CBSE BOARD X, asked by Anonymous, 2 months ago

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Answered by raorita1981
1

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There are two types of semantic barrier of communication. They are as follows:

Denotative barriers which are based on and caused by the direct meaning of a word. These kinds of barriers happen when sender and receiver disagree with the meaning of the word. The word “comment” for new generation Facebook users are different from the older generation who never used or aware of social media networking websites.

Connotative barriers refer to the differences in the meaning of the defined word. In addition to its exact or lexical meaning, words also acquire implied meanings called connotative meanings. Connotations are understood based only on an individual’s experience. Here both sender and receivers are aware of the meaning of the word but the disagreement occurs when the context, situation and emotion behind the word will be different. The meaning of the word does not arise by itself but in the relation between the text and the context. This barrier becomes much complicated since the significant meaning needs a mutual level of understanding for effective communication. For example, in the context of instant messaging, the popular reply words like “ok” or “hmm” are used as giving feedback. The word “hmm”(non-lexical filler) from receiver provides agreement with the sender but also leaves a space for disagreement in the new media scene.

Here is a simple example, the word “bat” is common but the meaning changes from sports equipment to a mammal. The word “touch” is having a physical meaning of touching once body but on other hands it is having a psychological meaning of touching the soul. The usage like “master

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