Noun
lexical item (plural lexical items)
- (semantics) A term (that is, a word or sequence of words) that acts as a unit of meaning, including words, phrases, phrasal verbs and proverbs; exemplified by cat, traffic light, take care of, by-the-way, and don't count your chickens before they hatch.
- For quotations using this term, see Citations:lexical item.
1993, Roman Kopytko, Polite Discourse in Shakespeare's English, page 396:He also realized that by comparing different types of text you may be able to spot "a different density ( repetition rate ) of lexical items, and different degrees of cohesion, in the short story and in the novel.
1998, Edda Weigand, Contrastive Lexical Semantics, page 22:It is not surprising that this is a very common structure in language, because it allows the flexibility that was identified earlier in this paper as essential for an adequate lexical item.
2007, Kristel Proost ·, Conceptual Structure in Lexical Items, page 114:The meaning of lexical items may be described in terms of combinations of semantic features.
2018, James Lambert, “Setting the Record Straight: An In-depth Examination of Hobson-Jobson”, in International Journal of Lexicography, volume 31, number 4, →DOI, page 490:Thus there are 3751 lexical items covered in total. Taking into account polysemy, there are 4315 separate senses.
Translations
term that acts as a unit of meaning
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 詞項/词项 (cíxiàng)
- Czech: lexikální jednotka f
- Dutch: lexicale eenheid f
- Finnish: leksikaalinen yksikkö
- French: lexie (fr) f
- German: lexikalische Einheit f
- Irish: mír fhoclóireachta f, aonad léacsach m
- Japanese: 語彙項目 (ごいこうもく, goi kōmoku)
- Russian: лекси́ческая едини́ца (ru) f (leksíčeskaja jediníca), лекси́ческий элеме́нт m (leksíčeskij elemént)
- Vietnamese: đơn vị từ vựng
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