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E-grāmata: Syntax and Semantics of Prepositions

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A great deal of attention has been devoted in the past ten years in the lingu- tic and computational linguistics communities to the syntax and the semantics of nouns, verbs and also, but to a lesser extent, to adjectives. Related p- nomena such as quanti cation or tense and aspect have motivated a number of in-depth studies and projects. In contrast, prepositions have received less attention. The reasons are quite clear: prepositions are highly polysemic, p- sibly more so than adjectives, and linguistic realizations are extremely dif cult to predict, not to mention the dif culty of identifying cross-linguistic regula- ties. Furthermore, a number of languages do not use prepositions or postpo- tions (or make a limited use of them) and prefer other linguistic forms such as morphological marks, e. g. case marks. Let us mention, however, projects devoted to prepositions expressing space, time and movement in arti cial intelligence and in natural language processing, and also the development of formalisms and heuristics to handle prepositional phrase attachment ambiguities. Prepositions are also present in subcategorization frames of predicative lexical items, but often in an informal and coarse-grained way. Let us also mention the large number of studies in psycholinguistics and in ethnolinguistics around speci c preposition senses. Finally, prepositions seem to reach a very deep level in the cognitive-semantic structure of the brain: cognitive grammar developers often use prepositions in their metalanguage, in order to express very primitive notions.
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xiv
Introduction to the Syntax and Semantics of Prepositions
1(26)
Patrick Saint-Dizier
The class of prepositions
1(1)
About the syntax of prepositions
2(8)
Polysemy and sense restrictions
10(2)
Representing the semantics of prepositions
12(8)
Prepositions and multilinguism
20(1)
Overview of the book structure
20(7)
References
23(4)
Preposition Contractions in Quebec French
27(16)
Luc V. Baronian
Introduction
27(1)
Facts
28(3)
Two possible analyses
31(1)
External evidence for Analysis 2
32(1)
Core linguistic arguments for Analysis 2
33(3)
Conclusion: consequences of the analysis
36(7)
Acknowledgments
40(1)
References
41(2)
The A's and BE's of English Prepositions
43(14)
Andrew McMichael
Some definitions
43(1)
Corpus data
44(1)
The general formative principle
45(2)
Adverb formation
47(1)
The A's: a more complicated origin
47(1)
Simplex and compound prepositions: a classification
48(1)
The prefixed Gp as a cognitive functional marker
49(1)
Cognitive schemata of grammaticalising prepositions: an alternative categorisation
49(3)
Extensions of the Pattern
52(1)
Language Typology
52(2)
Conclusion
54(3)
References
55(2)
Typological Tendencies and Universal Grammar in the Acquisition of Adpositions
57(12)
David Stringer
Introduction
57(1)
A monkey, a parrot and a banana
58(4)
Lexical variation and single syntax
62(4)
Conclusion
66(3)
References
67(2)
Multilingual inventory of interpretations for postpositions and prepositions
69(14)
Mikel Lersundi
Eneko Agirre
Previous work
70(2)
Method to obtain the inventory and the multilingual table
72(2)
Case study with the Basque instrumental postposition
74(3)
Overall results
77(1)
Remaining problems.
77(2)
Conclusions and future work
79(4)
Acknowledgments
81(1)
References
81(2)
German prepositions and their kin
83(18)
Martin Volk
Introduction
83(1)
German prepositions
84(9)
Conclusions
93(8)
References
94(2)
Appendix: Prepositions
96(2)
Appendix: Contracted Prepositions
98(1)
Appendix: Pronominal Adverbs
98(1)
Appendix: Reciprocal Pronouns
99(2)
Directionality Selection
101(14)
Marcus Kracht
Introduction
101(1)
Modes
102(2)
One Word --- Three Meanings
104(2)
Selection
106(2)
Significance for Interpretation
108(2)
Predicting Selectional Properties
110(2)
Mode Heads: Evidence from Mari
112(1)
Conclusion
113(2)
References
113(2)
Verb-Particle Constructions in the World Wide Web
115(16)
Aline Villavicencio
Introduction
115(3)
VPCs in a Nutshell
118(1)
VPCs and Dictionaries
118(3)
VPCs and Corpora
121(1)
VPCs in the Web
122(5)
Conclusions
127(4)
Acknowledgments
128(1)
References
128(3)
Prepositional Arguments in a Multilingual Context
131(16)
Valia Kordoni
Introduction
131(1)
The Data
132(4)
Previous Accounts in HPSG
136(1)
Indirect Prepositional Arguments: The Analysis
137(5)
Conclusion
142(5)
Acknowledgments
143(1)
References
143(4)
The syntax of French a and de: an HPSG analysis
147(16)
Anne Abeille
Olivier Bonami
Daniele Godard
Jesse Tseng
Introduction
147(3)
Syntactic properties
150(4)
Proposed HPSG analysis
154(5)
Concluding remarks
159(4)
References
161(2)
In Search of a Systematic Treatment of Determinerless PPs
163(18)
Timothy Baldwin
John Beavers
Leonoor van der Beek
Francis Bond
Dan Flickinger
Ivan A. Sag
Introduction
163(2)
The Syntax of Determinerless PPs
165(4)
The Semantics of Determinerless PPs
169(3)
Analysis
172(4)
Conclusion
176(5)
Acknowledgments
177(1)
References
177(4)
Combinatorial Aspects of Collocational Prepositional Phrases
181(16)
Beata Trawinski Manfred Sailer
Jan-Philipp Soehn
Introduction
182(1)
Syntactic Aspects
182(3)
Semantic Aspects
185(5)
Irregular Combinations
190(3)
Summary
193(4)
Acknowledgments
194(1)
References
195(2)
Distributional Similarity and Preposition Semantics
197(14)
Timothy Baldwin
Introduction
197(2)
Calculating inter-preposition similarity
199(1)
Gold standard sources of inter-preposition similarity
200(3)
Evaluation
203(3)
Related research
206(1)
Conclusion
207(4)
Acknowledgments
207(1)
References
208(3)
A Computational Model of the Referential Semantics of Projective Prepositions
211(18)
John Kelleher
Josef van Genabith
Introduction
212(1)
The Challenges
212(3)
Previous Computational Work
215(1)
The Live Model
216(10)
Conclusions
226(3)
References
227(2)
Ontology-Based Semantics for Prepositions
229(16)
Per Anker Jensen
Jorgen Fischer Nilsson
Introduction
229(2)
Formal ontologies
231(1)
The relation between lexicon and ontology
232(2)
Formal meaning ascription
234(1)
Generative ontologies with feature structures
235(1)
Ontological affinities and generative ontologies
236(1)
Compositional ontological semantics for nominals
237(1)
Prepositions and semantic roles in Danish
238(3)
Identifying paraphrases
241(1)
Conclusion
242(3)
Acknowledgments
243(1)
References
243(2)
Analysis and Interpretation of the Japanese Postposition no
245(18)
Ryusuke Kikuchi
Hidetosi Sirai
Introduction
246(1)
Syntactic Analysis of No
247(1)
Semantic Analysis of No
248(1)
Framework of Context-Dependent Interpretation --- SDRT
249(1)
Case Study
250(6)
Discussion
256(2)
Conclusion
258(5)
References
259(4)
What do the notions of instrumentality and of manner have in common?
263(26)
Alda Mari
Aim and methodology
263(2)
Analysis of avec-instrument and avec-manner
265(9)
The model: properties and constraints
274(5)
A model for avec-instrument and manner
279(4)
Conclusion
283(6)
References
286(3)
A Conceptual Semantics for Prepositions denoting Instrumentality
289(18)
Alda Mari
Patrick Saint-Dizier
An analysis of the primitive notion of instrumentality and its lexicalizations
289(2)
Analysing the notion of instrumentality via its lexicalizations
291(4)
The logical model
295(3)
LCS representation of preposition senses and instances
298(4)
Conclusion
302(5)
Acknowledgments
304(1)
References
304(3)
Prepositions in Cooperative Question-Answering Systems: a Preliminary Analysis
307(24)
Farah Benamara
Veronique Moriceau
Introduction
307(2)
Preposition use in Question Answering : the WEBCOOP system
309(2)
Semantic Representation and Interpretation of Localization Prepositions in WEBCOOP
311(6)
Reasoning with Localization Prepositions
317(6)
Generating Prepositions and PPs
323(5)
Conclusion
328(3)
References
329(2)
Index 331