Note sull’apprendimento delle parole polisemiche
Abstract
As well known, both in the case of acquiring an L! and, later, a foreign language (FL), many factors related
to communicative, affective and relational contexts come into play. The existence in the historical-natural
languages of polysemic words can be a difficulty in learning either a L1 (for example in the case of the Italian
banco which can mean both a “school bench” and a “butcher’s bench”) or a FL (for example in the case of
Italian speakers struggling to memorize that orologio in many European languages corresponds to two different
terms, depending on whether we mean “wall/table clock” or “wristwatch”). This difficulty is then made
stronger by the fact that more words are common and frequent, more extensive is their polysemy.
The aim of this paper is to highlight the similarities and differences that exist in L1 and FL acquisition
of polysemic words. In this regard, different study approaches are taken into account, bearing in
mind the need – in our opinion – to promote the development of word consciousness (involving an
interest in and an awareness of word parts, word order, how words extend their meanings, word choice in
different uses of the language etc.), with either L1 or FL learners.