Title: Towards an Explanatory Combinatorial Dictionary of Japanese
1Towards an Explanatory Combinatorial Dictionary
of Japanese
Asialex'03, Tokyo, August 27, 2003
- Lexicography in the Meaning-Text Theory
François Lareau OLST (U. of Montreal) / Lattice
(U. Paris 7) francois.lareau_at_umontreal.ca
2The architecture of an MTM
3Paraphrasing
4Levels of representation
5Levels of representation
6Levels of representation
Linear list of morphs or morphemes
7Levels of representation
Classic phonological representation
8Modules of an MTM
9Correspondence rules
10Wheres the lexicon?
11The DiCo
Melcuk Polguère
12The DiCo
- Identification
- Name of the entry
- ID number of the lexical unit
13The DiCo
- Syntactics
- Part of speech
- Gender, nominal class, etc.
- Irregular behavior
14The DiCo
- Semantics
- Semantic label of the LU
- Semantic actants
- Semantic labels of the actants
- Prepositions are there for intelligibility
15The DiCo
- Government
- Mapping between semantic, deep syntactic and
surface syntactic actants - Governed prepositions, nominal cases, etc.
16The DiCo
- Synonyms
- Exact and approximative synonyms
- Hyperonyms
17The DiCo
LFs
18The DiCo
- Examples
- Based on electronic corpora
19Idioms USO vs. LIE
- wo iu, tuku, osieru say
use telltell a - makka na crimsonbaldfaced, outright
- miesuita transparentobvious
20Idioms USO vs. LIE
21Semantico-syntactic patterns
22Semantico-syntactic patterns
23Semantico-syntactic patterns
24Semantico-syntactic patterns
f(lie) tell
f(x) y
Oper1
25Oper1 definition
Oper1(x) y
26Another example Magn
Magn(rain) heavy
Magn(uso) makka na lie
crimson
Magn(sekinin) omoi, zyudai na, zyuyô na, ôki
na responsibility heavy
important important big
27The DiCo
- LFs
- Paradigmatic and syntagmatic functions
- Standard and non-standard functions
- Natural language version of LF names
- Government patterns of LF values
- Special conditions
28A Japanese example USO
- S1 usotsuki (liar)
- Mult no katamari (pack of )
- Magn makka na (crimson)
- Ver mottomo rashii (which seems plausible)
- AntiVer miesuita (transparent)
- Oper1 wo iu (say), tsuku (use), oshieru
(tell) - Magnquant Oper1 happyaku wo naraberu (to
align 800 s), no katamari wo naraberu (to
align a pack of s)
29Another example KANZYÔ
- Qual1 kanzi yasui (easy feeling)
- IncepPredPlus ga moeagaru ( flares up),
takamaru ( rises) - CausPredPlus wo kakitateru (to stir up )
- nonPerm1Manif wo kakusu (to hide )
- Perm1Fact0 ni makeru (to yield to)
- nonPerm1Fact0 wo osaeru (to control )
- Adv1 wo komete (charged with )
30Conclusion
- An ECD is an essential component of a larger,
fully formalized, linguistic model - Lexical functions provide an elegant and
efficient way of describing idiomatic expressions - Such formal tools are especially useful for
cross-linguistic applications (see Mangeot and
Kuroda, tomorrow, 1115, room 2201)