Dependency Linguistics : Recent advances in linguistic theory using dependency structures. için kapak resmi
Dependency Linguistics : Recent advances in linguistic theory using dependency structures.
Başlık:
Dependency Linguistics : Recent advances in linguistic theory using dependency structures.
Yazar:
Gerdes, Kim.
ISBN:
9789027270160
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Fiziksel Tanımlama:
1 online resource (367 pages)
Seri:
Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today ; v.215

Linguistik Aktuell/Linguistics Today
İçerik:
Dependency Linguistics -- Editorial page -- Title page -- LCC data -- Table of content -- Authors -- Foreword -- 1. Is dependency a linguistic domain? -- 2. This volume -- Dependency in language -- 1. Introductory remarks -- 1.1 The task stated -- 1.2 Some History -- 1.3 Dependency and meaning-text stratificational approach -- 2. Different types of linguistic dependency -- 3. Fourteen possible combinations of the three types of linguistic dependency -- 4. Semantic Dependency -- 5. Syntactic dependency -- 5.1 Deep- vs. surface-syntactic dependency -- 5.2 Deep-Syntactic Relations -- 5.3 Surface-syntactic relations: criteria for establishing surface-syntactic relations in a language -- 5.4 Examples of deep- vs. surface-syntactic structures -- 6. Morphological dependency -- 6.1 Agreement -- 6.2 Government -- 7. What syntactic dependency is good for -- 7.1 Diatheses and Voices -- 7.2 Lexical functions -- 7.3 Phrasemes -- 7.4 Paraphrasing -- 7.5 Word order -- 8. Where syntactic dependency is not sufficient -- 9. Constituents vs. phrases -- 10. "Bracketing paradox" -- 11. Conclusions -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Appendix: A Tentative List of English SSynt-Relations -- Delimitation of information between grammatical rules and lexicon -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Grammar vs. lexicon in selected theoretical approaches -- 3. Valency -- 3.1 Valency approach of FGD -- 3.2 Valency in the lexicon and grammar -- 4. Dependent content clauses in Czech -- 4.1 Dependent content clauses in FGD -- 4.2 Modality in dependent content clauses -- 4.3 Interconnecting lexical and grammatical information -- 5. Grammatical diatheses of Czech verbs -- 5.1 Passivization -- 5.2 Resultative constructions -- 5.3 Recipient diathesis -- 5.4 Grammatical diatheses in the lexicon and grammar -- 6. Pair/group meaning of Czech nouns -- 6.1 Nouns with pair/group meaning.

6.2 Pair/group meaning as a grammaticalized feature -- 7. Conclusions -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Sentence structure and discourse structure -- 1. Motivation and background -- 2. Basic aspects of the underlying syntactic structure in the PDT relevant for discourse -- 3. Discourse annotation -- 3.1 Discourse relevance of intra-sentential relations -- 3.2 Basic aspects of discourse annotation -- 4. Three semantic relations expressed both in a sentence and in a text -- 4.1 The case of condition -- 4.2 The case of specification -- 4.3 The Case of Opposition -- 5. Overview of all relations expressed both in one sentence and between sentences -- 6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- The Copenhagen Dependency Treebank (CDT) -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Syntactic annotation -- 3. Morphological annotation -- 4. The semantic dimension -- 5. From syntax to discourse -- 5.1 Discourse relations in the CDT -- 5.2 Vagueness, doubts and inter-annotator agreement figures -- 5.3 CDT graphs -- 5.4 Unifying syntax and discourse in a tree structure. A discussion -- 5.5 Attribution -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Creating a Dependency Syntactic Treebank -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Background of the project -- 3. Linguistic phenomena -- 3.1 Elliptical comparative sentences -- 3.2 NPs with participles and derived nouns -- 3.3 Phenomena in other treebanks -- 4. The experiment -- 5. Results: Modeling the phenomena -- 5.1 Elliptical Comparative Structure -- 5.2 Participles and Derived Nouns -- 6. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- References -- A proposal for a multilevel linguistic representation of Spanish personal names -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Related work -- 2.1 Proper names in traditional dictionaries -- 2.2 Proper names in lexical databases -- 2.3 Description of the structure of proper names -- 3. Linguistic representation of Spanish personal names.

3.1 The person database -- 3.2 The dictionary -- 3.3 Semantic representation (SemR) -- 3.4 Syntactic representation of personal names -- 3.4.1 Single node or syntactic tree? -- 3.4.2 Syntactic relations in the description of personal names -- 4. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Coordination of verbal dependents in Old French -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Coordination in the dependency framework -- 2.1 Tesnière's baseline -- 2.1.1 Tesnière's initial statement -- 2.1.2 Timothy Osborne's asymmetrical approach -- 2.2 Mel'čuk's unidimensional approach -- 2.3 Sylvain Kahane's Bubbles -- 2.4 Gerdes and Kahane's paradigmatic piles -- 2.5 Word Grammar -- 2.6 Summary of options -- 3. Segmental underspecification in OF -- 3.1 Minimal relation and specification concepts -- 3.2 Segmental underspecification in OF -- 3.3 Consequences -- 4. Coordination as a specified juxtaposition or apposition -- 4.1 Specified juxtaposition -- 4.1.1 Argument types -- 4.1.2 Juxtaposed dependents -- 4.1.3 Specification -- 4.2 Specified apposition -- 4.2.1 Comparing apposition and juxtaposition -- 4.2.2 Specification -- 4.3 Conclusion -- Acknowledgemens -- References -- Dependency annotation of coordination for learner language -- 1. Introduction and motivation -- 2. Annotating learner language -- 3. Dependencies for learner language -- 3.1 Completeness, Coherence, & Consistency -- 3.2 Modeling dependencies -- 3.2.1 Distributional dependencies -- 3.2.2 Morpho-syntactic dependencies -- 3.2.3 Secondary dependencies -- 3.2.4 Other types of dependencies -- 3.2.5 Modeling subcategorization -- 3.3 Modeling adjunction -- 3.4 Technical details -- 4. Our treatment of coordination -- 4.1 Basic coordination -- 4.2 Coordination of unsaturated functors -- 4.3 Coordination of unlikes -- 4.4 Extending to other types of coordination -- 5. Summary and outlook -- Acknowledgments -- References.

The Dependency Distance Hypothesis for Bilingual Code-Switching -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The data -- 3. Dependency distance in English, German and Chinese -- 4. Dependency distance in 'mixed' dependencies -- 5. General findings -- 6. Specific findings -- 6.1 Monolingual dependencies -- 6.2 Monolingual L1 and mixed dependencies with an L1 head -- 6.3 Monolingual L2 and mixed dependencies with an L2 head -- 7. Summary and Conclusion -- References -- Dependencies over prosodic boundary tones in spontaneous spoken Hebrew -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Theoretical approaches to prosody-syntax interface -- 3. Speech segmentation and annotation -- 3.1 Prosodic annotation and distribution -- 3.2 Linear (n-gram) analysis -- 4. Spontaneous Hebrew corpus -- 5. Do all Continuous boundaries play the same role? -- 6. Results -- 7. Head and Dependant in the light of the results -- 7.1 Function words as heads in IH -- 7.2 The second element of the dependency -- 8. The dependency feature -- 9. Summary -- References -- Clitics in dependency morphology -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Catena-based morphology -- 2.1 Within words: Intra-word dependency -- 2.2 Across words: Inter-word dependency (Government) -- 2.3 Compound structure -- 3. Clitics -- 3.1 Horizontal and vertical dimensions -- 3.2 Clitic rising -- 3.3 Clitic doubling -- 3.4 Second position clitics -- 4. Conclusion -- References -- On the word order of Actor and Patient in Czech -- 1. The word order in Czech - systemic ordering -- 2. Verifying the systemic ordering on data from the Prague Dependency Treebank -- 3. Research results - tectogrammatical language layer -- 3.1 Order Actor/Patient -- 1.1.1 Actor and Patient in the constructions with the verb to be.

1.1.1.1 PAT.adjective - ACT.infinitive The order PAT-ACT often occurs in structures with the copula verb to be, where the PAT frequently has the form an adjective and the ACT is in the form of verbal infinitive (like in English structures it is necessary -- 1.1.1.2 PAT.noun - ACT.noun/ACT.noun - PAT.noun In PDT, there is a total of 560 occurrences of the PAT and the ACT in the constructions with the verb to be. The vast majority of them is in order PAT - ACT (391 hits) and 169 occurrences in order ACT - PAT. -- 3.1.1 Actor and Patient depending on a verb other than the copula to be -- 1.1.1.3 PAT.verb - ACT.noun/ACT.noun - PAT.verb -- 1.1.1.4 ACT.noun - PAT.noun/PAT.noun - ACT.noun -- 4. Actor and Patient in the syntactic roles of Subject and Object -- 4.1 Actor and Patient in the syntactic roles of Subject and Object expressed by nouns -- 5. Conclusions -- Acknowledgments -- References -- Type 2 Rising -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Catenae -- 3. Type 1 rising -- 4. Type 2 rising and the Rising Principle -- 4.1 Subcategorization -- 4.2 SV order -- 4.3 VF order -- 4.4 Sluicing -- 4.5 Free relatives -- 4.6 Constituency-based hierarchies -- 5. Pied-piping -- 6. Type 2 rising in other languages -- 7. Rising catenae -- 8. Conclusion -- References -- Wh-copying in German as replacement -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Wh-copying in German -- 3. Two generalizations about Wh-copying -- 3.1 Generalization I: Agreement -- 3.2 Generalization II: Proforms only -- 4. A problem with the PS approach -- 4.1 The PS approach -- 4.2 The Problem -- 5. A relational analysis -- 5.1 Brief overview of APG -- 5.2 Proforms -- 5.3 Flagging -- 5.4 Extraction -- 5.5 Wh-copying in APG -- 6. Conclusion -- References -- Representation of zero and dummy subject pronouns within multi-strata dependency framework -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Linguistic signs in MTT.

2.1 Subject pronoun having a phonetic realization and filling an endophoric function → [full pronoun].
Özet:
The objective of this paper is to discuss a formal representation of subject pronoun within a multi-strata dependency model. We propose criteria to describe consistently subject pronoun variations, naming subject pronouns that have no meaning and/or no morpho-phonological expression. We will present particular syntactic structures raised from a change of voice category; and will emphasize the problematic representation of Pro-Drop impersonal construction within the multi-strata framework.
Notlar:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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