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Introducing English Semantics

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Focusing on the English language, this comprehensive and accessible introduction to semantics explores how languages organize and express meaning through words, parts of words and sentences.

210 pages, Kindle Edition

First published March 26, 1998

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About the author

Charles W. Kreidler

7 books2 followers
Charles W. Kreidler is Professor Emeritus of Linguistics at Georgetown University. His publications include The Dynamics of Language (co-author, 1971), Introducing English Semantics (1998), and Phonology: Critical Concepts (edited, 6 volumes, 2000).

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5 stars
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4 stars
10 (23%)
3 stars
11 (25%)
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5 (11%)
1 star
1 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Daniel.
1,052 reviews96 followers
non-fic-tbr
April 2, 2019
I don't know what goes on at Routledge. I have a generally favorable impression of them as far as academic publishers goes, but I have to say the second edition paperback version of this book contains the most unbelievably hideous typesetting I can ever recall encountering in a professionally published book. It happens that I also have a hardback first edition at hand, and while it is ugly, with a boring layout and ugly header fonts that suggest a professor who truly hates his students, it is positively soothing in comparison to the violently nausea inducing interior of the second edition.
Profile Image for محمد حسين ضاحي.
317 reviews48 followers
August 3, 2016
This is the third book I read in semantics. I had made myself a plan for reading in semantics for the sake of my masters. However, this book seems to be away from my topic since it deals mainly with the classification of predicates (typically the verb). It is not only a book on semantics, but it also introduces pragmatics since it explores language in use (chapter 2), and speech acts (chapter 9). Other than these two chapters the rest of the 13 chapters are semantics and deal mainly with verbs.
Profile Image for Ralitsa Peykova.
2 reviews21 followers
October 14, 2016
Semantics is probably one of the most problematic branches of linguistics. Fortunately, books like this one exist!
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews