Results 201 to 210 of about 404,317 (248)
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A Mountain of Evidence? A Corpus Study of the Argument Structure of Transferred Senses of Nouns in English

Journal of Linguistics/Jazykovedný casopis
Based on an earlier observation, the study poses the question of whether the presence or absence of a valency complement of a noun relates to whether the noun is used literally or non-literally, in a transferred sense (typically based on metaphor).
Jakub Sláma
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Translating noun compounds using semantic relations

Computer Speech & Language, 2015
A hybrid scheme for noun compound translation from English to Hindi.A scheme for semantic relation identification is proposed for 2-word noun compounds.A scheme for generation of translation pattern(s) for 2/3/4-word noun compounds.Bracketing scheme for 4-word noun compounds.Results of the proposed system compared with the state-of-the-art translators.
Renu Balyan, Niladri Chatterjee
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On the applicability of the relational-qualitative distinction to deverbal active adjectives in Polish

Slovo a slovesnost
The term relational adjective is almost exclusively used with reference to denominal forms. The paper closely scrutinises the properties of the most productive type of deverbal adjectives with active semantics in Polish (i.e., adjectives with the suffix -
Maria Bloch-Trojnar
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Effect of relation availability on the interpretation and access of familiar noun–noun compounds

Brain and Language, 2004
Two experiments investigate whether relations that link the constituents of compounds during compound formation (e.g., teapot is formed by combining tea and pot using the relation head noun FOR modifier) also influence the processing of familiar compounds.
Christina L, Gagné, Thomas L, Spalding
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Warao II: Nouns, Relationals, and Demonstratives

International Journal of American Linguistics, 1966
3.0. The following definitions are useful for the description of Warao morphology: A ROOT is a lexical morpheme non-committal as to morpheme class. A DEPENDENT ROOT is a root which obligatorily occurs with formative specifications, that is, in sequence with an affix which transforms the root into a stem.
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Noun Raising and Genitival Relations

1997
Traditionally the noun phrase has been structurally represented as an NP, the maximal projection of N, with the determiner in its specifier position (Jackendoff 1977, among others):
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On the Implicit Anaphoric Argument of Relational Nouns in Mandarin Chinese

Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2019
A. Ke   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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