Everything about The Natural Semantic Metalanguage totally explained
The
Natural Semantic Metalanguage (NSM) is an approach to
semantic analysis based on reductive paraphrase (that is, breaking concepts/words down into combinations of simpler concepts/words, see
Oligosynthetic language) using a small collection of semantic primes. The semantic primes (below) are believed to be atomic, primitive meanings present in all human languages. The concept has roots in the 17th century projects for
ideal languages and the 18th century
alphabet of human thought of René Descartes and Gottfried Leibniz.
Words from ordinary language are analyzed in NSM by means of script-like explications as the following examples illustrate:
» plants: living things / these things can't feel something / these things can't do something
» sky: something very big / people can see it / people can think like this about this something: "it is a place / it's above all other places / it's far from people"
» sad: X feels sad = X feels something / sometimes a person thinks something like this: "something bad happened / if I didn't know that it happened I'd say: 'I don't want it to happen' / I don't say this now because I know: 'I can't do anything'" / because of this, this person feels something bad / X feels something like this
» anger: I think this person did something bad / I don't want this person to do things like this / I want to do something because of this
Anna Wierzbicka originated the NSM theory in the early 1970s (Wierzbicka 1972).
Starting with an inventory of only 14 primitives, the theory slowly grew.
As of
2002, the list consists of 61 semantic primitives and isn't yet regarded as complete.
Other eminent linguists who have participated in NSM research include
Cliff Goddard,
Felix Ameka,
Hilary Chappell, David Wilkins and
Nick Enfield. NSM is commonly used in
cross-cultural semantics.
To write a grammar of the NSM is a work in progress. Such a grammar would describe how these primes collocate in any language, regardless of their morphological and syntactic grammar in particular languages. A partial, though detailed, description is found in Goddard and Wierzbicka 2002.
Semantic primitives
The English exponents of the 61 Semantic Primitives (addition of LONG is proposed)
substantives : I, YOU, SOMEONE, PEOPLE, SOMETHING/THING, BODY
; mental predicates : THINK, KNOW, WANT,, SEE, HEAR, BE
speech : SAY, WORD, TRUE
; actions, events and movement : DO, HAPPEN, MOVE, PUT, GO
existence and possession : THERE IS, HAVE
; life and death : LIVE, DIE
time : WHEN/TIME, NOW, BEFORE, AFTER, A LONG TIME, A SHORT TIME, FOR SOME TIME, MOMENT
; space : WHERE/PLACE, HERE, ABOVE, BELOW; FAR, NEAR; SIDE, INSIDE;
"logical" concepts : NOT, MAYBE, CAN, BECAUSE, IF
; intensifier : VERY
augmentor : MORE
; quantifiers : ONE, TWO, SOME, ALL, MANY/MUCH
evaluators : GOOD, BAD
; descriptors : BIG, SMALL, (LONG)
taxonomy, partonomy : KIND OF, PART OF;
; similarity : LIKE
determiners : THIS, THE SAME, OTHER
The assumption that these primes are present in all languages was tested extensively against these 9 languages: Polish, Mandarin, Malay, Lao, Spanish, Korean, Mbula (Austronesian language), Cree (Algonquian language), Yankunytjatjara (Australian Aboriginal language).
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