C-rule

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(Expressing compounds in the UNLarium)
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== Expressing compounds in the UNL<sup>arium</sup> ==
 
== Expressing compounds in the UNL<sup>arium</sup> ==
In the UNL<sup>arium</sup> framework, compounds are treated as ordinary simple words except in case of discontinuous multi-word expressions or with infixation (such as "give in" or "take into account"). In these cases, the [[lemma]] is different from the [[base form]], and the compound-formation process is expected to be defined through specific rules:
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In the UNL<sup>arium</sup> framework, compounds are treated as ordinary simple words except in case of discontinuous multi-word expressions or with infixation (such as "give in" or "take into account"). In these cases, the [[lemma]] is different from the [[base form]], and the compound-formation process is expected to be defined through [[S-rule]]s such as the following:
*coffee house (multi-word expression without infixation: "coffee house">"coffee houses"): BF=lemma="coffee house"<br>
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*give in (multi-word expression with infixation: "give in">"gave in"): BF="give" <code>&ne;</code> lemma="give in"<br>
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<CATEGORY><ROLE>(<ADDED>);
*behind one's back (discontinuous multi-word expression without infixation: "behind my back", "behind his back", etc): BF="behind" <code>&ne;</code> lemma="behind <person>'s back"<br>
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*take into account (discontinuous multi-word LRU with infixation: "take it into account", "took that into account"): BF="take" <code>&ne;</code> lemma="take into account"
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Where:<br/>
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<CATEGORY> is the category of the compound (N = noun, V = verb, J = adjective, A = adverb, P = preposition, D = determiner, C = conjunction)<br />
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<ROLE> is the syntactic role of the term to be added to the base form (H = head, S = specifier, C = complement, A = adjunct)<br />
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<ADDED> is the term to be added to the base form to form the compound. It can be a string between "quotes" or a lemma between [brackets]<br />
  
 
== Examples ==
 
== Examples ==

Revision as of 14:40, 23 March 2010

Compounding or composition is the word-formation process of creating compounds by combining or putting together lexemes.

Contents

Expressing compounds in the UNLarium

In the UNLarium framework, compounds are treated as ordinary simple words except in case of discontinuous multi-word expressions or with infixation (such as "give in" or "take into account"). In these cases, the lemma is different from the base form, and the compound-formation process is expected to be defined through S-rules such as the following:

<CATEGORY><ROLE>(<ADDED>);

Where:
<CATEGORY> is the category of the compound (N = noun, V = verb, J = adjective, A = adverb, P = preposition, D = determiner, C = conjunction)
<ROLE> is the syntactic role of the term to be added to the base form (H = head, S = specifier, C = complement, A = adjunct)
<ADDED> is the term to be added to the base form to form the compound. It can be a string between "quotes" or a lemma between [brackets]

Examples

Lemma BF Compound Description
give in give VH([in]) the lemma "in" is to be added to the base form as part of the head of the verb (VH)
take into account take VA("into account") the string "into account" is to be added to the base form as an adjunct to the verb (VA)
throw <person> to the lions throw VA("to the lions"), VC(NP) the string "to the lions" is to be added to the base form as an adjunct to the verb (VA) and a noun phrase (NP) is to be added as a complement to the verb (VC)

Observation

Phrasal verbs
Particles of phrasal verbs must be represented as part of the head, if non separable, or as adjuncts, otherwise:
  • give in = VH([in]); ("give in something" but "give something in")
  • give back = VA([back]); ("give back something" or "give something back")
Strings and lemmas
In the compound-formation process, the UNLarium distinguishes between strings (to be represented between "") and lemmas (to be represented between [ ]). The difference between strings and lemmas has to do with the dictionary status. Lemmas, but not strings, are expected to be defined as dictionary entries:
  • VA("into account"); (add the string "into account" as a verbal adjunct, take > take into account)
  • VC([love]); (add the lemma "love" as a verbal complement, such as in make > make love)

In the above, it's unlikely to have "into account" as a single entry, whereas "love" is probably already there.

Syntax

Compounds may be explicitly expressed by S-rules, a formalism for describing the syntactic structure of phrases.

Software