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  • Some words can change in meaning so subtly that we don't even notice.

  • And to show you what I mean, I'm going to tell you a story.

  • A few years ago, I was at a wedding of a dear colleague of mine, and there were a few other linguists there.

  • They put us all at one end of one table, so that we wouldn't bother the other guests,

  • and so of course, we started talking about language.

  • And one person who is a lexicographer who is an editor of dictionaries said,

  • "Alright, I'm going to give you a sentence and I want you to tell me if you hear anything odd about this sentence."

  • So we all get ready for this sentence. And it was a sentence something like this:

  • "Mary and her partner had just moved in upstairs from us, and their boxes lay on the kitchen floor still unpacked."

  • We all listened to this. We listened to it again.

  • And some people were trying to figure out if there was

  • something wrong with lay/lie, but that's the red herring in the sentence.

  • But in the end, we all said, "sounds fine!"

  • Now, I don't know if you all thought it sounded fine or not, but the question I will ask you is,

  • Was there stuff still in the boxes, or not?

  • Now, in my head, the stuff is still in the boxes. But if we think about the sentence, the boxes were "still unpacked."

  • Which should mean that the stuff was out of the boxes. So in this sentence, "unpacked" means "packed."

  • Or it means "un-unpacked."

  • Some people will say, "This is impossible. A word cannot mean its opposite."

  • Well, it's not impossible. And, in fact, we have instances in English of other words that mean their opposite.

  • We don't have a lot of them, but we do have them.

  • If you think about the word "dust," dust can mean "to take the dust off of something,"

  • or "to put the dust onto something" as in you dust a cake with sugar.

  • "Sanction" is ambiguous because it can mean "to give permission to do something,"

  • or it can mean "to penalize for doing something."

  • "Cleave," which can mean "to cling to" or "to split apart."

  • Now, for each one of those words, there is a different story for how the word has come to mean its opposite.

  • But we do, as speakers, seem to be able to use context for at least some words, to be able to figure it out.

  • Now, I don't know what will happen with "unpacked" and whether

  • it will continue to mean "un-unpacked" for generations to come.

  • But I do know that it's not impossible for "unpacked" to mean both "unpacked" and "packed."

  • And I will forever be confused by what "bimonthly" means,

  • as to whether I'm going to the meeting twice a month,

  • or every other month, and I will always have to ask.

Some words can change in meaning so subtly that we don't even notice.

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アン・カーザンと語る言葉と文法 第8回 (The Word on Language and Grammar with Anne Curzan, Part 8)

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    Susy に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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