Title
Inheritance and complementation: a case study of easy adjectives and related nouns
Abstract
Mechanisms for representing lexically the bulk of syntactic and semantic information for a language have been under active development, as is evident in the recent studies contained in this volume. Our study serves to highlight some of themost useful tools available for structured lexical representation, in particular (multiple) inheritance, default specification, and lexical rules. It then illustrates the value of these mechanisms in illuminating one corner of the lexicon involving an unusual kind of complementation among a group of adjectives exemplified by easy. The virtues of the structured lexicon are its succinctness and its tendency to highlight significant clusters of linguistic properties. From its succinctness follow two practical advantages, namely its ease of maintenance and modification. In order to suggest how important these may be practically, we extend the analysis of adjectival complementation in several directions. These further illustrate how the use of inheritance in lexical representation permits exact and explicit characterizations of phenomena in the language under study. We demonstrate how the use of the mechanisms employed in the analysis of easy enables us to give a unified account of related phenomena featuring nouns such as pleasure, and even the adverbs (adjectival specifiers) too and enough. Along the way we motivate some elaborations of the HPSG (head-driven phrase structure grammar) framework in which we couch our analysis, and offer several avenues for further study of this part of the English lexicon.
Year
Venue
Keywords
1992
Computational Linguistics
lexical rule,active development,easy adjective,default specification,adjectival complementation,case study,lexical representation,related noun,adjectival specifiers,recent study,structured lexicon,structured lexical representation,english lexicon,multiple inheritance,noun
Field
DocType
Volume
Head-driven phrase structure grammar,Computer science,Succinctness,Noun,Phrase structure grammar,Semantic information,Lexicon,Natural language processing,Pleasure,Artificial intelligence,Linguistics,Syntax
Journal
18
Issue
Citations 
PageRank 
3
10
1.67
References 
Authors
7
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Dan Flickinger169955.66
John Nerbonne217447.63