Suggestions for In-Class Activities
"It may seem as though little need be said about ambiguity in that it is a clear-cut phenomenon: both words and sentences can have more than one meaning, and the semantic rules a linguist sets up must state correctly for each language which words and
sentences can have more than one meaning - what more is there to it than that?" Kempson, Ruth M. 1977.
Semantic Theory. Cambridge: CUP.: 123.
- Wy are the following sentences ambiguous? What linguistic aspects create the ambiguity?
- Every student thinks she is a genius.
- I hit a man with a wooden leg.
- Three linguists in this room attended two workshops.
- Have you seen the stranger in the light cloak?
- The thing that troubled Calvin was crouching under the table.
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What kinds of lexical ambiguity are represented by the pairs below?
fan - to direct a current of air with a piece of material
- a person enthusiastic about something
chip - to cut or chop with an axe
- a piece of potato cut and fried in deep fat
bolt - a flash of lightning
- a sudden dash or movement
rail - a bar of metal or wood
- to complain violently
hook - a bent piece of material for catching or holding things
- something that attracts or is intended to be an attraction (U.S.)
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Consider the following sentences involving different senses of 'bank'. Are the senses related in terms of homonymy or polysemy?
- The bank raised its interest rates yesterday.
- It's the second switch in the third bank.
- The store is next to the newly constructed bank.
- Mary walked along the bank of the river.
- The bank appeared first in Italy in the Renaissance.
- He tried to break the bank at Monte Carlo.
- The men in the third bank can't row any longer.