Semantic

From the Greek noun sema, “sign”. The corresponding verb form, semainein, meant “to show” or “to indicate by a sign”, and from that came the adjective semantikos, “significant”, “important”. The word lay dormant in Greek dictionaries until 1883, when it was borrowed into French by a linguist as sémantique to refer to the psychology of language. It entered English as semantic ten years later, meaning “pertaining to the relationship between linguistic symbols and their meanings”. The science of semantics is the study of language and meaning. (Prior to the 1890’s, semantics was known as semasiology.)

Personally, my linguistics degree focused on phonology (the study of the sounds of language), computational linguistics (programming computers to handle language), and lexical semantics (the study of the meanings of words), particularly verbs.

Phonosemantically, semantic’s primary syllable is “man”, which concerns the manifestation of a balanced energy that narrows toward a target. This may reflect the same sense as is found in idioms like “that’s the meaning I’m going for“, or “that’s what I’m driving at” (i.e. that’s the meaning I’m trying to convey), the fact that language is usually manifested with a target of conveying meaning.

semantic.jpg

Druid Journal: Guidance and inspiration from Nature and the Ancient World.

Subscribe to the Druid Journal Word of the Day, and receive the Word via regular email or through your favorite feed reader.

Subscribe to Druid Journal Word of the Day in a reader
Subscribe to Druid Journal Word of the Day by Email

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Subscribe without commenting

Recent Comments Elsewhere

  • Jeff Lilly on Bear: Thanks, Derik!...
  • derik on Bear: Bears are nature's chainsaws: you don't stop them, you just sit around wait for for the mauling to end. This is a neat-o little blog you've got goin...
  • Jeff Lilly on Tomato: Sorry to take so long in replying, Kate -- I had to think about this a while. What would I regard as good evidence that one of the premises or assu...
  • Kate Gladstone on Tomato: Well, I look forward to seeing what you'll tackle in future Words of the Day! I have to say that phonosemantics does not convince me anywhere nearl...
  • Jeff Lilly on Beauty: I'll put them in the queue, Kate. :-) Booty, briefly, is just like beauty, but lacks the connotations of energy, trust, and youth. ...