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21. Antonyms

Antonyms words of the same of part of speech which are based on opposition or contrast of meaning, such as hot cold, light dark, happiness sorrow, to accept to reject, up down.

Most antonyms are adjectives. Verbal pairs of antonyms are fewer in number. Here are some of them: to lose to find, to live to die, to open to close, to weep to laugh.

Nouns are not rich in antonyms, but even so some examples can be given: friend enemy, joy grief, good evil, heaven earth, love hatred.

Antonymic adverbs can be subdivided into two groups: a) adverbs derived from adjectives: warmly coldly, merrily sadly, loudly softly; b) adverbs proper: now then, here there, ever never, up down, in out.

Together with synonyms, antonyms represent the language's important expressive means. The following quotations show how authors use antonyms as a stylistic device of contrast.

How far that little candle throws his beams! So shines a good deed in a naughty1 world. (From Merchant of Venice by W. Shakespeare. Act V, Sc. I)

... But then my soul's imaginary sight Presents thy shadow to my sightless view,

1 naughty — wicked, evil (obs.)

Types of antonyms

2 Groups:

Gradable (градальные) – two words which denote the extremes of the quality. E. g. warm______cool______cold, old____middle-aged____young

Complementary (дополняющие др. др.) /contradictory – denote such notions which on the one hand can’t exist without each other, on the other hand they don’t exclude each other. E. g. leave – stay, find – lose.

There are also (in our lectures)

Conversive – naturally denote & describe opposite attributes of the same situation. E. g. If I buy, means that smb sells.

Derivational – are formed with the addition of negative prefixes or the oppositional suffixes. E. g. (un)easy, (il)legal, carefull / less, meaningfull / less

22. Homonyms

Homonyms – are words identical in some forms but different in meaning. E. g. to see – a see

Modern English is exceptionally rich in homonyms.

Types of homonyms

3 Classification:

  • The first refers to sound forms:

  1. homophones– the sound is the same, meaning – different.

  2. homographs – spelt alike, pronounced different. E.g. to like – a like (transmission)

  3. perfect homonyms e.g. a seal (печать) – a seal (тюлень).

  • The second – to grammar forms:

  1. full – coincide in all forms. E.g. a seal, seals, seal’s (печать) – a seal, seals, seal’s (тюлень)

  2. partial – belong to different parts of speech. E. g. to see, saw, seen – a sea, seas.

  • The third is based on the type of meaning in which the words differ.

  1. lexical – differ only in the lexical meaning. E.g. a seal – a seal

  2. lexicalgrammatical – differ both in their lex. & gram. meanings. E.g. to see, a see; to live – a live [ai]

  3. grammatical – differ in gram. meaning. E. g. to ask – asked-asked – 2 & 3 forms differ grammatically; a seal, seals, seal’s – 2 & 3 gram. homonyms.

Sources of homonyms

    1. The change of the pronunciation & spelling of words during the history of the language. E. g.

      to see

      old Eng. seen

      middle Eng. seen → see [e]

      during the great vowelshift all the

      a sea

      sæ долгий

      sea [æ]

      long vowels → [i:]

    2. Extensive borrowing – 50 %. E.g. to race (быстро бежать) – from Scandinavian.

    3. Creation – shortening. E. g. a fanatic → fan (фанат);a fan (вентилятор) from Latin.

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