gradable opposition
Học thuậtThân thiện
The temperature difference between summer and winter is a gradable opposition.
Definition
Noun: A type of semantic opposition where the two contrasting terms represent degrees or points on a scale, rather than an absolute, mutually exclusive contrast. The opposition is "gradable" because it allows for intermediate levels or comparisons.
Usage
This is a technical term used primarily in linguistics and semantics to describe a specific kind of relationship between words. It is used to analyze how meaning is structured.
Examples
- In the pair and , the gradable opposition allows for intermediate terms like , , and .
- The concept of gradable opposition explains why we can say something is or , but not or .
- Linguists study gradable opposition to understand how adjectives like or function differently from non-gradable pairs.
Advanced Usage
- Gradable antonyms: The word pairs themselves that exhibit this relationship are often called (e.g., , ).
- Comparison and modification: The key test for a gradable opposition is that the words can be modified by adverbs of degree (e.g., ) and can form comparative and superlative forms ().
Variants and Related Words
- Gradable (adjective): Capable of being graded or placed on a scale. (e.g., )
- Opposition (noun): In semantics, a general term for any contrastive relationship between lexical items.
- Ungradable opposition / Complementary antonymy: The contrasting type, where the terms represent an absolute, binary contrast with no middle ground (e.g., , ).
Synonyms
- Gradable antonymy
- Polar opposition (in some linguistic frameworks)
Antonyms
- Ungradable opposition
- Complementary antonymy
- Binary opposition
The temperature difference between summer and winter is a gradable opposition.
Noun
- an opposition that is capable of being graded