Hyponymy and Hypernymy: Jump To Navigationjump To Search
Hyponymy and Hypernymy: Jump To Navigationjump To Search
Hyponymy and Hypernymy: Jump To Navigationjump To Search
o 1.1Co-hyponyms
o 1.2Autohyponyms
2Hyperonym or hypernym
3Usage
4See also
5Notes
6References
7Sources
8External links
A word is an autohyponym if it is used for both a hypernym and its hyponym.[12] For example,
the word dog describes both the species Canis familiaris and male individuals of Canis
familiaris, so it is possible to say "That dog isn't a dog, it's a bitch" ("That hypernym Z isn't a
hyponym Z, it's a hyponym Y"). The term "autohyponym" was coined by linguist Laurence
R. Horn in a 1984 paper, Ambiguity, negation, and the London School of
Parsimony. Linguist Ruth Kempson had already observed that if there are hyponyms for one
part of a set but not another, the hypernym can complement the existing hyponym by being
used for the remaining part. For example, fingers describe all digits on a hand, but the
existence of the word thumb for the first finger means that fingers can also be used for "non-
thumb digits on a hand".[13]Autohyponymy is also called "vertical polysemy".[a][14]
Horn called this "licensed polysemy", but found that autohyponyms also formed even when
there is no other hyponym. Yankee is autohyponymous because it is a hyponym (native of
New England) and its hypernym (native of the United States), even though there is no other
hyponym of Yankee (as native of the United States) that means "not a native of New
England".[b][13] Similarly, the verb to drink (a beverage) is a hypernym for to drink (an
alcoholic beverage).[13]
In some cases, autohyponyms duplicate existing, distinct hyponyms. The hypernym "smell"
(to emit any smell) has a hyponym "stink" (to emit a bad smell), but is autohyponymous
because "smell" can also mean "to emit a bad smell", even though there is no "to emit a smell
that isn't bad" hyponym.[13]
Hyperonym or hypernym[edit]
Both hyperonym and hypernym are in use in linguistics. The form hypernym takes the -
o- of hyponym as a part of hypo in the same way as in the contrast
between hypertension and hypotension. However, etymologically the -o- is part of the Greek
stem ónoma. In other combinations with this stem, e.g. synonym, it is never elided.
Therefore, hyperonym is etymologically more faithful than hypernym.[15] Hyperonymy is used,
for instance, by John Lyons, who does not mention hypernymy and prefers superordination.
[16]
The nominalization hyperonymy is rarely used, because the neutral term to refer to the
relationship is hyponymy. A practical reason to prefer hyperonym is that hypernym is in its
spoken form hard to distinguish from hyponym in most dialects of English.
Usage[edit]
Computer science often terms this relationship an "is-a" relationship. For example, the phrase
"Red is-a color" can be used to describe the hyponymic relationship between redand color.
Hyponymy is the most frequently encoded relation among synsets used in lexical databases
such as WordNet. These semantic relations can also be used to compare semantic
similarity by judging the distance between two synsets and to analyse anaphora.
As a hypernym can be understood as a more general word than its hyponym, the relation is
used in semantic compression by generalization to reduce a level of specialization.
The notion of hyponymy is particularly relevant to language translation, as hyponyms are
very common across languages. For example, in Japanese the word for older brother
is ani(兄), and the word for younger brother is otōto (弟). An English-to-Japanese translator
presented with a phrase containing the English word brother would have to choose which
Japanese word equivalent to use. This would be difficult, because abstract information (such
as the speakers' relative ages) is often not available during machine translation.
See also[edit]
Contrast set
Has-a
Is-a
Genus proximum
Meronymy and holonymy
-onym
Polysemy
Subcategory
Synonym
Taxonomy
WordNet (a semantic lexicon for the English language, which puts words in
semantic relations to each other, mainly by using the
concepts hypernym and hyponym)
Notes[edit]
1. ^ In part because the term autohyponymy is ambiguous because it is itself an autohyponym (see
Koskela)
2. ^ Horn identifies up to four layers of hyponym for Yankee: native of the United States, native of
the northern United States, native of New England, or WASP native of New England.
References[edit]
1. ^ Brinton, Laurel J. (2000). The Structure of Modern English: A Linguistic
Introduction(Illustrated ed.). John Benjamins Publishing Company. p. 112. ISBN 978-90-272-
2567-2.
2. ^ Fromkin, Victoria; Robert, Rodman (1998). Introduction to Language (6th ed.). Fort Worth:
Harcourt Brace College Publishers. ISBN 978-0-03-018682-0.[page needed]
3. ^ "Umbrella Term Law and Legal Definition". uslegal.com. Retrieved December
11, 2018. Umbrella term is also called a hypernym
4. ^ Alexander Dhoest (2016). LGBTQs, Media and Culture in Europe. Taylor & Francis.
p. 165. ISBN 9781317233138. Retrieved December 11, 2018. Hypernym can also be called an
"Umbrella term"
5. ^ Robert J. Sternberg (2011). Handbook of Intellectual Styles. Springer Publishing Company.
p. 73. ISBN 9780826106681. Retrieved December 11, 2018. umbrealla term, or hypernym
6. ^ Frank W. D. Röder (2011). The Roeder Protocol. Books on Demand. p. 77. ISBN 9783842351288.
Retrieved December 11, 2018. Synaptic plasticity is a hypernym (umbrella term)
7. ^ Jump up to: a b Maienborn, Claudia; von Heusinger, Klaus; Portner, Paul, eds. (2011). Semantics: An
International Handbook of Natural Language Meaning. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton. ISBN 978-3-
11-018470-9.
8. ^ Lyons, John (1977). Semantics. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-52-129165-1.
9. ^ Gao, Chunming; Xu, Bin (November 2013). "The Application of Semantic Field Theory to English
Vocabulary Learning". Theory and Practice in Language Studies. 3 (11): 2030–
2035. doi:10.4304/tpls.3.11.2030-2035. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
10. ^ Green, Rebecca; Bean, Carol A.; Sung, Hyon Myaeng (2002). The Semantics of Relationships: An
Interdisciplinary Perspective. Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
p. 12. ISBN 9781402005688. Retrieved 2014-10-17.
11. ^ Cruse, D. A. (2004). Meaning in Language: An Introduction to Semantics and
Pragmatics (PDF) (2 ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 162. Archived from the original(PDF) on
2014-10-17. Retrieved 2014-10-17.
12. ^ Gillon, Brendan S. (1990). "Ambiguity, generality, and indeterminacy: Tests and
definitions". Synthese. 85 (3): 391–
416. doi:10.1007/BF00484835. JSTOR 20116854. S2CID 15186368.
13. ^ Jump up to: Horn, Laurence R (1984). "Ambiguity, negation, and the London School of
a b c d
Sources[edit]
Snow, Rion; Daniel Jurafsky; Andrew Y. Ng (2004). "Learning syntactic patterns
for automatic hypernym discovery" (PDF). Advances in Neural Information
Processing Systems. 17.
Hearst, M. (1992). "Automatic acquisition of hyponyms from large text
corpora". Proceedings of 14th International Conference on Computational
Linguistics. 2: 539. doi:10.3115/992133.992154.
External links[edit]
Look
up hyponymy, hypernymy,
or hyperonymyin
Wiktionary, the free
dictionary.
Hypernym at Everything2.com
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