نتایج جستجو برای: noun phrase matching

تعداد نتایج: 121208  

Journal: :Vidyodaya Journal of Social Sciences 2023

A noun phrase is an extension of a noun, in which one or more adjectives modifiers are used with the noun. In terms translation studies, analysis internal and external textual factors contributes to knowledge source text better understanding its aim. Noun phrases important element intertextual text. Hence, objectives present study describe explain function English Hindi languages for text, prod...

2009
Wei Ni Helena Hong Gao Shixiao Ouyang

Linguistically, a noun classifier is a morpheme or word used to classify a noun according to its inherent semantic features. Noun classifiers in Chinese are obligatory as a category of its own and used to specify a noun when it is used with a determiner or a numeral. In other words, classifiers are never used independently. It must occur with a numeral (e.g., yi “one”, er “two”, san “three”) an...

1980
Fumio Mizoguchi Akihiko Yamamoto

The present study deals with conflict resolution process in metaphorical interpretation for the noun phrase. In order to make the problem mbre explicit, we have reviewed the knowledge representation with conflict both from cognitive psychology and artificial intelligence. Then, we propose a semantic model which is obtained from the notion of Linguistics as Chemistry. That is, the model called "...

Journal: :Himalayan linguistics 2023

Tawang Monpa, also known as Dakpa, is an East Bodish language spoken in Arunachal Pradesh India, and Trashigang Bhutan. This article a brief description of the main grammatical features language. In section about nouns noun phrase use case markers topic marker will be discussed detail, addition to other related phrase. verbs verb negation various adverbial suffixes well set tense, aspect, modal...

2005
Jeff Mühlbauer

Until recently, Algonquian linguistic research has not considered word order and phrase structure to be particularly important components of these languages. The decision to exclude phrase structure from discussion is based on the seemingly erratic distribution of constituents in an Algonquian utterance when the traditional Algonquianist categories of noun, verb, and particle (i.e. everything t...

2012
Weston Feely Claire Bonial Martha Palmer

This research presents a comparison of the syntactic behavior of verbs represented in an online verb lexicon, VerbNet, and the actual behavior of the verbs in the SemLink corpus. To complete this comparison, each verbal instance of the SemLink corpus is reformulated into a syntactic frame, e.g. Noun Phrase – Verb – Noun Phrase, and compared to syntactic frames listed in VerbNet. Through this ef...

1995
Naoki Abe Hang Li Atsuyoshi Nakamura

We consider the problem of learning a certain type of lexical semantic knowledge that can be expressed as a binary relation between words, such as the so-called sub-categorization of verbs (a verb-noun relation) and the compound noun phrase relation (a noun-noun relation). Speci cally, we view this problem as an on-line learning problem in the sense of Littlestone's learning model [Lit88] in wh...

Journal: :D&D 2011
Zeynep Ilkin Patrick Sturt

We describe an eye-tracking experiment that tested the effect of syntactic predictability on skipping rates during reading. We found that plural noun phrases were skipped more often than singular noun phrases, in syntactic contexts which induced a high expectation for a plural. We interpret this effect as evidence that the plural noun phrase has been predicted ahead of time. The results indicat...

Journal: :CoRR 2013
Brendan T. O'Connor Michael Heilman

ARKref is a tool for noun phrase coreference that is based on the systemdescribed byHaghighi and Klein (2009) (which was never publicly released). It was originally written in 2009. At the time of writing, the last released version was in March 2011. This document describes that version, which is open-source and publicly available at http://www.ark.cs.cmu.edu/ARKref.1 ARKref is a deterministic,...

2006
Willemijn Vermaat

Direct questions such as “Who saw Mary?” intuitively request for a certain type of answer, for instance a noun phrase “John” or a quantified noun phrase such as “A man”. Following the structured meaning approach to questions, we propose an analysis of wh-questions in typelogical grammar that incorporates the requirement for a certain type of answer into the type assigned to wh-phrases. Interest...

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