All Questions
Tagged with dependency-grammar dependency-grammar or
77 questions
2
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Dependency grammar based dictionary
A presupposition of constructing the dependency semantic structure of a sentence is the knowledge of semantic features of all sentence's semantemes (actants, semantemes' nature as predicate or name ...
5
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1
answer
269
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A predicate as argument of a predicate
In Dependency Grammar we consider the meaning of a wordform either as a semantic predicate (:=predicate) or as a semantic name. Let us suppose we have a predicate, which has a predicate as argument (e....
1
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0
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56
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What theory of syntax and grammar do language typologists tend to prefer?
The first concerns the theory of syntax and grammar that typologists prefer:
What theory of syntax and grammar do language typologists tend to prefer? Do they prefer a transformational phrase ...
2
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0
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38
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How do different grammar theory (e.g. PSG, FG) explain word order in different language? [closed]
In typology, how do different types of grammar theories (such as phrase structure grammar, functional grammar, etc.) explain different linear word order in different languages? I know that dependency ...
5
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1
answer
159
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Analysis of relative pronouns in dependency grammar
A dependency grammar represents the structure of a clause as a set of pairs of words, such that the first "depends" on the second. My question is ultimately how loops are prevented in such a ...
6
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2
answers
792
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What is dependency grammar and what are the possible relationships?
I have just started studying dependency grammar and I am really struggling with the relationship types and trees. I have only ever drawn classic syntactic trees so I keep getting confused. Could you ...
3
votes
1
answer
81
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Name for ongoing syntactic dependencies after a word
Consider the sentence "I love my dog." There are three syntactic dependencies in this sentence: (a) the subject dependency from "I" to "love," (b) the modifier dependency ...
4
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0
answers
160
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Subject control or object control?
In the recent paper “Universal Dependencies” by de Larneffe, Manning, Nivre and Zeman, published in Computational Linguistics in 2021, page 277 the following example is given:
and it is said that ...
8
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1
answer
612
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Government versus Agreement
Taking English as an example, as I understand things, the case of a pronominal Subject is governed by the verb—it must be nominative:
She loves elephants.
*Her loves elephants. (ungrammatical)
...
0
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1
answer
62
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Dependency grammar on ditransitive objects
https://web.stanford.edu/~jurafsky/slp3/14.pdf
Page.23
I thought ditransitive verbs are head over direct objects and direct objects are head over indirect objects as in (b) System because I think ...
0
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0
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28
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Other name for "Predeterminer"/"Noun Premodifier" Dependency Relation?
I'm reading a paper which makes use of word dependency relationships from the Stanford Dependencies (SD) list.
One such relation they refer to as "Predeterminer" and "Noun Premodifer&...
1
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0
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36
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Which syntactic dependency parsers perform best on search query phrases?
Lots of NLP libraries contain syntactic dependencies parsers (e.g. spaCy, NLTK, Stanford NLP, Spark NLP...). As I understand it (please correct me if I'm wrong), these are mostly designed to parse ...
0
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1
answer
73
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Is there a Chinese translation of Tesniere's Elements of Syntactic Structure?
Is there a Chinese version of Elements of Syntactic Structure written by Tesniere? Has anyone ever translated it into Chinese?
2
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1
answer
155
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Do all frameworks of syntax view the string following an inverted auxiliary verb in English as the complement of the auxiliary?
This is a follow-up question of an earlier question titled:
In X bar theory, is the first auxiliary the head of an interrogative clause and the remainder the complement?
In that question, I had this ...
6
votes
1
answer
227
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To what extent was Chomsky influenced by Tesnière?
Kind of a question about the meta-history of linguistics as a discipline. Chomsky released 'Syntactic Structures' in the US in 1957; Tesnière released Éléments de syntaxe structurale posthumously ...
8
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3
answers
755
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Why is the subject outside the VP in most theories of syntax?
I'm trying to understand why in most theories of syntax, the subject of a sentence is the sister of the verb, and not the child eg:
S -> NP VP instead of
VP -> NP V (NP...)
The latter feels more ...
2
votes
0
answers
1k
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What exactly is the Structure-Dependency Principle
Could someone explain what structure-dependency is in layman terms, and why it's so important?
Resources I've found on the internet weren't of much help so I'm asking on here.
Thanks!
1
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1
answer
152
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How to determine grammatical complexity using quantitative features?
I'm doing a research on defining the complexity of language used in technical documentations for technologies (libraries and modules) used in data science and machine learning engineering. And I'm ...
2
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1
answer
111
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How can one best formalize dependency structures in terms of rules?
I am looking for guidance in forming mathematically-inspired rules for dependency syntax. I know about the rewrite rules for dependency structures produced by Hays (1964), but I am wondering whether ...
3
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2
answers
155
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Do formal language theory have concepts corresponding to dependency grammars?
If I am correct, phrase structure grammars in linguistics are the grammars for recursively enumerable languages.
Do formal language theory have concepts corresponding to dependency grammars, the ...
0
votes
1
answer
115
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removing modifiers but still keep the meaning of sentence
I have been running through some examples of DG and from those, I have realized that we can safely remove modifiers from a sentence and still preserve the meaning of the sentence.
For Example, ...
3
votes
1
answer
239
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Dependency Trees of types of clauses
I have been trying to learn linguistics, mainly English. Recently I have been studying clauses and dependency trees. I have been wondering -
Whether can we assume a rough tree structure for every ...
2
votes
1
answer
289
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Non-projective tree sentences
I'm trying to generate the non-projective tree of the sentence:
"A hearing is scheduled on the issue today."
But with the Stanford Core NLP tool (https://corenlp.run/), I obtain a projective ...
1
vote
2
answers
427
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Syntax trees associated with Prepositional Phrases as subject
Whenever we have a Prepositional Phrase as a subject, how should the dependency relations hold?
Specifically, consider the following sentence:
Before Wednesday does not work for me.
One dependency ...
2
votes
1
answer
104
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The Meaning <=> Text Theory (MTT)
I have recently read about "The Meaning <=> Text Theory" approach to syntax and would like to know more about it. Specifically,
What are the main differences between this theory and the phrase ...
1
vote
1
answer
144
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How to draw the NP "so little" in "He said so little" in a tree diagram?
He said so little.
includes the NP so little, which doesn't include any noun.
In the X-bar theory style tree diagram, how do you go about describing the NP? Do you have N' below the NP? Do you have ...
1
vote
0
answers
67
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Stance Detection with Dependencies Tree and POS Tagging
I'm working on a thing at the moment and I'm trying to do what's basically written on the title of this post.
Disclaimer: I'm not trying to get my job done by others. Just share ideas and gathering ...
0
votes
1
answer
150
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In these sentences, are these direct objects and oprds?
I read about oprd (object predicative: https://www.thoughtco.com/object-predicative-grammar-1691446) and I was thinking about the following sentences. Am I correctly identifying the direct object and ...
1
vote
1
answer
157
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Completely schematic construction?
I'm trying to understand what is a completely schematic construction in cognitive grammar.
I found an example: VP --> V NP
So, is that a construction that can be easily described by a general rule ...
1
vote
1
answer
262
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SVO triple in case of missing S or V or O?
hi I'm new to phrase/dependency structure.
For a project of mine I want to extract from any sentence a meaningful structure with 3 items i.e. triple.
In general case the Subject-Verb-Object is ideal....
2
votes
1
answer
307
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Where does supplementation fit in?
As far as I can see, the structure of supplementary constructions like
Karen, being ill, was unable to go
or
John – her father – was unable to walk her down the aisle
or maybe
a washer-dryer
...
2
votes
1
answer
79
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How to extract example sentences from linguistics papers
Does anyone know of a good tool to grab all example sentences used in a paper so they could be processed via an NLP pipeline? I have udpipe in mind especially: I'd like to take sentences from one or ...
1
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0
answers
24
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Why does matching any root of a question to any root of potential answers gives better text understanding results?
I'm trying to find a way to prevent Intelligent Agents with Reading Comprehension and Question Answering abilities to answer question from documents from a given dataset.
After dependency parsing we ...
3
votes
0
answers
56
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Specification of Dependency Grammar
My understanding is that, while natural languages aren't completely context-free, you can get a good approximation of a specification of English in Backus-Naur form, in that if you look at a given ...
1
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0
answers
104
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Which other languages have discontinuous dependencies and how are cross or long ones managed in them?
Discontinuous dependencies are a part of English syntatic rules and also are something which linguists are still trying to deal with.
My question: which other languages have this problem and how does ...
5
votes
1
answer
164
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What features are good for dependency parsing?
I am trying to implement a graph based dependency parser. Since I come from a computer engineering perspective, I have trouble finding the features.
Assuming that we have a (head,dependent) relation ...
7
votes
3
answers
3k
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What constitutes a Long Distance Dependency, and how can it be quantified?
To come to a computational and statistical analysis of some machine translated texts, a colleague of mine wants to quantify Long Distance Dependencies. The problem is, that we cannot seem to find ...
1
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0
answers
234
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Adjunct domain and Argument domain
I am attempting a problem with anaphora resolution. I need help with some terms in the Lappin and Leass' paper.
In the paper, it is mentioned
A pronoun P is non-coreferential with a (non-...
4
votes
1
answer
259
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In what ways might dependency grammar be a better fit for free word order languages?
I believe it is often cited that dependency grammars are more adequate for free word order languages. How actually, is dependency grammar more descriptive or less limited, than constituency grammar, ...
7
votes
2
answers
471
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German Dependency Parsing - question about dependencies between "sich ____ lassen"
I'm working on project regarding German dependency parsing, and came across something I'm a bit unsure about.
Using a parser, when given an input (whether it be in a sentence or just the verbs) which ...
3
votes
1
answer
815
views
How to interpret the dependency parse tree of an English Slot Grammar?
I am reading the paper titled Deep parsing in Watson (DOI: 10.1147/JRD.2012.2185409) and need help understanding this figure:
This is the paragraph that describes the tree in the figure above:
An ...
0
votes
0
answers
58
views
Induction of semantics for grammars of natural languages (as opposed to syntax)
I am learning about combinatory categorial grammars and the formal semantics of natural language, course by Partee http://people.umass.edu/partee/MGU_2005/MGU05_formal_semantics.htm (especially ...
2
votes
0
answers
101
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Treatment of copular verb in dependency parse of Google Natural Language API vs Stanford CoreNLP parser
Basically my question is what is the correct treatment of copular verbs in the following sentence: "The car is red."
According to Google Natural Language API, the root is the verb "is" and the "car" ...
3
votes
1
answer
104
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Governors of adjectives in dependency grammars
In some dependency treebanks for Germanic languages, nouns in subject position are assigned the governors of their corresponding predicative adjectives, as opposed to the copular verb connecting the ...
3
votes
3
answers
162
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Computational model of dependency parsing
I come from a computer science perspective and am trying to understand dependency parsing.
What is the formal (computational) model for dependency parsing? The computational model for constituency ...
4
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2
answers
201
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X-bar theory without movement
Are there any theories out there that use X-bar theory but deny movement (like Dependency Syntax can)?
3
votes
1
answer
349
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Mapping Minipar dependencies to Stanford Parser dependencies
I am trying to use the algorithm in Qiu et al., 2011, "Opinion Word Expansion and Target Extraction through Double Propagation" for my research. However, in the paper, they use Minipar for dependency ...
4
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0
answers
60
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How should "at some time" be tagged in Universal Dependencies framework?
I want to tag a sentence
Jones was unemployed at some time before he graduated.
with UD tags. I'm not sure how to tag at some time.
Stanford parser suggests the reading:
case (time-6, at-4)
det (...
4
votes
0
answers
97
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Using (e.g.) Stanford NLP for retrieving specific “indirect” objects
I am a computer scientist using Stanford NLP for extracting a Semantic Graph from plain text.
Through this tool I am already getting the universal dependencies but now I want to get all the possible ...
1
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0
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238
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How to build a neural network dependency parser with a dynamic oracle?
I'm curruntly trying to improve the results of my dependency parser (arc-standard) when I found this article: that uses a dynamic oracle. https://www.aclweb.org/anthology/Q/Q13/Q13-1033.pdf The ...