Dictionary Definition
antonym n : two words that express opposing
concepts; "to him the opposite of gay was depressed" [syn: opposite
word, opposite]
User Contributed Dictionary
see Antonym
English
Etymology
From (anti) "opposite" and -onym < (onuma) "name", Aeolic dialect < (onoma) "name"Pronunciation
- /ˈæntəˌnɪm/
Noun
- A word which has the opposite meaning to another, although not
necessarily in all its senses.
- "rich" is an antonym of "poor"; "full" is an antonym of "empty".
Antonyms
Related terms
Translations
word which has the opposite meaning
- Afrikaans: teenoorgestelde
- Arabic: عكس, نقيض
- Chinese: 相反詞
- Croatian: antonim, nasuprotnica
- Czech: antonymum
- Danish: antonym
- Dutch: tegendeel, tegengestelde, antoniem
- Esperanto: antonimo
- Finnish: antonyymi, vastakohta
- French: antonyme
- German: Antonym
- Greek: αντώνυμο (antónymo)
- Hungarian: ellentett
- Icelandic: andheiti
- Indonesian: lawan kata, antonim
- Interlingua: antonymo
- Japanese: 対義語 (たいぎご, taigi-go), 反意語 (han'i-go), 反対語 (はんたいご, hantai-go)
- Korean: 반대어 (bandeaeo), 반의어 (banuieo)
- Norwegian: antonym
- Polish: antonim
- Portuguese: antônimo
- Romanian: antonim , antonime n plural
- Serbian: odveznica
- Slovene: protipomenka, antonim
- Spanish: antónimo
- Swedish: antonym
- Telugu: వ్యతిరేక పదము (vyatireka padamu)
- Welsh: gwrthwynebair
See also
Extensive Definition
expert-subject Linguistics
In lexical
semantics, opposites are words that lie in an inherently
incompatible binary relationship as in the opposite pairs male :
female, long : short, up : down, and precede : follow. The notion
of incompatibility here refers to fact that one word in an opposite
pair entails that it is
not the other pair member. For example, something that is long
entails that it is not short. The notion of binary refers that are
only two members in a set of opposites. The relationship between
opposites is known as opposition. A member of a pair of opposites
can generally be determined by the question What is the opposite of
X ?
The term antonym (and the related antonymy) has
also been commonly used as a term that is synonymous with opposite;
however, the term also has other more restricted meanings. One
usage has antonym refering to both gradable opposites, such as long
: short, and (non-gradable) complementary opposites, such as male :
female, while opposites of the types up : down and precede : follow
are excluded from the definition. A third usage (particularly that
of the influential Lyons 1968, 1977) defines the term antonym as
referring to only gradable opposites (the long : short type) while
the other types are referred to with different terms. Therefore, as
Crystal (2003) warns, the terms antonymy and antonym should be
regarded with care. In this article, the usage of Lyons (1963,
1977) and Cruse (1986, 2004) will be followed where antonym is
restricted to gradable opposites and opposite is used as the
general term referring to any of the subtypes discussed
below.
General discussion
Opposites are interestingly simultaneously
different and similar in meaning. Typically, they differ in only
one dimension of meaning, but are similar in most other respects,
including similarity in grammar and positions of semantic
abnormality. Additionally, not all words have an opposite. Some
words are non-opposable. For example, the word purple has no word
that stands in opposition to it (hence, the unanswerability of What
is the opposite of purple?). Other words are opposable but have an
accidental gap in a given language's lexicon. For example, the word
devout lacks a lexical opposite, but it is fairly easy to
conceptualize a parameter of devoutness where devout lies at the
positive pole with a missing member at the negative pole.
Opposites may be viewed as a special type of
incompatibility. Words that are incompatible create the following
type of entailment
(where X is a given word and Y is a different word incompatible
with word X):
- sentence A is X entails sentence A is not Y
An example of an incompatible pair of words is
cat : dog:
- It's a cat entails It's not a dog
This incompatibility is also found in the
opposite pairs fast : slow and stationary : moving, as can be seen
below:
- It's fast entails It's not slow
- It's stationary entails It's not moving
Cruse (2004) identifies some basic
characteristics of opposites:
- binarity
- inheritness
- patency
Subtypes
Complementaries
Complementary opposites are pairs that express
absolute opposites, like mortal and immortal.
- interactives
- satisfactives
- counteractives
Antonyms
Antonyms, from the Greek
anti ("opposite") and onoma
("name") are word pairs that are opposite in meaning,
such as hot and cold, fat and skinny, and up and down. Words may
have different antonyms, depending on the meaning. Both long and
tall are antonyms of short. Antonyms are of four types:
- Gradable antonyms are two ends of the spectrum (slow and fast) but can have variations.
- Auto-antonyms are the same words that can mean the opposite of themselves under different contexts or having separate definitions
Though the word antonym was only coined by
philologists in the
19th
century, such relationships are a fundamental part of a
language, in contrast to synonyms, which are a result of
history and drawing of fine distinctions, or homonyms, which are mostly
etymological accidents
or coincidences.
Languages often have ways of creating antonyms as
an easy extension of lexicon. An example is the English prefixes
in- and un-. Unreal is the antonym of real and indocile is of
docile.
Some planned languages abundantly use such
devices to reduce vocabulary multiplication. Esperanto
has mal- (compare bona = "good" and malbona = "bad"), Damin has kuri-
(tjitjuu "small", kuritjitjuu "large") and Newspeak has un-
(as in ungood, "bad").
Interlingua, a
naturalistic planned language, also uses such prefixes to reduce
the vocabulary and ease learning: certe = "certain", incerte =
"uncertain"; pare = "appear", dispare = "disappear". Interlingua
also permits many antonym pairs: bon = "good", mal = "bad"; rapide
= "fast", lente = "slow". To cleave is an English verb with two
synonyms that are antonyms of each other: to separate and to
adhere.
Directional opposites
- antipodals
- reversives
- converses (or relational opposites)
- pseudo-opposites
- Relational antonyms (Converses) are pairs in which one describes a relationship between two objects and the other describes the same relationship when the two objects are reversed, such as parent and child, teacher and student, or buy and sell.
Notes
See also
Bibliography
- Crystal, David. (2003). A dictionary of linguistics and phonetics (5th ed.). Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
- Cruse, D. Alan. (1986). Lexical semantics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Cruse, D. Alan. (1992). Antonymy revisited: Some thoughts on the relationship between words and concepts. In A. J. Lehrer & E. F. Kittay (Eds.), Frames, fields, and contrasts: New essays in semantic and lexical organization (pp. 289-306). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
- Cruse, D. Alan. (2002). Paradigmatic relations of exclusion and opposition II: Reversivity. In D. A. Cruse, F. Hundsnurscher, M. Job, & P.-R. Lutzeier (Eds.), Lexikologie: Ein internationales Handbuch zur Natur und Struktur von Wörtern und Wortschätzen: Lexicology: An international handbook on the nature and structure of words and vocabularies (Vol. 1, pp. 507-510). Berlin: De Gruyter.
- Cruse, D. Alan. (2004). Meaning in language: An introduction to semantics and pragmatics (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Cruse, D. Alan; & Togia, Pagona. (1995). Towards a cognitive model of antonymy. Journal of Lexicology 1, 113-141.
- Lehrer, Adrienne J. (1985). Markedness and antonymy. Journal of Linguistics, 21, 397-421.
- Lehrer, Adrienne J. (2002). Paradigmatic relations of exclusion and opposition I: Gradable antonymy and complementarity. In D. A. Cruse, F. Hundsnurscher, M. Job, & P.-R. Lutzeier (Eds.), Lexikologie: Ein internationales Handbuch zur Natur und Struktur von Wörtern und Wortschätzen: Lexicology: An international handbook on the nature and structure of words and vocabularies (Vol. 1, pp. 498-507). Berlin: De Gruyter.
- Lehrer, Adrienne J.; & Lehrer, Keith. (1982). Antonymy. Linguistics and Philosophy, 5, 483-501.
- Lyons, John. (1963). Structural semantics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Lyons, John. (1968). Introduction to theoretical linguistics. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Lyons, John. (1977). Semantics (Vol. 1). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Mettinger, Arthur. (1994). Aspects of semantic opposition in English. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
- Murphy, M. Lynne. (2003). Semantic relations and the lexicon: Antonymy, synonymy, and other paradigms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Palmer, F. R. (1976). Semantics: A new outline. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Saeed, John I. (2003). Semantics'' (2nd ed.). Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
External links
- Bibliography of Antonymy: English Sources
- Thesaurus.com - also provides for antonyms.
antonym in Afrikaans: Antoniem
antonym in Bulgarian: Антоним
antonym in Catalan: Antònim
antonym in Chuvash: Антонимсем
antonym in Czech: Antonymum
antonym in Welsh: Gwrthwynebair
antonym in Danish: Antonym
antonym in German: Antonym
antonym in Estonian: Antonüüm
antonym in Spanish: Antónimo
antonym in Esperanto: Antonimo
antonym in Basque: Antonimo
antonym in French: Antonymie
antonym in Galician: Antonimia
antonym in Croatian: Antonim
antonym in Indonesian: Antonim
antonym in Icelandic: Andheiti
antonym in Italian: Antonimia
antonym in Georgian: ანტონიმი
antonym in Latvian: Antonīms
antonym in Lithuanian: Antonimas
antonym in Malay (macrolanguage): Antonim
antonym in Dutch: Antoniem
antonym in Japanese: 対義語
antonym in Norwegian: Antonym
antonym in Polish: Antonim
antonym in Portuguese: Antônimo
antonym in Romanian: Antonim
antonym in Russian: Антонимы
antonym in Simple English: Antonym
antonym in Slovak: Antonymum
antonym in Slovenian: Protipomenka
antonym in Serbo-Croatian: Antonim
antonym in Finnish: Antonyymi
antonym in Swedish: Antonym
antonym in Turkish: Antonim
antonym in Ukrainian: Антоніми
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
antipode, antipodes, antipole, antithesis, articulation, contra, converse, counter, counterbalance, countercheck, counterpoint, counterpoise, counterpole, counterterm, expression, foil, free form, homograph, homonym, homophone, inverse, lexeme, linguistic form, locution, logos, metonym, minimum free form,
monosyllable,
obverse, offset, opposite, opposite number,
polysyllable,
reverse, setoff, syllable, synonym, term, the contrary, the other side,
usage, utterance, verbalism, verbum, vis-a-vis, vocable, word