2,982 research outputs found
Paracompositionality, MWEs and Argument Substitution
Multi-word expressions, verb-particle constructions, idiomatically combining
phrases, and phrasal idioms have something in common: not all of their elements
contribute to the argument structure of the predicate implicated by the
expression.
Radically lexicalized theories of grammar that avoid string-, term-, logical
form-, and tree-writing, and categorial grammars that avoid wrap operation,
make predictions about the categories involved in verb-particles and phrasal
idioms. They may require singleton types, which can only substitute for one
value, not just for one kind of value. These types are asymmetric: they can be
arguments only. They also narrowly constrain the kind of semantic value that
can correspond to such syntactic categories. Idiomatically combining phrases do
not subcategorize for singleton types, and they exploit another locally
computable and compositional property of a correspondence, that every syntactic
expression can project its head word. Such MWEs can be seen as empirically
realized categorial possibilities, rather than lacuna in a theory of
lexicalizable syntactic categories.Comment: accepted version (pre-final) for 23rd Formal Grammar Conference,
August 2018, Sofi
Can Subcategorisation Probabilities Help a Statistical Parser?
Research into the automatic acquisition of lexical information from corpora
is starting to produce large-scale computational lexicons containing data on
the relative frequencies of subcategorisation alternatives for individual
verbal predicates. However, the empirical question of whether this type of
frequency information can in practice improve the accuracy of a statistical
parser has not yet been answered. In this paper we describe an experiment with
a wide-coverage statistical grammar and parser for English and
subcategorisation frequencies acquired from ten million words of text which
shows that this information can significantly improve parse accuracy.Comment: 9 pages, uses colacl.st
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Toward a Cognitive Classical Linguistics. The Embodied Basis of Constructions in Greek and Latin
The volume that gathers a series of papers bringing together the study of grammatical and syntactic constructions in Greek and Latin under the perspective of theories of embodied meaning developed in cognitive linguistics
Use of single- vs. multi-word verbs in the written discourse of Iranian EFL learners
Age is being evermore complained as an impediment to language competency, either given as a pretext or raised as a real challenge, taken for granted by foreign language learners. This study seeks to prod about the verb choices among EFL learners. In so doing, the two completely different radiuses of EFL learners, a group of university students in distance education, with part-time class participation and another from a private language institute in Qom province were recruited and compared on their choices of verbs in respect of single- and multi-word forms put into the written tasks. The results of the rating of the students' assignments showed that adult Iranian EFL learners' written language was deprived of phrasal verbs, even in informal writing assigned the use of informal language were scarcely captured. The study corroborates the former studies for the avoidance and incompetency of EFL learners in the use of phrasal verbs
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