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Beyond the Lemma: Inflection-Specific Constructions in English

Beyond the Lemma: Inflection-Specific Constructions in English. Sally Rice and John Newman University of Alberta AACL 2008 BYU 14 March 2008. Bertrand Russell’s Emotive Conjugations. I’m tenacious you’re stubborn he’s pigheaded. singular. 1 2 3. inflection-specific

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Beyond the Lemma: Inflection-Specific Constructions in English

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  1. Beyond the Lemma:Inflection-Specific Constructions in English Sally Rice and John Newman University of Alberta AACL 2008 BYU 14 March 2008

  2. Bertrand Russell’s Emotive Conjugations I’mtenacious you’restubborn he’spigheaded singular 1 2 3

  3. inflection-specific meaning and behavior (idiosyncracies of meaning, form, collocation, genre, and distribution)

  4. Form Idiosyncracies in a TypicalAthapaskan Verb Paradigm

  5. Form Idiosyncracies in another TypicalAthapaskan Verb Paradigm

  6. TAM-Based Idiosyncracies of some Basic Verbs Rice & Newman 2005

  7. SUBJ x TAM Idiosyncracies in BNCallRice & Newman 2005 GO

  8. SUBJ x TAM Idiosyncracies in BNCallRice & Newman 2005 GO

  9. SUBJ x TAM Idiosyncracies in BNCCCRice & Newman 2005 THINK

  10. SUBJ x TAM Idiosyncracies in BNCCCRice & Newman 2005 THINK

  11. VVB-base VVZ-3sg.pres VVI-inf VVD-past VVG-prog VVN-perf part rid allow

  12. Inflectional idiosyncracies of EAT and DRINKNewman & Rice 2003

  13. Distributional idiosyncracies of A, Aer, AestNewman & Rice 2006

  14. Distributional idiosyncracies of A, Aer, AestNewman & Rice 2006

  15. Distributional idiosyncracies of A, Aer, AestNewman & Rice 2006

  16. Collocational idiosyncracies of A, Aer, AestNewman & Rice 2006

  17. Collocational idiosyncracies of A, Aer, AestNewman & Rice 2006

  18. Really idiosyncratic gradable As

  19. Really idiosyncratic gradable As

  20. inflection-specific meaning and behavior (idiosyncracies of meaning, form, collocation, genre, and distribution)  Commitment to usage-based approaches like CG, RCG language-specific construction-specific inflection-specific Application of corpus linguistic methodologies and mindset

  21. Inflectional Islands Syntactic (constructional), semantic, and collocational properties tend to inhere in individual inflections of a lexical item in a register-specific manner. These properties may not extend across all the inflections (the paradigm) to characterize the lemma as a whole.

  22. English Pronominal Inflection searched BNC and CAE with Mark Davies’ corpus tool: Variation in English Words and Phrases: http://view.byu.edu tracked person & case distribution/skew for pronouns examined frequencies and collocations

  23. English Pronominal Inflection NOM ACC/ POSS IND REFLEX OBL DET POSS 1SGI me my mine myself 2 you you your yours yourself/ves 3SG.M he him his his himself 3SG.F she her her hers herself 3SG.N it it its its itself 1PL we us our ours ourself/ves 3PL they them their theirs themself/ves

  24. English Pronominal Inflection NOM ACC/ POSS IND REFLEX OBL DET POSS 1SGI me my mine myself 2 you you your yours yourself/ves 3SG.M he him his his himself 3SG.F she her her hers herself 3SG.N it it its its itself 1PL we us our ours ourself/ves 3PL they them their theirs themself/ves

  25. English Pronominal Inflection NOM ACC/ POSS IND REFLEX OBL DET POSS 1SGI me my mine myself 2 you you your yours yourself/ves 3SG.M he him his his himself 3SG.F she her her hers herself 3SG.N it it its its itself 1PL we us our ours ourself/ves 3PL they them their theirs themself/ves

  26. Top 20 Collocates for Pro + V (=NOM)

  27. Top 20 Collocates for Pro + V (=NOM)

  28. Percent Attraction of Pro to Pro + CAN Frame Attraction of “he” = (no. of “he+CAN” in construction over total no. of “he” in corpus) x100, following Schmid 2000)

  29. Percent Attraction of Pro to Pro + WILL Frame Attraction of “he” = (no. of “he+WILL” in construction over total no. of “he” in corpus) x100, following Schmid 2000)

  30. Collostructional Analysis of 3SG + CAN/WILL Collostructional analysis based on attraction/repulsion of “she/he/it” to the construction “Pro + CAN” or “Pro + WILL” [size of corpus = number of verbs (V*)]; Stefanowitsch & Gries 2003

  31. PRO like to vs. PRO hope to (BNC-cc) you like to I hope to

  32. PRO like to vs. PRO hope to (BNC-cc) you like to I hope to

  33. English Pronominal Inflection NOM ACC/ POSS IND REFLEX OBL DET POSS 1SGI me my mine myself 2 you you your yours yourself/ves 3SG.M he him his his himself 3SG.F she her her hers herself 3SG.N it it its its itself 1PL we us our ours ourself/ves 3PL they them their theirs themself/ves

  34. Top 20 Collocates for V + Pro (=ACC?)

  35. Top 20 Collocates for V + Pro (=ACC?)

  36. Top 20 Collocates for V + Pro (=ACC?)

  37. Top 20 Collocates for V + Pro (=ACC?)

  38. Top 10 Collocates for P + Pro (=OBL)

  39. Top 10 Collocates for P + Pro (=OBL)

  40. Distributional Idiosyncracies (CAEall+ BNCall) prep + PRO Reliance of “to+me” (= no. of “to+me” in corpus over total no. of PREP+PRO in corpus) x100, following Schmid 2000)

  41. English Pronominal Inflection NOM ACC/ POSS IND REFLEX OBL DET POSS 1SGI me my mine myself 2 you you your yours yourself/ves 3SG.M he him his his himself 3SG.F she her her hers herself 3SG.N it it its its itself 1PL we us our ours ourself/ves 3PL they them their theirs themself/ves

  42. Top 20 Collocates for Pro’s NP (=GEN)

  43. Distributional Idiosyncracies (AECall+ BNCall) my KINTERM Reliance of “my+mother” (= no. of “my+mother” in corpus over total no. of PRO.POSS+NN* in corpus) x100, following Schmid 2000)

  44. 3SG Distributional Idiosyncracies (BNCall)

  45. 1SG Distributional Idiosyncracies by Genre

  46. 1PL Distributional Idiosyncracies by Genre

  47. Our Manifesto de-lemmatize! inflected forms have a life of their own (Tao 2001, 2003) put lemmas aside (as done earlier with syntactic rule in favor of constructions) substitute words-in-context or WICs (intersection of genre, register, & inflection) aim low! find the “hierarchy of lower-level structures...[that] specify the actual array of subcases and specific instances that support and give rise to the higher-level generalization” RWL, Concept, Image, & Symbol, 1991:281-282

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