English

Self reference in word definitions

Computation and Language 2011-03-14 v1 Artificial Intelligence Physics and Society

Abstract

Dictionaries are inherently circular in nature. A given word is linked to a set of alternative words (the definition) which in turn point to further descendants. Iterating through definitions in this way, one typically finds that definitions loop back upon themselves. The graph formed by such definitional relations is our object of study. By eliminating those links which are not in loops, we arrive at a core subgraph of highly connected nodes. We observe that definitional loops are conveniently classified by length, with longer loops usually emerging from semantic misinterpretation. By breaking the long loops in the graph of the dictionary, we arrive at a set of disconnected clusters. We find that the words in these clusters constitute semantic units, and moreover tend to have been introduced into the English language at similar times, suggesting a possible mechanism for language evolution.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1103.2325,
  title  = {Self reference in word definitions},
  author = {David Levary and Jean-Pierre Eckmann and Elisha Moses and Tsvi Tlusty},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1103.2325},
  year   = {2011}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-21T17:38:27.093Z