Semantic Molecules on MOTHER
20/08/2020 Views : 733
I NENGAH SUDIPA
SEMANTIC MOLECULES on MOTHER
I Nengah Sudipa
nengahsudipa@unud.ac.id
Introduction
I
am impressed by the old nostalgic song, popularized by Alice May
Mother, how are today, here is a note from
your daugther, with me everthing is OK.... MOTHER, how are you today ?
I
am interested in reading the very recently published book entitled Studies in Ethnopragmantics, Cultural
Semantics and Intercultural Communication, edited by Kerry Mullan, Bert Peeters, Lauren Sadow, published in 2020 by Springer Nature Singapore. It deals with a lot
of sub-topics concerned as being refered by the book title itself. The
following quotation is the clear reason why this topic was writen.
“Some concepts in need of explication
are too complex to be described using only
semantic primes. They require the use of intermediary terms that help to
build
layers
of complexity” (Mullan, et.al. 2020:18).
from this
book, I learn that NSM has been
expanded, especially the explication as one of the ways to analyze the meaning. Basically NSM deals with (i) meaning mapping and (ii) explication.
Let’s take lexicon MOTHER as the tokens of the analysis.
Mapping
Genetic mother a woman whose contribution to the child was the ovum, and
hence genes.
Gestational mother a woman whose uterus was used for the
nurturing and development of an embryo into a baby.
Social mother a woman who rears the baby after birth.
A stepmother is a woman who enters one's family
by marrying one's parent. Children from her spouse's previous unions (to whom
she is not otherwise related) are known as her step-children.
Foster mother - a woman who is a foster parent and
raises another's child. foster-mother. foster parent, foster-parent
- a person who acts as parent and guardian for a child in place of the child's
natural parents but without legally adopting the child.
Adoptive mother (plural adoptive mothers)
A woman who has adopted a child, as opposed to a
biological mother.
Mother
in law is the mother of one’s spouse
Surrogate Mother is a woman who gets artificially inseminated with
the father's sperm. She then carries the baby and delivers it for you and your
partner to raise. A traditional surrogate is the baby's biological mother. That's because it was her egg that was fertilized
by the father's sperm. Donor sperm can also be used.
Explication
Once
a semantic molecule is explicated in semantic primes, it can then be
used
in further explications of more complex concepts—with the symbol [m] being
deployed
to identify where a molecule has been used. The procedure is illustrated in
explications
[A] [B] and [C] below, taken from Goddard (2018c:
139, 141; emphasis
added):
[A]
children
people
of one kind
all
people are people of this kind for some time
when
someone is someone of this kind, it is like this:
this
someone’s body is small
this
someone can do some things, this someone can’t do many other things
because
of this, if other people don’t often do good things for this someone, bad
things can happen to
this
someone
[B]
women
people
of one kind
people
of this kind are not children [m]
people
of this kind have bodies of one kind
the
bodies of people of this kind are like this:
inside
the body of someone of this kind, there can be for some time a living body of a
child [m]
For example, the concept behind the English word women
contains
the concept of ‘children’; as an inherent part of its meaning (Goddard 2018c).
Concepts
like
‘children’ is not semantic primes, but
they can be explicated by means of them.
[C] MOTHER
person
of one kind
person of this kind is not a child [m]
prson
of this kind has body of one kind
the
body of person of this kind is like this:
inside
the body of someone of this kind, there can be for some time a living body of a
child [m]
there
must be a husband [m]
there
can be a child [m]or children [m] the someone like this to have
For example, the concept behind the English word MOTHER
contains
the concept of ‘children’and ‘husband’
as inherent parts of its meaning. Concepts like ‘children’ and ‘husband’ are not
semantic primes, but they can be explicated by means of them.
Closing
NSM terms these concepts semantic molecules—complex concepts that
are expressible in semantic primes but are also building blocks for even more complex
meanings.
NSM
research undertaken to date suggests that some semantic molecules could be
universal
(e.g. man, woman, child, laugh) or near-universal (e.g. sleep, write,
hands,
quickly). Other molecules are area-specific (e.g. God, money, tree) or language
and
culture-specific (e.g. island, snow, plastic). Culture-specific molecules
are
essential for defining terms in one particular culture but may not exist in
other
languages.
References
Goddard, Cliff C. 2018. Ten lectures on Natural Semantic Metalanguage: Exploring language, thought and
culture using simple, translatable words. Leiden: Brill. xi + 356 pp. https://doi.org/
10.1163/9789004357723.
Hornby, AS. 2000.
Oxford Advanced Learner’ Dictionary. Oxford : OUP
Mullan, Kerry, Bert Peeters, Lauren Sadow (eds). 2020. Studies in Ethnopragmantics, Cultural
Semantics and Intercultural Communication. Singapore : Springer Nature.