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Showing posts from June, 2017

Hyperbole Questions and Answering

Assalamu’alaikum Wr. Wb. Nice to see u again in field of semantic GAN... Hokeh, talking about semantic is never not enough as we know before. It has so many beranches that we have to recognize and comperhand in our reality. Sometimes we use it either aware or not. Studying about sematic, it means that you will learn something new in your life because it always grows and develops by ap p earing new terms influence a language. Special series, the writer explains one of so many branches of semantic, that is Hyperbole and It will be pictured by three questions below: 1.       Mention 3 contemporary researches in field of hyperbole and their findings, include (title & authors) 2.       If i want to study hyperbole what books that you will recomend for me to read. Mention 3 and what make them different each other ? 3.       What is research’s trend right know in field of hyperbole and mention 2-3 article that talks about it 1.       A. The Use of Hyperbole in The Argumentat

Review Semantic from Other Journals

SEMANTICS REVIEW A. Defenition Sematics from Experts Perspective     Bloomfield (1933) stated that the context of situation was an essential part of meaning. He defined the meaning of a linguistic form as the situation in which the speaker utters it and the response which it calls forth in the hearer. Palmer(1981) used reference in the sense of non– linguistic world of objects and experiences. In this sense, the word reference is used for the whole network of the contexts of situations in which we live. In other words, both Bloomfield and Palmer focus on the context of situations. Bloomfield also thinks of meaning as something describable in terms of stimuli and responses like Skinner who came after him. Skinner (1957) views meaning as a result of stimuli and responses made by participants in a verbal act of communication. Like Skinner, Bloomfield explained his view of meaning with the help of an imagined verbal communication between Jack and Jill.     Malinowski (1923) and Firth