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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
semantic
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
analyser
▪ Conclusions: At present the semantic analyser uses only first level information.
▪ The syntactic analyser identifies the most syntactically acceptable word strings, whilst the semantic analyser identifies the most semantically plausible.
▪ Practical uses of this technique, and the interrelation with other knowledge sources within the semantic analyser are discussed below.
▪ Collocations represent a further linguistic constraint upon text, and as such may be exploited by the semantic analyser.
analysis
▪ This suggests that it is not only at the levels of syntactic and semantic analysis that language processing is interactive.
▪ This sentence would receive roughly the syntactic and semantic analysis shown in tree 6. 1.
▪ Phonological analysis also interacts with syntactic and semantic analysis.
▪ But semantic analysis also applies to those expressions that are made up of words: phrases and sentences.
▪ There is a parallel to this process of transformation in semantic analysis.
▪ This model allowed only semantic analysis, output from the syntactic analysis and feedback to the lexical and syntactic analysis was forbidden.
▪ It is suggested that semantic analysis using machine-readable dictionaries is restricted to their definitions and not their expansions.
▪ Rule-based methods offer some method of combining the two together - the grammar is able to provide information to the semantic analysis.
category
▪ The grammar took advantage of the limited domain by employing semantic categories and contained many domain specific word combinations.
change
▪ In the early post-war years, a semantic change is detectable.
▪ It is also the case that the structure of a semantic field plays a role in semantic change.
▪ The fact that this is partly a semantic change, reflects the existence of an underlying consensus.
▪ However semantic change often gives an unexpected bonus, which one should accept in this case as in others.
constraint
▪ The semantic constraint may take precedence over acoustic information. 4.2.2.2.
▪ This example illustrates again the important difference between semantic constraints and these sorts of pragmatic constraints.
▪ By choosing to override semantic constraints, the speaker will be speaking nonliterally.
content
▪ Their utterances are syntactically simpler, contain a narrower range of semantic content, and less frequently refer outside the here-and-now.
contrast
▪ Another useful and reliable intuition is that of recurrence of semantic contrast, or semantic proportion.
difference
▪ Most, but not all, of these grammatical differences are correlated with semantic differences.
element
▪ In other words, there is a syntactic or semantic element which might function deictically.
▪ The semantic elements represented by the radicals were not always added because they were needed as disambiguating elements.
field
▪ What dissimilar semantic fields are related through simile?
▪ It is difficult to be very precise about what counts as a semantic field.
▪ Do all time words form a semantic field?
▪ It is also the case that the structure of a semantic field plays a role in semantic change.
information
▪ For example this can be syntactic and semantic information to ensure more meaningful results, especially for running text.
▪ Taking these two considerations together, it seems reasonable to conclude that semantic information is an integral part of a grammar.
▪ Useful semantic information therefore facilitates the incidence of meaningful strong overlaps in normal text.
▪ Give two reasons for including a representation of semantic information in a grammar. 2.
▪ The syntactic and semantic information about each of these words is then made available to the relevant processors.
▪ Both syntactic and semantic information could be used more effectively than at present.
▪ A number of sources of semantic information are identified, the most notable of which being machine-readable dictionaries and text corpora.
▪ A central issue is whether syntactic and semantic information contribute independently or interact in the comprehension process.
knowledge
▪ This thesis is concerned with the application of semantic knowledge to the problem of text recognition.
▪ The use of semantic knowledge, its theory, application and relevance to text recognition forms the basis of this thesis.
▪ The next section reviews published natural language applications that have in some way addressed the problem of semantic knowledge representation and processing.
▪ But it does appear that asking people what things mean is not necessarily the best way of tapping their semantic knowledge.
▪ Similarly, eye movement studies have been used to demonstrate the role of semantic knowledge in the reading process.
▪ Similarly, the use of semantic knowledge is described in other sections of this thesis.
net
▪ Detecting patterns in a large, complex semantic net is difficult to do without the aid of computer programs.
▪ The semantic net of remedial was expanding and expanding.
▪ In the bottom-up approach the paragraphs are first collected, and the semantic net is built as the paragraphs are indexed.
▪ Rough notes may be entered and do not need to be attached to the semantic net.
▪ To build and maintain a semantic net, indexing of paragraphs and semantic net construction go hand-in-hand.
▪ The purpose of the semantic net is to give people an overview of or handle on the content of the text.
▪ A semantic net lends itself to graphic display, and its meaning tends to be intuitively, if not formally, clear.
▪ The role of the semantic net is being explored in this new environment.
processing
▪ Dispersed through the above discussion are also elements from a kind of linguistic analysis which transcends the traditional syntactic and semantic processing.
▪ As with syntax there are two ways of approaching semantic processing.
▪ The relationship between syntactic and semantic processing has been a central concern of psycholinguistics for the last two decades.
▪ Humans perform both syntactic and semantic processing when reading.
▪ They also have the well-defined approach to semantic processing and have led to theoretically clean and fairly efficient computational representations. 3.2.2.
▪ Published literature on the role of semantic processing within computerised text recognition is sparse.
▪ The aim of semantic processing is to demote word combinations that are not meaningful.
▪ A second approach combines syntactic and semantic processing.
property
▪ But some symbols acquire their additional semantic properties from some characteristic they have as actions or things.
▪ The second question concerning the goals of a semantic theory is, How should the theory handle these semantic properties and relations?
▪ Like the theories Brooke-Rose criticizes in 1958, this view conceives of metaphor in terms of semantic property to be fought over and captured.
▪ Another important semantic property of words, in particular words put together into phrases, is anomaly.
relationship
▪ Hence the expansion of dictionary definitions descends into progressive generality, displaying a weaker and weaker semantic relationship with the original word.
Relationships such as those shown in the hierarchy in Figure 12.1 are known as semantic relationships, representing connections between associated subjects.
▪ Syntactic relationships thus occur in documents, but are less permanent than semantic relationships.
system
▪ A pronunciation is addressed either with or without the mediation of the semantic system - our store of word meanings.
▪ We wish to distinguish between lexical input systems, lexical output systems, and a semantic system.
▪ The ambiguity of the social system is present in the semantic system too.
theory
▪ However, during the present project the limitations of the established semantic theories have become apparent.
▪ A number of semantic theories have been discussed; these are shown to differ widely in terms of their representational aspects.
▪ What should a semantic theory do, and how?
▪ There have been a number of semantic theories proposed.
▪ Thus, if an expression is meaningful, the semantic theory should say so.
▪ To what then, should the present project turn, for its semantic theories, principles, and data sources?
▪ If it has a specific set of meanings, the semantic theory should specify them.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The semantic distinction between "criticism" and "feedback" can be important.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A semantic constituent which can not be segmented into more elementary semantic constituents will be termed a minimal semantic constituent.
▪ Another important semantic property of words, in particular words put together into phrases, is anomaly.
▪ How might we represent these kinds of facts in a semantic theory?
▪ However, during the present project the limitations of the established semantic theories have become apparent.
▪ It is, of course, perfectly possible for a sentence to exhibit semantic and grammatical deviance simultaneously: 7.
▪ Modifiers can create other complications for compositionality, which must also be reflected in a semantic theory of the language.
▪ The syntactic and semantic information about each of these words is then made available to the relevant processors.
▪ This example illustrates again the important difference between semantic constraints and these sorts of pragmatic constraints.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Semantic

Semantic \Sem*an"tic\, Semantical \Sem*an"tic*al\, n. sing. or pl. [Gr. shmantikos having meaning, from sh^ma a sign.]

  1. pertaining to the meanings of words.

  2. of or pertaining to semantics.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
semantic

1894, from French sémantique, applied by Michel Bréal (1883) to the psychology of language, from Greek semantikos "significant," from semainein "to show by sign, signify, point out, indicate by a sign," from sema "sign, mark, token; omen, portent; constellation; grave" (Doric sama), from PIE root *dheie- "to see, look" (cognates: Sanskrit dhyati "he meditates;" see zen).

Wiktionary
semantic

a. 1 Of or relating to semantics or the meanings of words. 2 (context software design of code English) Reflecting intended structure and meaning. 3 (label en slang of a detail or distinction) petty or trivial; (context of a person or statement English) quibble, niggle.

WordNet
semantic

adj. of or relating to the study of meaning and changes of meaning; "semantic analysis"

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "semantic".

Speech melody must be processed by the listener in as much as lexical speech melody and intonational speech melody provide part of the semantic content of speech.

He makes laughter itself the central semantic object of his own novelistic repetition, his playful digressions and meditations.

Through the wide range of repetitions where all the levels of composition and structure concur in a common Donjuanesque examination of time, Kundera achieves a fascinating novelistic synthesis in which the esthetic, erotic, ethical, playful and cognitive functions combine as in a single semantic river.

Through continual excursions into the semantic crossroads of each one of his words, Kundera reinvests the language with a little of its forgotten polysemy, relativity and laughter.

They constituted a language, a real and infinitely precise language, a language given by the semantic selector as it oriented the prepunched molecules that formed his brain.

Intellectually, the libraries and active mental configurations of the Sophotech segment of the population embodied uncountable quadrillions of units of information, infinitesimal processing times and nonsequential semantic and symbolic arrangements no human mind, no matter how augmented, could understand.

Through the wide range of repetitions where all the levels of composition and structure concur in a common Donjuanesque examination of time, Kundera achieves a fascinating novelistic synthesis in which the esthetic, erotic, ethical, playful and cognitive functions combine as in a single semantic river.

This reverse process, far from being limited with Kundera to an analogy accompanied by a mere substitution of characters, achieves the status of a veritable gnoseological exploration of the theme through its numerous semantic and formal, textual and intertextual transformations.

He backtracked his train of thought, but the word had suddenly lost all semantic reference and become only two meaningless syllables, odd-sounding and flat.

The semantic confusions surrounding these topics are an absolute nightmare, confusions that have bred an inordinate amount of ideological fury on both sides, and unless we attempt to clear up some of this confusion, the discussion simply cannot go forward.

The professor who had instructed them about the use of subliminals, keywords, semantic triggers, and cultural progressions in the world of advertising.

Granted that psychologists have described a whole taxonomy of memory, procedural and declarative, episodic and semantic, working and reference, should one expect similar underlying biochemical and cellular changes to be involved in each, or would every form of memory have its own special biochemistry?

I suspect what he does is almost instantly to analyze the pattern, identify universals of logic and conation, go on from there to reconstruct the whole mental configuration—as if his nervous system included not only sensitivity to the radiation of others, but an organic semantic computer fantastically beyond anything that Technic civilization has built.

I suspect what he does is almost instantly to analyze the pattern, identify universals of logic and conation, go on from there to reconstruct the whole mental configuration-as if his nervous system included not only sensitivity to the radiation of others, but an organic semantic computer fantastically beyond anything that Technic civilization has built.

One of these semantic memes asserted that bit-pattern designators should be assigned in numerical order, so that (for example) Hive Mind One would be designated RIST 0001 and so on.