semantics and lexicology svem21 5. neogenerativist and neostructuralist semantics

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Jordan Zlatev. Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21 5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics. Projects (general). Summarize the main ideas/concepts in the text. Relate to the discussion of the tradition (and author) in the textbook (Geeraerts) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Jordan Zlatev

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Page 2: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Summarize the main ideas/concepts in the text.

Relate to the discussion of the tradition (and author) in the textbook (Geeraerts)

Analyze examples from another language (e.g. Swedish) using the concepts, categories, distinctions… discussed.

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Page 3: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Cognitive adequacy“a type of meaning description that paid less attention to formalization, but that explicitly opted for a maximalist, encyclopedic, psychologically realist form of semantics, and that thus broke radically with the legacy of structuralism” > Chapter 5, Cognitive Semantics

Formal adequacy“theories that continue the lines set out by structuralism, but that do so with specific attention to concerns issuing from generativist semantics: the demarcation of linguistic knowledge with regard to cognition in the broader sense, and the possibility of formalizing linguistic meaning” (: 121)

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Page 4: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

“Neogenerativist” 1.Conceptual Semantics (Jackendoff) 2. Two-level semantics (Bierwisch) 3. Generative Lexicon (Pustejovsky)

“Neostructuralist” 4.WordNet (Miller, Fellbaum) 5. Explanatory Combinatorial Dictionary

(Mel’cuk) 6. Distributional Corpus Analysis

Natural Semantic Metalanguage (Wierzbicka)

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Page 5: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

“There is no privileged level of “linguistic semantics” at which specifically linguistic effects of meaning can be separated out from more general cognitive effects such as categorization…” (Jackendoff 1996: 104), (:138)

Words as “interfaces” across modules.

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Page 6: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

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Conceptual system

Visual/3D format

Body format

Linguisticsystem

Inter-subjective information

Subjective information

Based on Jackendoff (1992: 14)

Page 7: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

runV_<PPj>[event GO ([THING]i, [PATH]j)

putV_<NPj> <PPk>[event CAUSE ([THING], [event GO

[THING]j, [PATH]k)7

Page 8: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

EVENTGOTHINGPATH

Path-function (TO, FROM, VIA)PLACE

Place-function (IN, ON, ABOVE, BELOW)

THING (Time, Property) STATE

BETHINGPLACE

Place-function (IN, ON, ABOVE, BELOW)THING (Time, Property)

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Page 9: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

A strict separation between “conceptual” and “non-conceptual” information

Conceptual primitives and structures: “innate” and “universal”

More subtle differences of meaning, such as different “manner verbs”: run, jog +walk, crawl, fly…? – should be a matter of non-universal “perceptual representations”

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Page 10: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Too universalist: not clear if motion verbs in all languages (Japanese, Mayan languages) have a semantic component (GO), as opposed to a pragmatic, “defeasable” implicature.

ROOM, TRAIN – “primitives”? Information about jogging – purely non-

conceptual? “need criteria to determine what enters into a

conceptual description and what can be relegated to the non-conceptual cognitive modules” (: 141)

(rather) static, with respect to context10

Page 11: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

“provides a model for the interaction of word knowledge and world knowledge in actual contexts of use” (:143)

“More explicitly than Jackendoff, the two-level approach deals with meaning variation… accounting for polysemy and semantic flexibility is a major focus in contemporary lexical semantics (: 143).

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Page 12: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

university Level 1 (“semantic form”):λx [PURPOSE [x, w] & advanced study [w]]

Level 2 (“conceptual structure):The university offers scholarships.λx [INSTITUTION [x] & PURPOSE [x, w]]The university lies in the centre of the

town.λx [BUILDING [x] & PURPOSE [x, w]]

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Page 13: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

“McDonald’s University” – advanced? A counterexample, or just a “creative” use of the term university?

Contextualization requires encyclopedic knowledge (Taylor): why not? (The model does not deny this…) ? Der Palast hat die Frage bereits entschieden.The Palace has already come to a decision on the issue.

Language change – from pragmatic inference (Level 2) to semantic form (Level 1): rather an argument for keeping the levels distinct! This does requires however, more than one entry in the case when the old meaning is preserved. since(temporal) + since (causal), cf. 145

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Page 14: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

“the most advanced approach among the formal componential theories…” (: 154)

Targetting “regular polysemy” (Apresjan), “logical polysemy” (Pustejovsky): Building-Institution Count noun – Mass noun Product-Producer Process-Result Contents-Container Telic-Atelic action Emotional state – Expressing emotional state

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Page 15: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Argument structure Event structure Qualia structure (descriptive features)

Formal (“what something is”) Constitutive (“what something consists of”) Telic (“the purpose”) Agentive (“how something came into

being”)

See Figure 4.2 (: 149) and example for novel, (: 155)

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Page 16: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Type matching Accommodation Type coercion

▪ Exploitation (using “dotted types”)▪ Introduction (making a “dotted type”)

See examples, p. 151Extensions Lexical rules: operates upon rules Metaphor Lexical Rule: “semantic type can

be anything”, but preserves qualia structure

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Page 17: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

“profit from a broader empirical basis” (: 152)

Overgenerating as with Two-level Semantics? (if not encyclopedic

knowledge is included) Sydney began a novel / a sweater. (TELIC = write)

Undergenerating Waiting for a bus. (other reasons that taking it)

But need the model account for such clearly pragmatic interpretations?

Primitives like “physical object”

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Page 18: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

English, and other European languages

Nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbsEach entry:

Synset Definition Example

Synonym sets (synsets): president, chairman, chairwoman, chairperson

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Page 19: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Hyperonyms Hyponyms Meronyms Antonyms (for adjectives, adverbs,

verbs) Entailments

Hyponyms “troponyms”: walk < stride Presupposition: succeed < try Causality: show > see

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Page 20: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

No differentiation between different kinds of antonyms

Definitions: “the network information does not completely replace such definitional information” (: 160)

Originally, psychological adequacy, but not anymore: “a machine readable dictionary… not a model of the mental lexicon” (: 160)

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Page 21: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Adding “lexical functions”, e.g. head of (dead-faculty, board-chair, ship-captain…): Cap

Syntagmatic, and not only paradigmatic, differ across languages: question-ask (English) Frage-stellen (German) question-poser (French)See example of Revulsion, 162-163

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Page 22: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Practical Applied mostly to Russian and French Elaborate, but time-consuming (hence

WordNet is preferred for practical lexicography)

Theoretical Again: entries contain an analytic

definition Does not include part-whole relations:

world-knowledge, but Cap?22

Page 23: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

“a collection of naturally occurring text, chosen to characterise a state or variety of a language” (Sinclair 1991: 171), (: 167)

Language on the level of parole, not langue

“a radical usage-based, rather than system-based approach” (: 168)

But note: “… of a language” (Sinclair)23

Page 24: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Collocation: “a lexical relation between two or more words which have a tendency to co-occur within a few words of each other in running text” (Stubbs 2002: 24)

“Node” + “collocate” (see Figure 4.3) Colligation: syntactic pattern Semantic preference: b/n the node and “a

set of semantically related words” Semantic/discourse prosody: positive vs.

negative (emotive attitude)

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Page 25: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Popular in cognitive science (quantitative, “objective”)

“the interaction between theoretical lexical semantics… and statistical lexical semantics is still rather restricted”

“the least structuralist of the ‘neostructuralist’ approaches” (: 176)

“Given the problems of demarcation and selection of primitives… distributional corpus analysis has the clear advantage of making contact with the probabilsitic paradigm in computational linguistics” (: 177)

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Page 26: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

“primarily a method, not a model” (: 177)

“has not yet reached the stage where it can present a stable set of methodological procedures coupled to specific descriptive questions” (: 178)

“whether all the relevant information that language users have about the reference of words, may be retrieved from a corpus” (: 178)

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Page 27: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

Note the biased terminology: models which aimed for distinguishing lexical meaning from general knowledge (“pragmatics 1”) and contextual usage (“pragmatics 2”) where first called “minimal”, then “parsimonious” – and then: “reductionist and exclusionary” (: 176)

Distributional corpus analysis is on other hand works in a “non-reductionist, usage-oriented way” (:177)

One could argue that the latter, especially if “radical”, abolished distinctions (semantics/pragmatics etc), reduces meaning to use, quality to quantity – and is in essence the truly reductionist approach!

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Page 28: Semantics and Lexicology SVEM21  5. Neogenerativist and Neostructuralist Semantics

In Chapter 4, Geeraerts shows the problems with conceptual or semantic “primitives” and making clear distinctions b/n lexical meaning and (a) encyclopedia and (b) usage – but does not show

That the search for universal semantic concepts is futile

That semantics/pragmatics distinctions are not necessary – even though “unclear”, and “dynamic”

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