
Chapter 24 - 서울대 Biointelligence lab
... P: Well, I’ll need to see your printout. S: I can’t unlock the door to the small computer room to get it. P: Here’s the key. ...
... P: Well, I’ll need to see your printout. S: I can’t unlock the door to the small computer room to get it. P: Here’s the key. ...
SOCial NEurOSCiENCE: ThE fOOTPriNTS Of PhiNEaS gagE
... Similarly, Ochsner and Lieberman argued that “cognitive psychology underwent [a] transformation as data about the brain began to be used to constrain theories about the cognitive processes underlying memory, attention, and vision, among other topics” (Ochsner & Lieberman, 2001, p. 726)—with the impl ...
... Similarly, Ochsner and Lieberman argued that “cognitive psychology underwent [a] transformation as data about the brain began to be used to constrain theories about the cognitive processes underlying memory, attention, and vision, among other topics” (Ochsner & Lieberman, 2001, p. 726)—with the impl ...
Involuntary state constructions in Polish: a case of semantic
... contains the subject, the verbal element and the object. However, in this system it will be perceived as consisting of two binary levels of one hierarchy. For instance (p. 27), a transitive verb, as in x likes y, has the denotation of two functions, e.g. f and g. F is a function from individuals in ...
... contains the subject, the verbal element and the object. However, in this system it will be perceived as consisting of two binary levels of one hierarchy. For instance (p. 27), a transitive verb, as in x likes y, has the denotation of two functions, e.g. f and g. F is a function from individuals in ...
Chapter 1
... Unlike a main clause, a dependent clause, as the name suggests, cannot stand on its own and is not able to present a complete thought. Another term for dependent clause is “subordinate clause”; these two terms are used interchangeably. All dependent clauses cooperate with a main clause. They strengt ...
... Unlike a main clause, a dependent clause, as the name suggests, cannot stand on its own and is not able to present a complete thought. Another term for dependent clause is “subordinate clause”; these two terms are used interchangeably. All dependent clauses cooperate with a main clause. They strengt ...
The syntax and pragmatics of embedded yes/no questions
... cent’ is the most dramatic or extreme property that the subject ‘Joe’ can have with respect to a scale of different degrees of being poor. In this and many other cases, the emphatic value of the NPI is part of our current understanding of the word or phrase. In some cases, NPIs have lost the strong ...
... cent’ is the most dramatic or extreme property that the subject ‘Joe’ can have with respect to a scale of different degrees of being poor. In this and many other cases, the emphatic value of the NPI is part of our current understanding of the word or phrase. In some cases, NPIs have lost the strong ...
Annotation Tools and Knowledge Representation for a Text
... to construct a 3D scene. Vignettes inherit high-level semantics from FrameNet via normal frameto-frame inheritance and decompose into low-level graphical frames using a new SUBFRAMEPARALLEL frame-to-frame relation. Vignettes can be defined not only for actions but also for locations or any other com ...
... to construct a 3D scene. Vignettes inherit high-level semantics from FrameNet via normal frameto-frame inheritance and decompose into low-level graphical frames using a new SUBFRAMEPARALLEL frame-to-frame relation. Vignettes can be defined not only for actions but also for locations or any other com ...
The Structure of Modern English
... Thus, it is clear that communication involves two parties the sender and the receiver. The sender transmits message to the receiver with the aim of establishing common knowledge and understanding over the meaning. It is only through transmitting meaning from one person to another that information an ...
... Thus, it is clear that communication involves two parties the sender and the receiver. The sender transmits message to the receiver with the aim of establishing common knowledge and understanding over the meaning. It is only through transmitting meaning from one person to another that information an ...
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... outside o f the applicative construction; there is no transfer verb * haaren (‘hair’).2 The applicative predication in (3) denotes a transfer event o f the type denoted by trivalent applicative verbs like laden (‘load’), and yet the transfer implication cannot be attributed to the semantics o f the ...
... outside o f the applicative construction; there is no transfer verb * haaren (‘hair’).2 The applicative predication in (3) denotes a transfer event o f the type denoted by trivalent applicative verbs like laden (‘load’), and yet the transfer implication cannot be attributed to the semantics o f the ...
Introducing English Semantics
... and distance to the site, but in general non-human communication takes place on the spot, and is concerned with what is immediately present. No animal can tell another one about past experiences, and still less are they able to communicate their plans for the future. Humans alone are able to talk ab ...
... and distance to the site, but in general non-human communication takes place on the spot, and is concerned with what is immediately present. No animal can tell another one about past experiences, and still less are they able to communicate their plans for the future. Humans alone are able to talk ab ...
The Science of Scientific Writing by George D. Gopen and Judith A
... material in stress positions, we as a reading community would have been far more likely to interpret these sentences uniformly. We couch this discussion in terms of “likelihood” because we believe that meaning is not inherent in discourse by itself; “meaning” requires the combined participation of ...
... material in stress positions, we as a reading community would have been far more likely to interpret these sentences uniformly. We couch this discussion in terms of “likelihood” because we believe that meaning is not inherent in discourse by itself; “meaning” requires the combined participation of ...
Sentences: Simple, Compound, and Complex Experienced writers
... C, "Alejandro played football" because, possibly, he didn't have anything else to do, for or because "Maria went shopping." How can the use of other coordinators change the relationship between the two clauses? What implications would the use of "yet" or "but" have on the meaning of the sentence? CO ...
... C, "Alejandro played football" because, possibly, he didn't have anything else to do, for or because "Maria went shopping." How can the use of other coordinators change the relationship between the two clauses? What implications would the use of "yet" or "but" have on the meaning of the sentence? CO ...
what does the greek first class conditional imply? gricean
... terms and hypotheses formulated in an untestable manner. For this reason, no one has achieved a level of proof on which all can agree. However, H. P. Grice 5 has developed linguistic theory which provides a descriptive apparatus in which testable hypotheses concerning implications can be formulated. ...
... terms and hypotheses formulated in an untestable manner. For this reason, no one has achieved a level of proof on which all can agree. However, H. P. Grice 5 has developed linguistic theory which provides a descriptive apparatus in which testable hypotheses concerning implications can be formulated. ...
THE SCIENCE OF SCIENTIFIC WRITING
... author placed all stress-worthy material in stress positions, we as a reading community would have been far more likely to interpret these sentences uniformly. We couch this discussion in terms of "likelihood" because we believe that meaning is not inherent in discourse by itself; "meaning" requires ...
... author placed all stress-worthy material in stress positions, we as a reading community would have been far more likely to interpret these sentences uniformly. We couch this discussion in terms of "likelihood" because we believe that meaning is not inherent in discourse by itself; "meaning" requires ...
Natural Language Processing
... understand the concepts: it would be very useful if these were attempted before the lectures as indicated. There are ...
... understand the concepts: it would be very useful if these were attempted before the lectures as indicated. There are ...
Essential Skills Alignment for Language
... define a collection of objects, people, or things Know that nouns are words that name people, Understand that proper nouns (group, herd, school, etc) places, things and ideas Understand the use of adjectives Know how regular plurals are formed Know that verbs describe actions Understand the differen ...
... define a collection of objects, people, or things Know that nouns are words that name people, Understand that proper nouns (group, herd, school, etc) places, things and ideas Understand the use of adjectives Know how regular plurals are formed Know that verbs describe actions Understand the differen ...
What Does the Greek First Class Conditional Imply? Gricean
... Boyer's work is exhaustive and convincing. However, there is still an element of uncertainty in Boyer's analysis because the methodology by which he separated the conditions into categories of "obviously true" and "obviously false" is apparently his own intuition. There are many examples in his obvi ...
... Boyer's work is exhaustive and convincing. However, there is still an element of uncertainty in Boyer's analysis because the methodology by which he separated the conditions into categories of "obviously true" and "obviously false" is apparently his own intuition. There are many examples in his obvi ...
Grace Theological Journal 12.1 (1992) 99
... Boyer's work is exhaustive and convincing. However, there is still an element of uncertainty in Boyer's analysis because the methodology by which he separated the conditions into categories of "obviously true" and "obviously false" is apparently his own intuition. There are many examples in his obvi ...
... Boyer's work is exhaustive and convincing. However, there is still an element of uncertainty in Boyer's analysis because the methodology by which he separated the conditions into categories of "obviously true" and "obviously false" is apparently his own intuition. There are many examples in his obvi ...
A Combined Taxonomic and Frame-based Approach to
... model of natural language, a Meaning Text Model representing a system of rules which simulate the linguistic behaviour of humans. That model is designed to perform the transition from meanings in general (any information/content a speaker transmits by using natural language) to texts (physical manif ...
... model of natural language, a Meaning Text Model representing a system of rules which simulate the linguistic behaviour of humans. That model is designed to perform the transition from meanings in general (any information/content a speaker transmits by using natural language) to texts (physical manif ...
Part Two: Sentence Structure
... Jessica has such a beautiful voice; many couples have asked her to sing at their wedding. ...
... Jessica has such a beautiful voice; many couples have asked her to sing at their wedding. ...
Chapter 9 Not Knowing Mar. `10 “Ignorance is the necessary
... is a member of the reference class of their pluralized forms. In its less than-auto form, the persons cited in the premisses must be one and the same, but the speaker may be some third person. Accordingly, we have a first pass at a general schema for autoepistemic inference: Proposition 9.2b AUTOEPI ...
... is a member of the reference class of their pluralized forms. In its less than-auto form, the persons cited in the premisses must be one and the same, but the speaker may be some third person. Accordingly, we have a first pass at a general schema for autoepistemic inference: Proposition 9.2b AUTOEPI ...
Typological variation of the adjectival class
... classes are treated merely as primitives, either in terms of input to rules, determinants of underlying phrase structure, governors of inflectional patterns, or as sources of valency and subcategorization frames. Thus, class-designations such as “verb”, “adjective”, and “noun” are the linchpins of s ...
... classes are treated merely as primitives, either in terms of input to rules, determinants of underlying phrase structure, governors of inflectional patterns, or as sources of valency and subcategorization frames. Thus, class-designations such as “verb”, “adjective”, and “noun” are the linchpins of s ...
On the Linguistic Notion of Transitivity:
... to de-synthesize the subject matter into independent factors that cannot be reduced, then accurate descriptions of each distinct part, or function, ideally lead to the whole (function) of that research object. Linguists have generally found this methodology effective for studies of human language, s ...
... to de-synthesize the subject matter into independent factors that cannot be reduced, then accurate descriptions of each distinct part, or function, ideally lead to the whole (function) of that research object. Linguists have generally found this methodology effective for studies of human language, s ...
Understanding Cultural Differences to Identify People - IC
... exactly the same word, but would also be interesting to find people who talk about "experiment", but using the word "test". In this context, this paper proposes an approach that allows people to seek and find others with similar interests even though they are from different cultures, or have differe ...
... exactly the same word, but would also be interesting to find people who talk about "experiment", but using the word "test". In this context, this paper proposes an approach that allows people to seek and find others with similar interests even though they are from different cultures, or have differe ...
Journal of Linguistics Bare nominals and incorporating verbs in
... allowed in this structure, along with a compositional rule that combines the nominal with the verb as a modifier, rather than as an argument, much in the spirit of Dayal’s (2003) semantics for pseudo-incorporation. The paper is structured as follows. Section 2 offers a description of the nominals and ...
... allowed in this structure, along with a compositional rule that combines the nominal with the verb as a modifier, rather than as an argument, much in the spirit of Dayal’s (2003) semantics for pseudo-incorporation. The paper is structured as follows. Section 2 offers a description of the nominals and ...
Automatic Labeling of Semantic Roles
... like products, relationship, joint venture company, and amount (Hobbs et al. 1997). For natural language understanding tasks to proceed beyond these specific domains, we need semantic frames and semantic understanding systems that do not require a new set of slots for each new application domain. In ...
... like products, relationship, joint venture company, and amount (Hobbs et al. 1997). For natural language understanding tasks to proceed beyond these specific domains, we need semantic frames and semantic understanding systems that do not require a new set of slots for each new application domain. In ...