pseudopolysemy
Pseudopolysemy is a term used in linguistics to describe cases where a single lexical form appears to have multiple senses that are not semantically interconnected in a way that would ground genuine polysemy. The concept is not universally standardized; some scholars prefer phrases like false polysemy or describe the phenomenon as a case of homonymy or cross-linguistic calques. In practice, pseudopolysemy draws attention to when apparent senses lack a single core semantic anchor.
Distinguishing pseudopolysemy from true polysemy relies on examining coherence among senses. True polysemy implies a shared
Common mechanisms underlying pseudopolysemy include: true homonymy, where two unrelated words converge in form; borrowing or
The concept has implications for lexicography, natural language processing, and semantic theory. Analysts typically examine etymology,