- Source: Troponymy
In linguistics, troponymy is the presence of a 'manner' relation between two lexemes.
The concept was originally proposed by Christiane Fellbaum and George Miller. Some examples they gave are "to nibble is to eat in a certain manner, and to gorge is to eat in a different manner. Similarly, to traipse or to mince is to walk in some manner".
Troponymy is one of the possible relations between verbs in the semantic network of the WordNet database.
See also
Hyponymy and hypernymy
Hierarchy § Subsumptive containment hierarchy
Is-a
Hypernymy (and supertype)
Hyponymy (and subtype)
Has-a
Holonymy
Meronymy
Lexical chain
Ontology (information science)
Polysemy
Semantic primes
Semantic satiation
Thematic role
Word sense
Word sense disambiguation
References
= Inline citations
== Sources
=Fellbaum, C; Miller, G (1990). "Folk psychology or semantic entailment? A reply to Rips and Conrad (1989)". Psychological Review. 97: 565–570. doi:10.1037/0033-295x.97.4.565.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Troponymy
- Polysemy
- Semantic network
- List of Greek and Latin roots in English/H–O
- List of Greek and Latin roots in English/O
- Lexical semantics
- Semantic lexicon