Proceedings:
Representation and Acquisition of Lexical Knowledge: Polysemy, Ambiguity, and Generativity
Volume
Issue:
Representation and Acquisition of Lexical Knowledge: Polysemy, Ambiguity, and Generativity
Track:
Contents
Downloads:
Abstract:
Current research in lexical semantics has brought into focus (i) the existence of general tendencies ('principles') ac:o~ languages or inside language families, (ii) the existence of numerous exceptions to these tendencies. To reconcile these two facts, it seems natural to endorle s general conception of principles-withexceptions or ’subregularities '1, usually cashed on a form of default logic. This leaves open the question of how to identify and manage the exceptions in a more precise way, i.e. not just as marginal by-products of a subregulsr/ty system. In tiffs paper, we analyze different examples where complex cases can be handled explicitly, and show that pzincip|e-bused approaches require, as a natural complement, to be controlled by more local information.
Spring
Representation and Acquisition of Lexical Knowledge: Polysemy, Ambiguity, and Generativity