Colexification Explained
Colexification, together with its associated verb colexify, are terms used in semantics and lexical typology. They refer to the ability, for a language, to express different meanings with the same word.
Definition
Colexification describes the case of different meanings being expressed by the same word (i.e., “co-lexified”) in a language. For example, the two senses which are distinguished in English as people and village are colexified in Spanish, which uses pueblo in both cases.
Colexification is meant as a neutral descriptive term that avoids distinguishing between vagueness, polysemy, and homonymy. Some cases of colexification are common across the world (e.g. ‘blue’ = ‘green’); others are typical of certain linguistic and cultural areas (e.g. ‘tree’ = ‘fire’ among Papuan and Australian languages[1] ; or ‘thunder’ = ‘dragon’ in the Sino-Tibetan languages[2]).
The opposite of “co-lexify” is “dis-lexify”, i.e. 'express two meanings using different lexical forms'.[3] Thus, Russian colexifies 'arm' and 'hand' using the single word рука, but Spanish dislexifies these two meanings using two distinct words, respectively brazo v. mano.
Examples
Use in linguistic studies
The term was coined by the linguist Alexandre François in his 2008 article “Semantic maps and the typology of colexification”. This article illustrated the notion with various examples, including the semantic domains of,, . The latter notion is at the source of a colexification network that is attested in several languages, linking together such senses as ‘breath’, ‘life’, ‘soul’, ‘spirit’, ‘ghost’...: Skr. आत्मन् ātmán; Anc. Gk ψυχή, πνεῦμα; Lat. animus, spīritus; Arab. روح rūḥ, etc. François built on that example to propose a method for constructing lexical semantic maps.
Several studies have taken up the concept of colexification and applied it to different semantic domains and various language families.[4]
Colexification is also the object of a dedicated database, known as CLiCS “Database of Cross-Linguistic Colexifications”.[5] Based on data from more than 2400 language varieties of the world, the database makes it possible to check the typological frequency of individual instances of colexification,[6] and to visualize semantic networks[7] based on empirical data from the world's languages.
Links and references
See also
External links
- CLiCS “Database of Cross-Linguistic Colexifications”.
References
- 10.1016/j.cognition.2022.105179. 226. 105179. Brochhagen. Thomas. Boleda. Gemma. When do languages use the same word for different meanings? The Goldilocks principle in colexification. Cognition. 2022. 10230/56229. free.
- 10.1007/s42761-021-00033-1. Di Natale. Anna. Pellert. Max. Garcia. David. Colexification networks encode affective meaning. Affective Science. 2021. 9382918.
- 10.1080/23306343.2024.2383513. 1–23. Ding. Hongdi. Dong. Sicong. Colexification of “thunder” and “dragon” in Sino-Tibetan languages. Asia Pacific Translation and Intercultural Studies . 2024. DingDong.
- .
- François . Alexandre . 2022 . Lexical tectonics: Mapping structural change in patterns of lexification . Zeitschrift für Sprachwissenschaft . 41. 1 . 89‒123 . DeGruyter . 10.1515/zfs-2021-2041 . 246000538 . 23 June 2022 . tectonics . free .
- Gast, Volker & Maria Koptjevskaja-Tamm. 2018. The areal factor in lexical typology. In D. Olmen, T. Mortelmans & F. Brisard (eds), Aspects of linguistic variation, 43–82. Berlin: DeGruyter.
- 10.1515/lingty-2021-2088. 26. 2. Georgakopoulos. Thanasis. Grossman. Eitan. Nikolaev. Dmitry. Polis. Stéphane. Universal and macro-areal patterns in the lexicon: A case-study in the perception-cognition domain. Linguistic Typology. 2021. free.
- Georgakopoulos, Thanasis, Daniel A. Werning, Jörg Hartlieb, Tomoki Kitazumi, Lidewij van de Peut, Annette Sundermeyer & Gaëlle Chantrain. 2016. The meaning of ancient words for ‘earth’: An exercise in visualizing colexification on a semantic map . In Gerd Graßhoff & Michael Meyer (eds), Space and Knowledge. Special issue of eTopoi. Journal for Ancient Studies 6. 418–452.
- J. . Jackson. J. . Watts. T. . Henry. J.-M. . List. P. . Mucha. R. . Forkel . S. . Greenhill . K. . Lindquist. 2019 . Emotion semantics show both cultural variation and universal structure. Science. 366 . 6472 . 1517–1522 . 10.1126/science.aaw8160 . 31857485. 2019Sci...366.1517J. 209424412. 1885/220045. free.
- Juvonen, Päivi & Maria Koptjevskaja-Tamm. 2016. The Lexical Typology of Semantic Shifts (Cognitive Linguistics Research 58). Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.
- 10.1111/cogs.13035. 45. 9. Karjus. Andres. Blythe. Richard A.. Kirby. Simon. Wang. Tianyu. Smith. Kenny. Conceptual similarity and communicative need shape colexification: An experimental study. Cognitive Science. 2021. 2103.11024.
- List . Johann-Mattis. Simon . Greenhill. Cormac . Anderson. Thomas . Mayer. Tiago . Tresoldi . Robert . Forkel. 2018. CLiCS²: An improved database of cross-linguistic colexifications assembling lexical data with the help of cross-linguistic data formats. Linguistic Typology. 10.22425/jul.2015.16.2.63. 277–306. 22. 2. free.
- Pericliev, Vladimir. 2015. On colexification among basic vocabulary. Journal of Universal Language 16(2). 63–93. .
- C. . Rzymski. T. . Tresoldi. S. . Greenhill. M. . Wu. N. . Schweikhard. M. . Koptjevskaja-Tamm. V. . Gast. T. . Bodt. A. . Hantgan. G. . Kaiping. S. . Chang. Y. . Lai. N. . Morozova. H. . Arjava. N. . Hübler. E. . Koile. S. . Pepper. M. . Proos. B. . Epps. I. . Blanco. C. . Hundt. S. . Monakhov. K. . Pianykh. S. . Ramesh. R. . Gray. R. . Forkel. J.-M. . List. 10.1038/s41597-019-0341-x. 31932593. Scientific Data. The Database of Cross-Linguistic Colexifications, reproducible analysis of cross- linguistic polysemies. 7. 13. 2020. 13. 6957499. 2020NatSD...7...13R. free.
- Book: De Gruyter . 10.1515/9783110377675-012. 355–422. Päivi Juvonen. Maria Koptjevskaja-Tamm. Schapper. Antoinette. San Roque. Lila. Hendery. Rachel. The Lexical Typology of Semantic Shifts. Tree, firewood and fire in the languages of Sahul. Berlin, Boston. 2016. https://www.degruyter.com/view/books/9783110377675/9783110377675-012/9783110377675-012.xml . schapper.
- Schapper, Antoinette, Lila San Roque & Rachel Hendery. 2016. Tree, firewood and fire in the languages of Sahul. In Päivi Juvonen & Maria Koptjevskaja-Tamm (eds.), The Lexical Typology of Semantic Shifts. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter.
- Urban, Matthias. 2012. Analyzability and semantic associations in referring expressions. Leiden University PhD dissertation.
Notes and References
- See Schapper et al. (2016).
- See Ding & Dong (2024).
- [#tectonics|François (2022:95)]
- See the bibliography.
- See List et al. (2018) and Rzymski et al. (2020).
- For example, the colexification pair ‘hear’–‘feel’.
- For example, the subgraph around the notion