The object of lexicology: - lexicology = lexis (word) + logos (learning) - lexicology – the part of linguistics dealing with the vocabulary and the properties of words as the main units of language - vocabulary = the system formed by the sum total of all the words of a language - word = the basic unit of a given language (resulting from the association of a particular meaning with a particular group of sounds capable of a particular gramm. employment) → a semantic, gramm. and phonological unit - a word is a generalized reflection of reality (extra-linguistic phenomena influence the lang.)
• general lexicology – studies words irrespective of the specific features of any language → language universals – lang. phenomena common to all languages • special lexicology – studies specific features of the voc. of a given language; always based on the principles of general lexicology • historical lexicology – the evolution of a vocabulary and its elements; discusses the origin of words, their change and development, investigates the forces modifying them - criticized for its atomistic approach x hist. lexicology can study the evolution of a voc. as a system • descriptive lexicology – the voc. of a lang. at a given stage of its development - descriptive lex. of E deals with E words in their morphological and semantical structures, studies the interdependence between them
- diachronic / synchronic view – due to Saussure; no language can be separated in this way – the 2 aspects are interdependent • sociolinguistics – deals with casual relations between the way the language works and develops and the facts of social life; some scholars use this term in a narrower sense (= speech behaviour in small social groups) → cannot give a complete picture - the actual system of the lang. is in a state of constant change!
The notion of lexical system: - vocabulary of a language is a system (a coherent homogenous whole, constituted by interdependent elements of the same order related in some specific ways) → lexicology studies this whole (the properties of its elements, relationships of contrast and similarity, the ways in which they are influenced by extra-lingual reality) - usually the sound form of the word only conventionally reflects the object nominated by it; the motivation is indirect and based on analogies - different authors: ‘language is not systematic but chaotic’; today we call voc. systematic / the words can be considered as a structured set of interdependent and interrelated elements - English vs. Russian: - E contains a lot of homonyms and polysemy, the loss of motivation, great number of generic words, little autonomy of words (connected with monomorphemic character of E, scarcity of morphological means) - equivalence = the relation between 2 elements based on the common feature due to which they belong to the same set - each LU possesses a certain number of characteristic features (variously combined) → lexical distinctive feature = a feature capable of distinguishing words (on different levels: phonology, morphology, lexicology) - lexical opposition = the semantically relevant relationship of partial difference between 2 partially similar words; the features the 2 contrasted words posses in common form the basis of the opposition • polydimensional opposition – the basis is not limited to the members of one opposition - lexical group = a subset of the voc. the elements of which posses a particular feature forming the basis of the opposition