Dictionary Definition
lexicon
Noun
1 a language user's knowledge of words [syn:
vocabulary, mental
lexicon]
2 a reference book containing an alphabetical
list of words with information about them [syn: dictionary]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- , /ˈleksɪkɑn/, /"leksIkQn/
Etymology
From λεξικόν.Noun
- A dictionary that includes or focuses on lexemes.
- A dictionary of Classical Greek, Hebrew, Latin, or Aramaic.
- The lexicology of a programming language. (Usually called lexical structure.)
- Any dictionary.
- The vocabulary used by or known to an individual. (Also called lexical knowledge)
Translations
dictionary of lexemes
dictionary of Classical Greek, Hebrew, Latin, or
Aramaic
- Greek: λεξικό
- Icelandic: orðabók, orðasafn
- Italian: lessico
- Russian: лексикон
lexicology of a programming language
- Greek: λεξιλόγιο
- Icelandic: orðasafn
- Italian: lessico
(rare) any dictionary
- Greek: λεξικό
- Icelandic: orðabók, orðasafn
- Italian: lessico
- Russian: лексикон, словарь
vocabulary used by an individual
- ttbc French: lexique
- ttbc Interlingua: lexico
- ttbc Portuguese: léxico
- ttbc Welsh: geiriadur
Extensive Definition
In linguistics, the lexicon
(from Greek Λεξικόν) of a language is its vocabulary, including its
words and expressions. More formally, it is a language's inventory
of lexemes.
The lexicon includes the lexemes used to
actualize words. Lexemes are formed according to morpho-syntactic
rules and express sememes. In this sense, a lexicon
organizes the mental
vocabulary in a speaker's mind: First, it organizes the vocabulary
of a language according to certain principles (for instance, all
verbs of motion may be linked in a lexical network) and second, it
contains a generative device producing (new) simple and complex
words according to certain lexical rules. For example, the suffix
'-able' can be added to transitive
verbs only, so that we get 'read-able' but not
'*cry-able'.
Usually a lexicon is a container for words
belonging to the same language. Some exceptions may be encountered
for languages that are variants, like for instance Brazilian
compared to Portuguese, where a lot of words are common and where
the differences may be marked word by word.
When linguists study the lexicon, they study such
things as what words are, how the vocabulary in a language is
structured, how people use and store words, how they learn words,
the history and evolution of words (i.e. etymology), types of
relationships between words as well as how words were
created.
An individual's lexicon, lexical knowledge, or
lexical concept is that person's knowledge of vocabulary.
Further reading
- Aitchison, Jean. Words in the Mind: An Introduction to the Mental Lexicon. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell, 2003.
lexicon in German: Wortschatz
lexicon in Spanish: Lexicón
lexicon in French: Lexique
lexicon in Hebrew: לקסיקון
lexicon in Ido: Lexiko
lexicon in Lithuanian: Leksikonas
lexicon in Dutch: Woordenschat
lexicon in Norwegian Nynorsk: Ordforråd
lexicon in Norwegian: Ordforråd
lexicon in Portuguese: Léxico
lexicon in Russian: Лексика
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
biographical dictionary, cant, chemical dictionary, desk
dictionary, dialect dictionary, dictionary, dictionary of
quotations, electronics dictionary, etymological dictionary,
foreign-language dictionary, gazetteer, general dictionary,
geological dictionary, gloss, glossary, gradus, jargon, language, lexis, nomenclator, onomasticon, palaver, phrase book, phraseology, polyglot
dictionary, promptorium, rhyming
dictionary, science dictionary, slang dictionary, specialized
dictionary, stock of words, synonym dictionary, synonymy, terminology, thesaurus, treasury of words,
unabridged dictionary, verbiage, vocabulary, word list,
wordage, wordbook, wordhoard, words