LEADER 00520nam 2200193z- 450 001 9910326157903321 005 20200330121546.0 035 $a(CKB)3780000000512368 035 $a(EXLCZ)993780000000512368 100 $a20180430c2015uuuu -u- - 101 0 $aeng 200 00$aReturn to Erfurt /$fOlga Tarcali 210 $cCPL - Centro Primo Levi$d2015 311 $a1-941046-05-3 700 $aTarcali$b Olga$01024261 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910326157903321 996 $aReturn to Erfurt$92434109 997 $aUNINA LEADER 11337nam 2200757 a 450 001 9910965819903321 005 20240513083508.0 010 $a9786612154898 010 $a9781282154896 010 $a1282154893 010 $a9789027292773 010 $a9027292779 024 7 $a10.1075/slcs.84 035 $a(CKB)1000000000551651 035 $a(SSID)ssj0000309157 035 $a(PQKBManifestationID)11227404 035 $a(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000309157 035 $a(PQKBWorkID)10282081 035 $a(PQKB)11045472 035 $a(OCoLC)746926652 035 $a(MiAaPQ)EBC623092 035 $a(Au-PeEL)EBL623092 035 $a(CaPaEBR)ebr10587670 035 $a(CaONFJC)MIL215489 035 $a(OCoLC)705531436 035 $a(DE-B1597)721468 035 $a(DE-B1597)9789027292773 035 $a(EXLCZ)991000000000551651 100 $a20140721d2007 uy 0 101 0 $aeng 135 $aurcn||||||||| 181 $ctxt 182 $cc 183 $acr 200 00$aSelected lexical and grammatical issues in the meaning-text theory $ein honour of Igor Mel'c?uk /$fedited by Leo Wanner 205 $a1st ed. 210 $aAmsterdam ;$aPhiladelphia $cJohn Benjamins Pub. Co.$dc2007 215 $axviii, 377 p. $cill 225 0 $aStudies in Language Companion Series ;$v84 225 0$aStudies in language companion series,$x0165-7763 ;$vv. 84 300 $aBibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph 311 08$a9789027230942 311 08$a9027230943 320 $aIncludes bibliographical references and indexes. 327 $aSelected Lexical and Grammatical Issues in the Meaning-Text Theory -- Editorial page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Authors -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- Bibliography -- What to Do with the Ideophones? A Problem in Lexical Classifation from Upper Necaxa Totonac -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Phonological and Morphological Properties -- 2.1 Sound Symbolism -- 2.2 Reduplication -- 2.3 Relations to Other Words -- 3 Syntactic Properties -- 4 Semantic Properties -- 5 Ideophones and Adverbs as Predicate-Qualifiers -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Appendix: Ideophones in the Upper Necaxa Database -- Lexical Function Standardness -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Nature of Standardness -- 2.1 Definition Part 1: The General Notion of Lexical Function -- 2.2 Definition Part 2: Lexical Function Standardness -- 2.3 Some Preliminary Observations about LF Standardness -- 2.4 Why Is Lexical Functin Stndardness an Issue? -- 2.4.1 LF Standardness => -- Universality => -- Something about the Mind -- 2.4.2 As Nature Does Not Like Vacuum, Formal/Computational Linguistics Does Not Like Non-Standardness -- 2.4.3 LF Standardness Is Directly Linked to the Granularity of LF Encoding -- 3 Empirical vs. Logical Approaces to Expanding the Set of Standard Lexical Functions -- 3.1 Empircally Identifying New Standard LFs -- 3.2 Inferring New LFs from the Existing System of Standard LFs -- 4 De nouveau again: A Case Study Based on the DiCo/LAF Project -- 4.1 The DiCo/LAF Lexicograhic Project -- 4.2 Data on De nouveau 'again' -- 4.3 Choosing a Name for the Non-Standard LF -- 4.4 Positioning De nouveau within the System of Standard LFs -- 4.4.1 De nouveau as an "F(F)" Paradigmatic LF -- 4.4.2 De nouveau's Relationship with Caus and Incep -- 4.4.3 De nouveau and Différent "different' -- 4.5 Potential for Standardization. 327 $a5. Where to Go from Here? -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Appendix A: DiCo/LAF Data on de nouveau -- Appendix B: DiCo/LAF Data on Essayer de -- Towards the Synthesis of Support Verb Constructions: Distribution of Syntactic Actants between the Verb and the Noun -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 The Object and the Framework of the Study -- 1.2 The Problem -- 1.3 The Goal of the Paper -- 2. The Diathesis of the Support Verb -- 3 Number of DSynt As of he LF Operi -- 3.1 Variable Diathesis of LF Operi -- 3.2 Only Two DSynt As for All Operi -- 3.3 Number of DSyntAs of Operi Depending on its Value -- 4 Transition Rules Concerning SVCs -- 5. Paraphrasing Rules Concerning SVCs -- 5.1 Lexical Paraphrasing Rules -- 5.2 Syntactic Paraphrasing Rules -- 5.3 Distribution of DSyntAS in the Syntactic Fission Rule -- 6 Synthesis Procedure -- 6.1 Evaluaton of Possibility 1: Variable Diathesis -- 6.2. Evaluation of Possibility 2: Diatsis with Only Two DSyntAs -- 6.3 Possibility 3: Diathsis Differentiated Depending on SSyntS -- 6.4 Passage from the Sem-Level to the DSynt-Level for a SVC -- 7. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Motivation of Lexical Associations in Collocations: The Case of Intensifiers Denoting 'Joy' -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 A Tentative Semantic Analysis of NJs and IntenseAdjs -- 2.1 The Semantic Class of NJs -- 2.1.1 NJs and Other Kind of Nouns -- 2.1.2 Dimensions of NJs -- 2.2 Semantic Analysis of Adjective of Intensity -- 2.2 1 Expression of intensity with NJs -- 2.2.2 Intense Adjs Occurring with NJs -- 2.2.3 Semantic dimensions -- 3. Principles Underlying IntenseAdj+NJ Associations -- 3.1 Reinforcement -- 3.2 Convergence of Polarity -- 3.3 Coherence with the Semantic Types of NJs -- 4. Proposal for the Lexicogrphic Representation of Intense Adjs. 327 $a4.1 How to Encode Regulqrities in Collocate Entries of a Dictionary Such as the ECD -- 4.2 Example: Encoding of the Lexemes AFFREUX and DÉSESPOIR -- 4.2.1 Lexeme DÉSESPOIR1 -- 4.2.2 Lexeme AFFREUX (IntenseAdjs) -- 4.3 Discussion -- 5 Conclusion -- Ackowledgemnts -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Using Explanatory and Combinatorial Lexicology to Describe Term -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2. Basic Aspects of Terms and How Terminology Views Them -- 3 Previous Work Resorting to Explanatory and Combinatorial Lexicology (ECL) -- 3.1 A Concrete Proposal to Resort to ECL -- 3.2 Specialized Dictionaries Comatible with ECL -- 3.2.1 Contextual Dictionaries -- 3.2.2 A Specialized Learners' Dictionary -- 3.2.3 Specialized Combinatorics -- 3.3 What These Endeavors Teach Us about Terms -- 4. Using ECL at all levels of the description of terms -- 4.1 Confirming Specialized Senses -- 4.2 Describing Prdicative Terms -- 4.3 Capturing Relationships between Terms -- 4.4 What This Work Tells Us about Terms -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Lexical Functions in Actual NLP-Applications -- Abstract -- 1 ETAP-3 and MTT -- 2 The Notion of Lexical Function -- 3. LFs in Computerized Dictionaries and NLP Grammar Rules -- 4. LFs as a Disambiguation Tool in Parsing -- 4.1 Syntactic Ambiguity Resolution -- 4.2 Lexical Ambiguity Resolution -- 5 Finding Idiomatic Equivalents in MT with the Help of LF -- 6 An LF-Based Computer System of Parahrasing Utterances -- 6.1 Theory of the Paraphrasing System -- 6.2 Experimental Data -- 7 Computer-Aided Learning of Lexica -- 7.1 Dictionaries -- 7.1.1 Analytical Definitions -- 7.1.2 Lexical Functions in the Language Learning Tool -- 7.2 Linguistic Games -- 8 Conclusions -- Acknoledgements -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Towards Automatic Recognition of Lexical Function Instances -- Abstract -- 1. Introduction. 327 $a2 Lexical Fuctionns -- 3 The Approach -- 3.1 The Classification Strategies -- 3.2 Basic Assumptions and Notations -- 3.3 ML-Techniques for the Classification of LF-Instances -- 3.3.1 Nearest Neighbor Classification -- 3.3.2 Naïve Bayesian Network Classification -- 3.3.3 Tree Augmented Naïve Bayesian (TAN) Classification -- 4. SpEWN as the Source of the Semantic Description of Lexical Items -- 5 The Experiments -- 5.1 LF-Material Used in the Experiments -- 5.2 The Experiment Setup -- 5.3 Single Field Collocation Classification Experiment -- 5.4 Field-Independent Collocation Classification Experiment -- 6. What Do the Expriments Tell Us? -- 7 Related Work -- 8. Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Semantic Equivalence Rules in Meaning-Text Paraphrasing -- Abstract -- 1 Paraprasing in the Meaning-Text Linguistic Theory -- 2 The Meaning-Text Paraphrasing System -- 3. Limits of Deep-Syntactic Paraphrasing -- 4. Semantic Approach to Paraphrasing -- 4.1 Basic semantic concepts -- 4.2 Propositional equivalences -- 4.3 Communicative equivalences -- 5. Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Phrasing It Differently -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Problematics -- 3. Topological Phrase Structure for German -- 3.1 Different Word Order Phenomena in German -- 3.2 Topological Model -- 3.3 Word Order Rules for German -- 4 Comparison of Different Topological Phrase Structures -- 4.1 Flat Topological Phrase Structures -- 4.2 Embedding -- 4.3 Emancipation -- 5 Extension of the Basic German Grammar -- 5.1 The Internal Structure of the Verb Cluster -- 5.2 Sentential Complements -- 5.3 Relatives and Pied-Piping -- 6 Characterizing the Notion of Topological Phrase -- 6.1 Syntactic Tests -- 6.2 Prosodic Tests -- 7 The Place of the Phrase Structure in the Linguistic Model -- 8 Conclusion -- Notes -- Bibliography. 327 $aA Generative Approach to Parsing in the Framework of the Meaning-Text Theory -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 From an Equative to a Generative Approach to Parsing -- 3 On a Generative Formalism -- 3.1 Elementary Trees -- 3.2 Combining Elementary Trees -- 3.3 The Generative Procedure -- 4 Parsing -- 4.1 The Parsing Algorithm -- 4.2 Ambiguity and Non-Determinism -- 4.2.1 Stack Duplication -- 4.2.2 Using a Graph-Structured Stack -- 4.3 Bi-directional parsing -- 5 Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Subject Index -- Name Index. 330 $aThe Meaning Text Theory (MTT) is a lexicon-centred and dependency-based theory for the description of language using a holistic model that incorporates semantics, syntax, morphology and lexis. This volume, prepared on the occasion of Igor Mel'?uk's 70th birthday, offers a cross-section of the current advances in MTT and its applications. The first part of the book focuses on lexical phenomena that are still largely neglected in mainstream linguistics: sound symbolism as manifested by ideophones, and idiosyncratic lexical relations as manifested by lexical functions (LFs). In particular, LFs are addressed from different angles (including the introduction of new "standard" LFs, the argument structure and semantic decomposition of lexical relations captured by LFs, automatic recognition of LF-instances in corpora, and the use of LFs in terminology and natural language processing). The second part of the book deals with such prominent model-oriented issues as semantic paraphrasing in MTT, the role of phrase structure in MTT and syntactic analysis within MTT. 606 $aLexicology 606 $aGrammar, Comparative and general 606 $aMeaning-text theory (Linguistics) 615 0$aLexicology. 615 0$aGrammar, Comparative and general. 615 0$aMeaning-text theory (Linguistics) 676 $a413/.028 701 $aWanner$b Leo$01801901 701 $aMel'c?uk$b Igor' A$g(Igor' Aleksandrovic?),$f1932-$0304072 801 0$bMiAaPQ 801 1$bMiAaPQ 801 2$bMiAaPQ 906 $aBOOK 912 $a9910965819903321 996 $aSelected lexical and grammatical issues in the meaning-text theory$94347361 997 $aUNINA