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The Grammar of English Deverbal Compounds and their Meaning

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Publication date11/12/2016
Host publicationProceedings of the Workshop on Grammar and Lexicon: interactions and interfaces (GramLex)
EditorsEva Hajicova, Igor Boguslavsky, Eduard Bejcek
PublisherAssociation for Computational Linguistics
Pages81-91
Number of pages11
ISBN (print)9784879747068
<mark>Original language</mark>English
Event Grammar and Lexicon: Interactions and Interfaces Workshop, co-located with COLING - Osaka, Japan
Duration: 11/12/2016 → …
http://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/grammlex2016/index.php

Workshop

Workshop Grammar and Lexicon: Interactions and Interfaces Workshop, co-located with COLING
Abbreviated title GramLex
Country/TerritoryJapan
CityOsaka
Period11/12/16 → …
Internet address

Workshop

Workshop Grammar and Lexicon: Interactions and Interfaces Workshop, co-located with COLING
Abbreviated title GramLex
Country/TerritoryJapan
CityOsaka
Period11/12/16 → …
Internet address

Abstract

We present an interdisciplinary study on the interaction between the interpretation of noun-noun deverbal compounds (DCs; e.g., task assignment) and the morphosyntactic properties of their deverbal heads in English. Underlying hypotheses from theoretical linguistics are tested with tools and resources from computational linguistics. We start with Grimshaw’s (1990) insight that deverbal nouns are ambiguous between argument-supporting nominal (ASN) readings, which inherit verbal arguments (e.g., the assignment of the tasks), and the less verbal and more lexicalized Result Nominal and Simple Event readings (e.g., a two-page assignment). Following Grimshaw, our hypothesis is that the former will realize object arguments in DCs, while the latter will receive a wider range of interpretations like root compounds headed by non-derived nouns (e.g., chocolate box). Evidence from a large corpus assisted by machine learning techniques confirms this hypothesis, by showing that, besides other features, the realization of internal arguments by deverbal heads outside compounds (i.e., the most distinctive ASN-property in Grimshaw 1990) is a good predictor for an object interpretation of non-heads in DCs.