The meaning of meaning
1 The meaning of meaning
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Linguistic meaning operates at three levels—word, sentence, and utterance—and successful communication depends on shared conventions for both normal usage and creative extensions, with semantics studying inherent linguistic meaning and pragmatics studying meaning derived from context and use.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Three levels of meaning: word meaning, sentence meaning (semantic content), and utterance meaning (semantic content plus pragmatic inferences from context).
- Semantics vs pragmatics: semantics concerns inherent meaning of linguistic expressions; pragmatics concerns meaning that depends on how expressions are used in context.
- Shared conventions are essential: word meanings must be agreed upon by the speech community, yet can be stretched in rule-governed ways (Mark Twain's "good man in the worst sense" succeeds; Humpty Dumpty's arbitrary redefinition fails).
- Common confusion: sentence vs utterance—a sentence is a linguistic expression; an utterance is a speech event by a speaker in a specific context; the same sentence can produce different utterance meanings in different contexts.
- Form-meaning relationship: word forms are mostly arbitrary (except onomatopoeia); sentence meanings are compositional (predictable from word meanings plus syntax); utterance meanings are calculable from sentence meaning plus context via pragmatic principles.
🎭 Two ways to stretch meaning
✅ Successful extension (Mark Twain)
Mark Twain described someone as "a good man in the worst sense of the word."
- Twain uses good with nearly the opposite of its normal meaning (implying puritanical, self-righteous, judgmental, or hypocritical).
- Despite the unfamiliar usage, he successfully communicates his intended message.
- Why it works: the extension follows shared conventions for bending the rules; hearers can infer the intended meaning from context and shared pragmatic principles.
❌ Failed communication (Humpty Dumpty)
Humpty Dumpty claims "When I use a word, it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less."
- He tries to use glory to mean "a nice knock-down argument."
- Alice cannot understand him; communication fails.
- Why it fails: arbitrary, individual redefinition violates the fundamental requirement that meanings be shared by the speech community.
- Don't confuse: creative extension (following shared pragmatic rules) vs arbitrary redefinition (ignoring community conventions).
🔬 Semantics and pragmatics
🔬 Two divisions of meaning study
| Division | Focus | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Semantics | Inherent meaning of words and sentences as linguistic expressions in themselves | Dictionary meaning of good |
| Pragmatics | Aspects of meaning that depend on or derive from how expressions are used | Twain's negative implication when using good |
- The distinction is useful but the exact boundary is difficult to draw and remains controversial.
- The two interact in complex ways, so studying them together is beneficial.
📐 Defining semantics more precisely
Semantics: the study of the relationship between linguistic form and meaning.
- Not just "the study of meaning" in isolation.
- This relationship is rule-governed, just like syntax.
- Language learners acquire:
- Vocabulary (lexicon) with meanings
- Rules for combining words into sentences (syntax)
- Rules for interpreting the expressions formed when words are combined
- All components must be shared by the speech community for communication to work.
📊 Three levels of meaning
📝 Word meaning
- The meaning of individual vocabulary items.
- Must be learned and shared by the speech community.
- Example: the meaning of yellow allows us to identify objects that are yellow in color.
📄 Sentence meaning
Sentence meaning: the semantic content of the sentence; the meaning which derives from the words themselves, regardless of context.
- A sentence is a linguistic expression, a well-formed string of words.
- Sentence meaning is what the words literally say, independent of any particular use.
- Example: "Have you already eaten?" literally asks whether the addressee has eaten.
🗣️ Utterance meaning (speaker meaning)
Utterance meaning: the semantic content plus any pragmatic meaning created by the specific way in which the sentence gets used; "the totality of what the speaker intends to convey by making an utterance."
- An utterance is a speech event by a particular speaker in a specific context.
- When a speaker uses a sentence in a specific context, they produce an utterance.
- The same sentence can have different utterance meanings in different contexts.
🌏 Context-dependent interpretation example
The Teochew question "Have you already eaten?" illustrates context-dependence:
| Context | Utterance meaning | Relation to sentence meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Greeting between friends | Equivalent to "hello" or "How do you do?" | Utterance meaning differs greatly from sentence meaning |
| Doctor asking patient before medicine | Genuine request for information about eating | Utterance meaning matches sentence meaning |
- The literal (sentence) meaning is always "Have you already eaten or not?"
- The utterance meaning depends on who is speaking, to whom, and why.
🔗 Form-meaning relationships
🎲 Arbitrary relationship (most words)
- For most words, the relation between form (phonetic shape) and meaning is arbitrary.
- No inherent connection between the sound and what it refers to.
- Example: the word for 'dog' varies arbitrarily across languages—Armenian shun, Balinese cicin, Korean gae, Tagalog aso.
🔔 Partly conventional (onomatopoeia)
- Onomatopoetic words: forms intended to imitate sounds they refer to.
- Even these show conventional aspects; the same sound is represented differently across languages:
- Dog barking: English bow-wow, Balinese kong-kong, Armenian haf-haf, Korean mung-mung or wang-wang
- Cross-linguistic variation is not due to dogs barking differently in different places
- Common pattern: labial, velar, or labio-velar consonants and low back vowels
- The form-meaning relation is non-arbitrary but still partly conventional.
🧩 Compositional relationship (sentences)
Compositional: the meaning of the expression is predictable from the meanings of the words it contains and the way they are combined.
- The relation between sentence form and meaning is generally compositional, not arbitrary.
- Example: knowing yellow describes a color class and submarine describes a vehicle class, plus English syntax, allows us to infer that yellow submarine refers to something in both classes.
- This principle is fundamental to almost every topic in semantics.
🚫 Exception: idioms
- Idioms are non-compositional: the meaning is not predictable from individual words.
- Examples: kick the bucket = 'die'; X's goose is cooked = 'X is in serious trouble'
- The meaning of the whole phrase must be learned as a unit.
🎯 Calculable relationship (utterances)
- Utterance meaning is neither arbitrary nor strictly compositional.
- Utterance meanings are derivable (calculable) from sentence meaning plus context via pragmatic principles.
- Not always fully predictable; sometimes multiple interpretations are possible for a given utterance in a situation.
🤔 What does "mean" mean?
⚠️ The circularity problem
- Defining semantics as "the study of meaning" uses one English word to define another.
- This creates circularity: a definition only works if the words in the definition are themselves well-defined.
- We must ask: What is the meaning of meaning? What does mean mean?
🔤 Object language vs metalanguage
- Object language: the language being analyzed (e.g., Swahili, English).
- Metalanguage: the language used to describe the object language (e.g., English used to describe Swahili).
- Problem: when both are natural languages, both exhibit vagueness and ambiguities.
- Solution: many linguists use formal logic as a semantic metalanguage.
✍️ Mention vs use
- Mentioned expressions (object language): written in italics, referred to as objects of study.
- Example: "What is the meaning of meaning?"
- Used words (metalanguage): written in plain font, used in their normal sense.
- This distinction is crucial when using English to describe English.
🎯 Focusing on communicative intent
The excerpt limits its scope to:
- Kinds of meaning people intend to communicate via language.
- Not body language, dress, facial expressions, gestures (except in sign languages).
- Not unintended information a hearer may acquire.
🚫 Natural meaning vs linguistic meaning
- Natural meaning (philosopher Paul Grice's term): unintended information.
- Example: smoke "means" fire; a rasping voice "means" laryngitis.
- A suspect's inconsistent statement may reveal guilt to a detective, but guilt is not what the suspect intends to communicate.
- These types of inference are not the central focus.
🌍 The correspondence approach
An approach focusing on how speakers use language to talk about the world.
- Knowing word meanings allows us to identify the class of objects those words can refer to in a particular situation (universe of discourse).
- Knowing sentence meaning allows us to determine whether a sentence is true in a particular situation.
- Example: "It is raining" uttered at a particular time and place is true if it corresponds to the actual weather at that time and place.
- This is called the correspondence theory of truth.
📏 Meaning as truth conditions
- The meaning of a declarative sentence is the knowledge that allows speakers and hearers to determine whether it is true in a particular context.
- The principle of compositionality constrains word meanings: individual word meanings must compositionally determine correct sentence meanings.
- Some words (e.g., if, and, but) do not refer to things in the world; their meanings are defined by their contribution to sentence meanings.
🎬 Three questions about utterances
❓ What did the speaker say?
- What is the semantic content of the sentence?
- Philosopher Paul Grice used "What is said" to refer to sentence meaning.
💭 What did the speaker intend to communicate?
- Grice used the term implicature for intended but unspoken meaning.
- Aspects of utterance meaning that are not part of sentence meaning.
🎭 What is the speaker trying to do?
- What speech act is being performed?
- Speech acts are things people do by speaking (e.g., greeting, requesting information, making a promise).
🙏 Example: the word "please"
Consider: (a) "Please pass me the salt." (b) "Can you please pass me the salt?"
- Please does not contribute to sentence meaning (semantic content).
- Adding please to a true statement doesn't make it false; using it inappropriately is just odd.
- Please makes two contributions to utterance meaning:
- Identifies the speech act: indicates the utterance is a request
- Marks politeness: indicates the manner of performance and social relationship
- We cannot understand please without referring to speech acts.
🎯 Direct vs indirect speech acts
| Type | Example | Form vs function |
|---|---|---|
| Direct request | "Please pass me the salt." | Grammatical form (imperative) matches intended speech act (request) |
| Indirect request | "Can you please pass me the salt?" | Grammatical form (interrogative) does not match intended speech act (request); requires pragmatic inference |
- Direct: utterance meaning ≈ sentence meaning
- Indirect: utterance meaning must be inferred pragmatically