According to the traditional view, a word prototypically denotes a class of objects sharing similar features, i.e. it results from an abstraction based on the detection of common properties in perceived entities. I explore here another idea: words result from abstraction of common premises in the rules governing our actions. I first argue that taking ‘inference', instead of ‘reference', as the basic issue in semantics does matter. I then discuss two phenomena that are, in my opinion, particularly difficult to analyse within the scope of traditional semantic theories: systematic polysemy and plurals. I conclude by a discussion of my approach, and by a summary of its main features
Polysemy is a semantic phenomenon which occurs when one lexical item has more meanings which can be ...
In this note we suggest that difficulties encountered in natural language semantics are, for the mos...
A large number of word forms in natural language are polysemous, that is, associated with several re...
Abstract objects have been a central topic in philosophy since antiquity. Philosophers have defended...
Philosophers frequently draw on natural language to motivate properties, numbers, and propositions a...
Abstract. Genericity is not encoded in the syntax semantics interface any more than metaphoricity is...
Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1986), pp. 528-53
According to the singular conception of reality, there are objects and there are singular properties...
Abstract. This paper accounts for the semantics of plurality, in partic-ular, the accessibility rela...
International audienceThis paper investigates an issue at the interface between language and ontolog...
It is, I suppose, a truism that an adequate theory of meaning for a natural language L will associat...
The term ‘meaning’, as it is presently employed in Linguistics, is a polysemous concept, covering a ...
Communication using natural language is remarkably e cient, by allowing reuse (through the use of ge...
abbreviated as ‘’) is a very rich one. Not only does it contain a wealth of empirical and formal ins...
The article examines the two major types of word meaning – broad meaning and polysemy. An attempt is...
Polysemy is a semantic phenomenon which occurs when one lexical item has more meanings which can be ...
In this note we suggest that difficulties encountered in natural language semantics are, for the mos...
A large number of word forms in natural language are polysemous, that is, associated with several re...
Abstract objects have been a central topic in philosophy since antiquity. Philosophers have defended...
Philosophers frequently draw on natural language to motivate properties, numbers, and propositions a...
Abstract. Genericity is not encoded in the syntax semantics interface any more than metaphoricity is...
Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Meeting of the Berkeley Linguistics Society (1986), pp. 528-53
According to the singular conception of reality, there are objects and there are singular properties...
Abstract. This paper accounts for the semantics of plurality, in partic-ular, the accessibility rela...
International audienceThis paper investigates an issue at the interface between language and ontolog...
It is, I suppose, a truism that an adequate theory of meaning for a natural language L will associat...
The term ‘meaning’, as it is presently employed in Linguistics, is a polysemous concept, covering a ...
Communication using natural language is remarkably e cient, by allowing reuse (through the use of ge...
abbreviated as ‘’) is a very rich one. Not only does it contain a wealth of empirical and formal ins...
The article examines the two major types of word meaning – broad meaning and polysemy. An attempt is...
Polysemy is a semantic phenomenon which occurs when one lexical item has more meanings which can be ...
In this note we suggest that difficulties encountered in natural language semantics are, for the mos...
A large number of word forms in natural language are polysemous, that is, associated with several re...