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4: Homonyms, Homophones, Homographs

LINGUISTICS ORGANIC SEARCH ENGINE THEORY
(LOSE-T) PART IV

Search Engine Optimization (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Homonyms, Homophones, Homographs

lexical, syntactical, phonological, grammatical, punctuational ambiguity

The number of linguistic search queries mediated on a daily basis are innumerable, and keywords, sentences, phrases, misspellings and keyboard mishaps can blur the syntax of search results. The ambiguous nature of keyword semantics and it’s textual context are paramount focus in linguistic capitalism, keyword commodity, user intention, query context and search engine optimization (SEO). Let’s explore the most pervasive forms of ambiguity in semantics; homonyms, homophones and homographs; (excluding heteronyms and heterographs subsets).

Homonyms are monosyllabic words; “homo,” means “same,” and “onym,” means “name.” Hence words like “bark,” are homonyms, because of same spelling and pronunciation; “bark,” as the noun, “the protective outer sheath of a tree trunk,” and as the verb, “dog emitting sound;” the meanings are predicated on grammatical syntax….There’s no morphological or phonological distinctions with homonymic lexemes, and the disparity between the noun, verb or adjective semantics becomes salient in their syntax. Homonym and polysemy are identical in spelling and pronunciations, with exceptions to polysemous meanings extend beyond homonyms double interpretations.

Homophones; “homo” means “same,” and the root “phone,” means sound; words like “waste,” and “waist,” are spelled differently with the same pronunciation. “Waste,” as a verb that “expend what’s useless or lacking purpose,” and “waist,” as “part of the human anatomy.” Homophones are unequivocal because of their orthographic distinctions; however, those distinctions become implicit when a non-English speaker keyword search words and phrases based on pronunciations, and not accounting for linguistic orthography. Homophones are often used as misdirection in humor and political satire…

Homographs; “homo,” means “same,” and “graph,” means “write;” homographs are spelled identical but may or may not have the same pronunciation; meaning, homographs may also be homonyms depending on their syntax. Prime example is; “wind,” as the noun, “air movement,” and the verb “twist and turn.” Wind as a “verb,” in regards to twisting and turning has a different pronunciation, it’s where the “i,” is enunciated with the “y,” sound in “wind,” and this is grammatically determined by syntax or contextual usage.

Now that we’ve segmented lexemes into ambiguous categories, let’s explore this paper that was published by an accredited institution; it states that there’s three types of ambiguity; lexical, syntactic and semantic; actually, there’s over six; lexical, syntactical or structural, semantical, grammatical, punctuational and phonological.

Lexical ambiguity, syntactical ambiguity and semantic ambiguity are pervasive in news headlines, politics, humor and any area that’s contingent on the exchange and communication of language. However, phonological ambiguity derives from intonational ambiguity attributed to a lexical or syntactical sentence; an example is a declining inflection while uttering the word “no;” a rhetoric that insinuates “tell me more,” “condescends,” or “induces curiosity,” during a dialogue that produces shock value. The phonological ambiguity of the word “no,” can induce polysemic interpretations, and this ambiguity is a result of the suprasegmental features in phonology associated with cadence, modulation, intonation and inflection.

Punctuational ambiguity is when an unequivocal syntactical sentence becomes ambiguous when punctuational rules are implemented. Primary example; “a woman without her man is nothing;” and “a woman without her, man is nothing.” A monosemous sentence becomes ambiguous when commas are introduced. Grammatical ambiguity refers to the discordant functions of a verb conducing ambiguity in a syntactical sentence; example, “I see her duck;” to “lower her head,” or “a waterbird.” This is grammatical ambiguity where the present tense replaced the past tense inducing a grammatically incorrect syntax, thus inducing the punctuational ambiguity.

“Knight” and “Night” are homophones, not homonyms; homonyms have identical spelling and pronunciation with mutually exclusive meanings; generally it’s a contrast between a noun and a verb or adjective. Example “bark;” dogs bark, and tree bark. Homophones are words that are pronounced identical but spelled differently. These distinctions are imperative if you’re publishing a paper on Google’s algorithm, morphological ambiguity, polysemous and other semantical ambiguous attributes that affects the search engines performance, in terms of query and context accuracy; ambiguous distinctions are paramount…..


The History of Linguistics Organic Search Engine Theory (LOSE-T), (SEO), and Word Sense Disambiguation (WSD)


INTRODUCTION TO (LOSE-T)

THE EVOLUTION OF (LOSE-T)


THE HISTORY OF (LOSE-T)

PHENOMENOLOGY (LOSE-T)


Introduction To (LOSE-T) Search Query Disambiguation (SQD)
(1) (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Derivational & Inflectional Morphology
(2) (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Metaphor, Analogy, Metonym
(3) (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Polysemy, Capitonym, Monosemy
(4) (SEO), (SERP), Homonym, Homophones, Homograph
(5) (SEO), (SERP), Segmental & Suprasegmental Phonology
(6) (SEO), (SERP), Paronym, Hyponym, Meronym, Hypernym
(7) (SEO), (SERP), Onomatopoeia, Denotation and Connotation
(8) (SEO), (SERP), Heteronym, Heterograph, Orthographic Units
(9) (SEO), (SERP), (NLP), Cuneiform, Pictographs, Ideographs
(10) (SEO), (SERP), Logographs, Hieroglyphics, Phonographs
(11) (SEO), (SERP), Abbreviations, Acronyms-Hybrids, Initialisms
(12) (SEO) (SERP) Anthropomorphic, Personification, Typography
(13) (SEO), (SERP) Holonyms, Synonyms, Antonyms, Taxonomy
(14) (SEO), (SERP) Prefix, Suffix, Affix, Infix, Circumfix, Morpheme
(15) (SEO), (LOSE-T) Taxonomic Framework To Encode (NLP)
(16) (SEO), (SERP) Absolute, Comparative, Superlative Adjectives
(17) (SEO), (SERP) Redshift, Doppler, Special & General Relativity
(18) (SEO), Possessive, Demonstrative, Indefinite Adjectives
(19) (SEO), (NLP), Proper Nouns, Common Nouns, Capitonymic
(20) (SEO), (NLP), Modulation, Cadence, Intonation, Inflection
(21) (SEO), (NLP), Terminology, Jargon, Verbosity, Slang/Ebonics
(22) (SEO), (NLP) Phonemes, Graphemes, Morphemes, Digraphs
(23) (SEO), (NLP), Autocomplete, Spelling Correction Predictions
(24) (SEO), (NLP), Algorithmic Paradoxes, Equilibriums, Axioms
(25) (SEO), (NLP), Chromatics, Diatonics, Logarithmics, Octaves
(26) (SEO), (NLP), Anaphora, Cataphora, Antecedent, Postcedent
(27) (SEO), (NLP), Hegelians Dialect; Thesis, Antithesis, Synthesis


(1) Fundamental vs Technical Analysis in The Stock-Market
(2) Predicting The Stock Market Using Dispersed Variables..
(3) (SEO), (SMO), (SERP), And Google Algorithms..
(4) ICANN), (gTLD), Domain Registras & Cyber-Squatting..
(5) Domain Names (gTLD), Effect On (SEO), Stock-Market..
(6) 10-K, 10-Q, Annual Reports And Google Revenue..
(7) (ICANN), (UDRP), Domain Trademark And Cybersquatting..
(8) Economic Correlation/Advertisement, Marketing & Commodity!


(1) Three Dimensional Paradoxes In Spatial Schemata
(2) Vibrating Molecules and Elliptical Bubbles
(3) Musical Octaves and Wave-Particle Duality
(4) Smells Velocity Induces Memory Faculty
(5)
The Paradox of Light and Sound Induces Synesthesia
(6) The Trichotomy Between Amplitude, Frequency and Velocity
(7) Black Is An Electromagnetic-Radiation (EM) Paradox
(8) Quantum Field Theory, Nash Equilibrium & Social Science
(9) Quantum Electrodynamics, Intramolecular, Intermolecular
(10) The Fibonacci Sequence & Coriolis Effect; Music & Motion


(1) The Emotional Dichotomy in Humor
(2) Neuro-Behavioral Disorder Adaptation
(3) Why Comedians Don’t Laugh At Open Mics
(4) Economic Psychology and Humor Aberration
(5) The Philosophy And Psychology Behind Fozzie Bear Humor
(6) Women Comics! A Sociobiological and Economical Analysis
(7) The Trichotomy Between Instinct, Intuition and Improvisation
(8) Synasthesia, Psychophysics, Linguistics and Humor!

The Wave-Medium Dichotomy Between Light and Sound
The Contrasting Distinctions Between Metaphor and Analogy
Thermodynamics and The Industrial Revolution
Analogically Correlating The Third Law of Motion Equilibrium
American History Pervasive With Irony 13th, 14th, 15th Amendment
The Fallibility of Improper Metaphor Congress and Atoms
Sarcasm Phonology, Ambiguity, Semiotics, Semantics etc..
Dramatic, Situational, Verbal, Tragic, Socratic Irony
Apophenia, Pareidolia, Psychosis, Schizophrenia
Synchronicity, Serendipity, Irony, Coincidences
Lexical, Syntactical and Structural Ambiguity
Incongruous Juxtaposition Resolution


(1) Ecological Factors and Physiological Attributes 
(2) The Psychology of Politics Equatable Rhetorics
(3) Psychophysics, Polyrhythm, Arrangement and Composition
(4) Smells Velocity Induces Memory Faculty
(5) Cognitive Impairment/Weather Conditions/Placebo Effect
(6) The Social Equilibrium of Spirituality vs Superficiality
(7)  Quantum Entanglement, Chameleon Effect and Coincidences
(8) Synthesis Deriving From A Medical Antithesis
(9) The Power of Analogy, A Peculiar Mnemonics
(10) A Metaphor In Physics To Induce Organic Sleep
(11) Karma The Spiritual Undertone In Cause and Effect  
(12) Distinctions Between Verbal Irony and Verbal Sarcasm  
(13) School District Negligence, A Butterfly a Effect Analogy 
(14) Dogs Defecating Alignment With The Earths Magnetic Field  
(15) Fundamental vs Technical Analysis in The Stock-Market  
(16) A Conglomeration of Political Discrepancy 

Share your views and opinion, please leave a comment below Written By: Atelston Fitzgerald Holder 1st
SCIENTIST | ACADEMIC WRITER | LECTURER
The Harlem Times Politics | Business | Economics | Entertainment
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Copyright 2016

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