Monday, April 16, 2018

Makalah Semantics : COLLOCATION AND IDIOM


CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION

A.    Background of Study
Semantics is the study of meaning. It is a wide subject within the general study of language (how language users acquire a sense of meaning, as speakers and writers, listeners and readers) and of language change (how meanings alter over time. The study of semantics includes the study of how meaning is constructed, interpreted, clarified, obscured, illustrated, simplified negotiated, contradicted and paraphrased; such as collocation and idiom.
Knowledge of collocation and idiom is vital for the competent use of language: a grammatically correct sentence will stand out as awkward if their preferences are violated. This makes collocation and idiom as interesting area for language teaching. In this paper will focus on what is collocation and idiom including their types.

B.     Problem Formulation
1.    What is collocation and what are kinds of collocation?
2.    What is idiom and what are types of idiom?

C.    Purpose
1.      Having understand about collocation and its kinds.
2.      Having understand about idiom and its types.

CHAPTER II
DISCUSSION

A.    Collocation
Learning collocations is an important part of learning the vocabulary of a language, because our language will be more natural and more easily understood and we will have alternative and richer ways of expressing yourself.  To make us having understand  about collocation. Following the discussion about collocation.
1.    Definition of Collocation
Collocation is two or more words that often go together. Moreover, collocation is an expression consisting of two or more words that correspond to some conventional way of saying things. Example, once more, as well, beautiful girl, long distance, table of content.[1]
Collocation is a pair of or group of words that are often used together (word partner). These combinations sound natural to native speakers, but students of English have to make a special effort to learn them because they are often difficult to guess. Some combinations just sound wrong to native speaker of English. For example the adjective fast collocates with food, but not with a meal.
Sometimes, a pair of words may not be obviously wrong, and people will understand what is meant, but it may not be the natural, normal collocation. If someone says I did a few mistakes they will be understood, but fluent English would probably say I made a few mistakes. If you want to use a word naturally, you need to learn the other words often go with in it. It can be different from language to language. For example, in English we say: I missed the bus (NOT I lost the bus) and she committed suicide (NOT she undertook or did suicide).[2]

2.    Kinds of Collocation
According to Benson et al., collocation can be sorted systematically into two major groups-lexical collocations and grammatical collocations. A lexical collocation could be made up of nouns, adjectives, verbs, or adverbs.[3] For example:

Example
Description
Gray Market
Legal trade of a commodity through unofficial distribution channels.
Death penalty
Person is put to death by state as a punishment for a crime.
Driving license
Document stating that a given person can operate a motorized vehicles.
Green card
ID card attesing to the permanent resident status of an immigrant in the United State.
Sign language
Language which, instead of sound patterns, uses body language.

On the other hand, Grammatical Collocation is a type of construction where for example a verb or adjective must be followed by a particular preposition, or a noun must be followed by a particular form of the verb, as in:
1.    Verb + Preposition : depend on (NOT depend of)
2.    Adjective + Preposition : afraid of (NOT afraid at)
3.    Noun + Particular form of verb: strength to lift it (not strength lifting it).[4]

B.     Idiom
Idiom is unit of statement which the meaning cannot “predicted” from the elements of meaning itself neither lexically nor grammatically. Example, form of grammatically “Sell a house” it means that “People who sell get money and people who buy get a house”, but in Indonesia language “sell teeth” it means that “loud of laugh” and that’s it that called idiomatical meaning, another example from idiom meaning is raining cats and dogs.
Moreover, idiom is a phrase where the words together have a meaning that is different from the dictionary definitions of the individual words.[5] Furthermore, Idioms are group of words in a fixed order that have a meaning that cannot be guessed by knowing meaning of the individual words. For example, pass the buck is an idiom meaning to pass responsibility for a problem to another person to avoid dealing with it oneself.[6]
Usually, idiom divided into two parts, full idiom and semi idiom. Full idiom is idiom that has different meaning with original meaning and cannot give the meaning word by word, because it is unity. Example: a ripp of, it means that very expensive.
While, semi idiom is idiom that one of the elements still have lexical meaning itself. Example, “black list” it means that people who do wickedness or crime. He is in my black list. I will never trust him again.[7]

CHAPTER III
CONCLUSION

Collocations should not be confused with idioms although both are similar in that there is a degree of meaning present in the collocation or idiom that is not entirely compositional. With idioms, the meaning is completely non-compositional whereas collocations are mostly compositional. With collocation the language will be more natural and be more understood.

REFERENCES



[1] Collocations, Idioms & Phrasal Verbs.Pdf
[2] Vocabulary, Collocation.Pdf
[3] Farokh Parisa. Raising Awareness of Collocation in ESL/EFL Classrooms in Journal of Studies in Education ISSN 2162-6952 2012, Vol. 2, No.3.P.59
[4] Vocabulary, Collocation.Pdf
[5] Expression, Idiom.Pdf
[6] Vocabulary, Collocation.Pdf
[7] Drs. Abdul Chaer, Linguistic Umum, RINEKA CIPTA, 2012, P. 296

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DISCOURSE ANALYSIS : LEXICAL COHESION