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    Detecting Erroneous Uses of Complex Postpositions in an Agglutinative Language

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    This work presents the development of a system that detects incorrect uses of complex postpositions in Basque, an agglutinative language. Error detection in complex postpositions is interesting because: 1) the context of detection is limited to a few words; 2) it implies the interaction of multiple levels of linguistic processing (morphology, syntax and semantics). So, the system must deal with problems ranging from tokenization and ambiguity to syntactic agreement and examination of local contexts. The evaluation was performed in order to test both incorrect uses of postpositions and also false alarms. 1 1 Structure of complex postpositions Basque postpositions play a role similar to English prepositions, with the difference that they appear at the end of noun phrases or postpositional phrases. They are defined as “forms that represent grammatical relations among phrases appearing in a sentence” (Euskaltzaindia, 1994). There are two main types of postpositions in Basque: (1) a suffix appended to a lemma and, (2) a suffix followed by a lemma (main element) that can also be inflected. (1) etxe-tik house-(from the) from the house (2) etxe-aren gain-etik house-(of the) top-(from the) from the top of the house The last type of elements has been termed as complex postposition. We will use this term to name the whole sequence of two words involved, and not just to refer to the second element. Com
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