Compare the Difference Between Similar Terms

Difference Between Lexical and Structural Ambiguity

Key Difference – Lexical vs Structural Ambiguity
 

Ambiguity is the quality of having more than one interpretation. A word, phrase, or a sentence becomes ambiguous if it can be interpreted with more than one meaning. Ambiguity can be classified into two different categories named lexical and structural ambiguity. Lexical ambiguity occurs when a word has more than one possible meanings. Structural ambiguity is a situation where one sentence has more than one meaning due to its sentence structure. This is the key difference between lexical and structural ambiguity.

What is Lexical Ambiguity?

Lexical ambiguity, also known as semantic ambiguity, occurs when a sentence has an ambiguous word or phrase (which has more than one possible meaning). This phenomenon is a result of polysemy. Lexical ambiguity is sometimes used deliberately to create pun and other wordplays. Given below are some examples of lexical ambiguity.

We saw her duck.

The minister married her sister.

Harriet cannot bear children.

The fisherman went to the bank.

Although lexical ambiguity can cause problems in meanings, it is not difficult to understand the intended meaning of the writer by looking at the context. For example,

“We saw her duck when we visited her last month. She has made a special pond in the garden to keep it.” – Duck here refers to an animal.

What is Structural Ambiguity?

Structural ambiguity, also known as syntactic ambiguity, occurs when a phrase or sentence has more than one underlying structure. Such a sentence can be interpreted in more than one way. Given below are some examples of structural ambiguity.

Miriam hit the boy with a book.

The teacher said on Friday he would give a test.

Visiting relatives can be boring.

They are cooking apples.

Peter saw his neighbour with binoculars.

What is the difference between Lexical and Structural Ambiguity?

Cause:

Lexical Ambiguity: Lexical Ambiguity occurs due to polysemy – words having more than one meaning.

Structural Ambiguity: Structural Ambiguity occurs due to the structure of the sentence.

The Intended Meaning:

Lexical Ambiguity: The intended meaning can be understood by the context.

Structural Ambiguity: The intended meaning can be understood by the prosodic features such as stress, intonation, etc.

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