund – M.E. sound (healthy).
Words identical in sound-form but different in meaning are traditionally termed homonyms.
Modern English is exceptionally rich in homonymous words and word- forms. It is held that languages where short words abound have more homonyms than those where longer words are prevalent. Therefore it is sometimes suggested that abundance of homonyms in Modern English is to be accounted for by the monosyllabic structure of the commonly used English words.1
Homonymy of Words and Homonymy of Word-Forms
When analyzing different cases of homonymy we find that some words are homonymous in all their forms, i.e. we observe full homonymy of the paradigms of two or more different words, e.g., in seal,—'a sea animal' and seal—'a design printed on paper by means of a stamp'. The paradigm "seal, seal's, seals, seals'" is identical for both of them and gives no indication of whether it is seal, or seal. that we are analyzing. In other cases, e.g. seal;—'a sea animal' and (to) seal—'to close tightly', we see that although some individual word- forms are homonymous, the whole of the paradigm is not identical. Com pare, for instance, the paradigms:
seal (to) seal
seal seal seal's seals seals sealed seals'sealing, etc.
It is easily observed that only some of the word-forms (e.g.seal, seals,etc.) are homonymous, whereas others (e.g. sealed, sealing) are not. In such cases we cannot speak of homonymous words but only of homonymy of individual word-forms or of partial homonymy. This is true of a number of other cases, e.g. comparefind[famd], found [faund],found[faund], andfound[faund],foundedt'faundid], founded t'faundidl;know[nou],knows[nouz],knew[nju:], and no [nouj;nose[nouz],nosest'nouzis];new[nju:] in which partial homonymy is observed.


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