What is ambiguity? Ambiguity is a word, phrase, or
sentence that has doubtfulness of meaning and makes people understood in two or
more sense. Ambiguity is important and it is worth examining what
the phenomenon is and how it differs and relates to similar phenomena.
There are two types of ambiguity:
1. Lexical ambiguity
Lexical ambiguity
is a common problem. Bear, time, and light are lexically
ambiguous. Why it can be ambiguous?
Look at the example.
The word “time” as
noun, verb, and adjective has different meaning.
Noun : Time is money.
Verb : Time me on the
last lap.
Adjective : Time
travel is not likely in my life time.
2. Structural ambiguity
Structural ambiguity is also
common problem. For example, “Tibetan history teacher”, it can be structural ambiguity
because can be represented in two structurally different ways. “Tibetan history
teacher” can be ‘[Tibetan history] teacher’ and ‘Tibetan [history teacher]’.
How do we do to avoid ambiguity? There
are some tips to avoid ambiguity.
1. Ensure that it is clear which noun each pronoun
replaces.
2. Add extra punctuation if it helps to clarify your meaning.
3. Write longer or shorter sentences if it makes things
clearly.
4. Rearrange the order of your words if it sounds
confusing.
5. Aim for a balanced mixture of nouns and pronouns.
References
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