Semantic measures are widely used today to estimate the strength of the semantic relationship between elements of various types: units of language (e.g., words, sentences, documents), concepts or even instances semantically characterized (e.g., diseases, genes, geographical locations). Semantic measures play an important role to compare such elements according to semantic proxies: texts and knowledge representations, which support their meaning or describe their nature. Semantic measures are therefore essential for designing intelligent agents which will for example take advantage of semantic analysis to mimic human ability to compare abstract or concrete objects. This paper proposes a comprehensive survey of the broad notion of semantic measure for the comparison of units of language, concepts or instances based on semantic proxy analyses. Semantic measures generalize the well-known notions of semantic similarity, semantic relatedness and semantic distance, which have been extensively studied by various communities over the last decades (e.g., Cognitive Sciences, Linguistics, and Artificial Intelligence to mention a few).