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Homograph

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File:Homograph homophone venn diagram.png
Venn diagram showing the relationships between homographs (yellow) and related linguistic concepts

A homograph (from the Template:Langx, Template:Translit Template:Gloss and Template:Lang, Template:Translit Template:Gloss) is a word that shares the same written form as another word but has a different meaning.<ref> Template:Cite dictionary </ref> However, some dictionaries insist that the words must also be pronounced differently,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> while the Oxford English Dictionary says that the words should also be of "different origin".<ref>Oxford English Dictionary: homograph.</ref> In this vein, The Oxford Guide to Practical Lexicography lists various types of homographs, including those in which the words are discriminated by being in a different word class, such as hit, the verb to strike, and hit, the noun a strike.<ref>Atkins, BTS.; Rundell, M., The Oxford Guide to Practical Lexicography, OUP Oxford, 2008, pp. 192 - 193.</ref>

If, when spoken, the meanings may be distinguished by different pronunciations, the words are also heteronyms. Words with the same writing and pronunciation (i.e. are both homographs and homophones) are considered homonyms. However, in a broader sense the term "homonym" may be applied to words with the same writing or pronunciation. Homograph disambiguation is critically important in speech synthesis, natural language processing and other fields. Identically written different senses of what is judged to be fundamentally the same word are called polysemes; for example, wood (substance) and wood (area covered with trees).

In English

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Examples:

sow (noun) Template:IPAc-en – female pig

where the words are heteronyms, spelt identically but pronounced differently. Here confusion is not possible in spoken language but could occur in written language.

  • bear (verb) – to support or carry
bear (noun) – the animal

where the words are homonyms, identical in spelling and pronunciation (Template:IPAc-en), but different in meaning and grammatical function.

The above examples are of etymologically unrelated words. Some homographs are also etymological doublets, meaning they come from the same source and are spelt the same way in Modern English, but their distinct meanings are tied to their distinct pronunciations:

Dominican Template:IPAc-en – of Dominica (slightly modified from the Spanish pronunciation of Dominica Template:IPAc-es, named for Latin diēs Dominica Template:IPAc-la meaning "the Lord's Day" or "Sunday")

Both words ultimately come from Latin dominicus Template:IPAc-la meaning "of the Lord."

violist Template:IPAc-enviola player

Both viol and viola come from Latin vitula.

More examples

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Template:Main

Word Example of first meaning Example of second meaning
lead Gold is denser than lead Template:IPAc-en. The mother duck will lead Template:IPAc-en her ducklings around.
close "Will you please close Template:IPAc-en that door!" The tiger was now so close Template:IPAc-en that I could smell it...
wind The wind Template:IPAc-en howled through the woodlands. Wind Template:IPAc-en your watch.
minute I will be there in a minute Template:IPAc-en. That is a very minute Template:IPAc-en/Template:IPAc-en amount.

In Chinese

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Many Chinese varieties have homographs, called Template:Linktext (Template:Lang-zh) or Template:Linktext (Template:Lang-zh), Template:Linktext (Template:Lang-zh).

Old Chinese

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Modern study of Old Chinese has found patterns that suggest a system of affixes.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> One pattern is the addition of the prefix Template:IPA, which turns transitive verbs into intransitive or passives in some cases:<ref name=baxterhandbook>Template:Cite book</ref>

Word Pronunciationa Meaninga Pronunciationb Meaningb
見<ref>The two meanings were later distinguished through the means of radicals, so that 見 ('to see', Std. Mand. jiàn) was unchanged, while 見 ('to appear', Std. Mand. xiàn) came to be written as 現.</ref> Template:IPA see Template:IPA appear
敗<ref>This distinction was preserved in Middle Chinese using voiced and unvoiced initials. Thus, 敗 (transitive, 'to defeat') was read as 北邁切 (Baxter, paejH), while 敗 (intransitive, 'to collapse; be defeated') was read as 薄邁切 (Baxter, baejH). 《增韻》:凡物不自敗而敗之,則北邁切。物自毀壞,則薄邁切。Modern Wu dialects (e.g., Shanghainese, Suzhounese), which preserve the three-way Middle Chinese contrast between voiced/aspirated/unaspirated initials, do not appear to preserve this distinction.</ref> Template:IPA defeat Template:IPA be defeated
All data from Baxter, 1992.<ref name=baxterhandbook/>

Another pattern is the use of a Template:IPA suffix, which seems to create nouns from verbs or verbs from nouns:<ref name=baxterhandbook/>

Word Pronunciationa Meaninga Pronunciationb Meaningb
Template:IPA transmit Template:IPA (n.) record
Template:IPA grind Template:IPA grindstone
Template:IPA (v.) block Template:IPA border, frontier
Template:IPA clothing Template:IPA wear, clothe
Template:IPA king Template:IPA be king
All data from Baxter, 1992.<ref name=baxterhandbook/>

Middle Chinese

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Many homographs in Old Chinese also exist in Middle Chinese. Examples of homographs in Middle Chinese are:

Word Pronunciationa Meaninga Pronunciationb Meaningb
Template:IPA easy Template:IPA (v.) change
Template:IPA (v.) part Template:IPA differentiate, other
Template:IPA rise, give Template:IPA above, top, emperor
Template:IPA long Template:IPA lengthen, elder
Reconstructed phonology from Wang Li on the tables in the article Middle Chinese. Tone names in terms of level (꜀平), rising (꜂上), departing (去꜄), and entering (入꜆) are given. All meanings and their respective pronunciations from Wang et al., 2000.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Modern Chinese

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Many homographs in Old Chinese and Middle Chinese also exist in modern Chinese varieties. Homographs which did not exist in Old Chinese or Middle Chinese often come into existence due to differences between literary and colloquial readings of Chinese characters. Other homographs may have been created due to merging two different characters into the same glyph during script reform (See Simplified Chinese characters and Shinjitai).

Some examples of homographs in Cantonese from Middle Chinese are:

Word Pronunciationa Meaninga Pronunciationb Meaningb
Template:IPA easy Template:IPA (v.) change
Template:IPA rise, give Template:IPA above, top, emperor
Template:IPA long Template:IPA lengthen, elder

See also

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Bibliography

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References

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