Lise Menn | University of Colorado, Boulder (original) (raw)
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Papers by Lise Menn
We explore the differences in verb subeategorization frequencies across several corpora in an eff... more We explore the differences in verb subeategorization frequencies across several corpora in an effort to obtain stable cross corpus subcategonzation probabilities for use in norming psychological experiments. For the 64 single sense verbs we looked at, subeategorizatlon preferences were remarkably stable between British and American corpora, and between balanced corpora and financial news corpora. Of the verbs that did show differences, these differences were generally found between the balanced corpora and the financial news data. We show that all or nearly all of these shifts in subcategorization are realised via (often subtle) word sense differences. This is an interesting observation in itself, and also suggests that stable cross corpus subcategorization frequencies may be found when verb sense is adequately controlled.
Penn State University Press eBooks, Dec 11, 2020
Colorado research in linguistics, 1989
Studies in speech pathology and clinical linguistics, Nov 30, 1995
... The Japanese transcription is phonemic rather than phonetic: it uses si (instead of &... more ... The Japanese transcription is phonemic rather than phonetic: it uses si (instead of 'shi') for [fi]; syo, sya for [Jo], [fa]; zi for [dsi]; hu (instead of 'fu') for [$u]; tu for [tsu]; and ti for [tfi] (tyo, tya for [t[o], [tja]. Long vowels are indicated by doubling the letter. Page 13. ...
Rutgers University Press eBooks, Dec 31, 2019
We explore the differences in verb subeategorization frequencies across several corpora in an eff... more We explore the differences in verb subeategorization frequencies across several corpora in an effort to obtain stable cross corpus subcategonzation probabilities for use in norming psychological experiments. For the 64 single sense verbs we looked at, subeategorizatlon preferences were remarkably stable between British and American corpora, and between balanced corpora and financial news corpora. Of the verbs that did show differences, these differences were generally found between the balanced corpora and the financial news data. We show that all or nearly all of these shifts in subcategorization are realised via (often subtle) word sense differences. This is an interesting observation in itself, and also suggests that stable cross corpus subcategorization frequencies may be found when verb sense is adequately controlled.
Penn State University Press eBooks, Dec 11, 2020
Colorado research in linguistics, 1989
Studies in speech pathology and clinical linguistics, Nov 30, 1995
... The Japanese transcription is phonemic rather than phonetic: it uses si (instead of &... more ... The Japanese transcription is phonemic rather than phonetic: it uses si (instead of 'shi') for [fi]; syo, sya for [Jo], [fa]; zi for [dsi]; hu (instead of 'fu') for [$u]; tu for [tsu]; and ti for [tfi] (tyo, tya for [t[o], [tja]. Long vowels are indicated by doubling the letter. Page 13. ...
Rutgers University Press eBooks, Dec 31, 2019