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Work Group 2: Ontological Concepts for Lexical Entries.

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1 Work Group 2: Ontological Concepts for Lexical Entries

2 An example (Sesana; Gur; Ghana): hórro "at its heart, dirty": (2) "bad" mε- (prefix, verb>modifier); productive but with exceptions mεhórro 'dirty' (only) Must list in lexical entries which verbs take mε- Proposed solution: Assign identifiers (senses and subsenses) Use subsense indentifier to link mεhorro to "be dirty"

3 : Attributes (1) native-speaker type (e.g. Ingush and Turkish - use infinitive) : Navajo - infl form (2) linguist-conventions type (Ingush, Turkish, and Navajo: roots) replace with morph/morpheme - ?only when irregular (e.g. suppletion) types: Suppletion, …. morphosyntactic information could have a subtypes morphology and syntax, limited, vs.?? link media stream to transcription (MMaxwell's Form) MM: definition, gloss, SciName suggested elements: / - kinship term - cognate, reconstructions, loans/copies, source language includes register and stylistic value - formal, informal, taboo, colloquial, child language, archaic

4 LexEntry type= headword/lem ma MSI headcitation form orthog. variant sense id unpredictable variation sensetranscription (phonetic, gesture) media+ audio video image example idexample gloss semantic fieldsense id etymology use idaccess lexical relation scientific term dialect region

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6 Our thinking about lexical resources/structures has been dominated by print models, primarily dictionaries, less so thesauruses and encyclopedias.

7 We have the opportunity to design electronic, specifically web, lexical resources in new ways, combining the parts in whatever way is best for specific purposes. This suggests a highly modular design so that the parts can be combined as needed, not just for looking up the meaning or pronunciation of individual words.

8 The natural unit of analysis is the lexical entry, or lexeme. But each of its parts: phonetic, phonological, orthographic, morphological, syntactic, semantic, pragmatic, perhaps even etymological, are discrete, separable and recurring.

9 Bell and Bird recognize this to the extent of suggesting as a data structure a set of triples L={T a = }, where each T, F, M, S can be separately identified and combined. We can go further with this breakdown, particularly customizing the parts covered by M for the language, providing complete paradigms, derivational patterns, etc.

10 We know how to break down phonology, orthography, and to some extent, morphology and syntax into smaller units of analysis. We have had less success, consensus, and hence experience with semantics.

11 We have on the one hand Bloomfield- Fodor “atomism”– the unit of meaning is the meaning of the morpheme– and on the other Pustejovsky-Wierzbicka “decompositionalism” into primitive semantic units (properties and relations).

12 We need to come to a practical working agreement about semantic analysis. We’re being guided/driven by our friends and colleagues in computer science and artificial intelligence to do so. They are busily developing commonsense ontologies (Cyc Corp, Teknowledge) and practical reasoners, the “agents” who will work for us behind the scenes in Web transactions, for example, so I recommend that we plunge into this research area w. gusto.

13 Conclusion: A distributed lexicon, with the parts identified and some parts pre- assembled (e.g., Bird and Bell style N- tuples), others assemblable and presentable on the fly, e.g., the inflectional paradigms for a particular stem.


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