Pius ten Hacken (ed.): The semantics of compounding

Similar documents
Dissertation Summaries. Headedness in Word Formation and Lexical Semantics: Evidence from Italiot and Cypriot (University of Patras, 2014)*

Improved Effects of Word-Retrieval Treatments Subsequent to Addition of the Orthographic Form

LING 329 : MORPHOLOGY

Ontologies vs. classification systems

CS 598 Natural Language Processing

Ontological spine, localization and multilingual access

Intra-talker Variation: Audience Design Factors Affecting Lexical Selections

Iraide Ibarretxe Antuñano Universidad de Zaragoza

Derivational and Inflectional Morphemes in Pak-Pak Language

- «Crede Experto:,,,». 2 (09) ( '36

FOREWORD.. 5 THE PROPER RUSSIAN PRONUNCIATION. 8. УРОК (Unit) УРОК (Unit) УРОК (Unit) УРОК (Unit) 4 80.

A Minimalist Approach to Code-Switching. In the field of linguistics, the topic of bilingualism is a broad one. There are many

Specification and Evaluation of Machine Translation Toy Systems - Criteria for laboratory assignments

Case government vs Case agreement: modelling Modern Greek case attraction phenomena in LFG

BULATS A2 WORDLIST 2

Minimalism is the name of the predominant approach in generative linguistics today. It was first

Developing True/False Test Sheet Generating System with Diagnosing Basic Cognitive Ability

Pseudo-Passives as Adjectival Passives

Procedia - Social and Behavioral Sciences 154 ( 2014 )

Analysis: Evaluation: Knowledge: Comprehension: Synthesis: Application:

On the Notion Determiner

AN EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH TO NEW AND OLD INFORMATION IN TURKISH LOCATIVES AND EXISTENTIALS

1. Introduction. 2. The OMBI database editor

Florida Reading Endorsement Alignment Matrix Competency 1

GERM 3040 GERMAN GRAMMAR AND COMPOSITION SPRING 2017

Exploiting Phrasal Lexica and Additional Morpho-syntactic Language Resources for Statistical Machine Translation with Scarce Training Data

Which verb classes and why? Research questions: Semantic Basis Hypothesis (SBH) What verb classes? Why the truth of the SBH matters

Constraining X-Bar: Theta Theory

AQUA: An Ontology-Driven Question Answering System

Derivational: Inflectional: In a fit of rage the soldiers attacked them both that week, but lost the fight.

English Language and Applied Linguistics. Module Descriptions 2017/18

Collocations of Nouns: How to Present Verb-noun Collocations in a Monolingual Dictionary

Intensive English Program Southwest College

Citation for published version (APA): Veenstra, M. J. A. (1998). Formalizing the minimalist program Groningen: s.n.

Case of the Department of Biomedical Engineering at the Lebanese. International University

Enhancing Unlexicalized Parsing Performance using a Wide Coverage Lexicon, Fuzzy Tag-set Mapping, and EM-HMM-based Lexical Probabilities

Corpus Linguistics (L615)

The Language of Football England vs. Germany (working title) by Elmar Thalhammer. Abstract

Discourse markers and grammaticalization

Maximizing Learning Through Course Alignment and Experience with Different Types of Knowledge

A Case Study: News Classification Based on Term Frequency

Linguistic Variation across Sports Category of Press Reportage from British Newspapers: a Diachronic Multidimensional Analysis

CEFR Overall Illustrative English Proficiency Scales

Parallel Evaluation in Stratal OT * Adam Baker University of Arizona

Underlying and Surface Grammatical Relations in Greek consider

Parsing of part-of-speech tagged Assamese Texts

Developing a TT-MCTAG for German with an RCG-based Parser

Cross-linguistic aspects in child L2 acquisition

LEXICAL COHESION ANALYSIS OF THE ARTICLE WHAT IS A GOOD RESEARCH PROJECT? BY BRIAN PALTRIDGE A JOURNAL ARTICLE

LANGUAGE IN INDIA Strength for Today and Bright Hope for Tomorrow Volume 11 : 12 December 2011 ISSN

Linguistics. Undergraduate. Departmental Honors. Graduate. Faculty. Linguistics 1

Exegesis of Ephesians Independent Study (NTE 703) Course Syllabus and Outline Front Range Bible Institute Professor Tim Dane (Fall 2011)

Syntactic and Lexical Simplification: The Impact on EFL Listening Comprehension at Low and High Language Proficiency Levels

Some Principles of Automated Natural Language Information Extraction

The Acquisition of Person and Number Morphology Within the Verbal Domain in Early Greek

Intercultural communicative competence past and future

A Comparison of Two Text Representations for Sentiment Analysis

Beyond constructions:

International Conference on Current Trends in ELT

Grammatical constructions, frame structure, and metonymy: Their contributions to metaphor computation

European 2,767 ACTIVITY SUMMARY DUKE GLOBAL FACTS. European undergraduate students currently enrolled at Duke

Learning and Retaining New Vocabularies: The Case of Monolingual and Bilingual Dictionaries

On the nature of voicing assimilation(s)

Twitter Sentiment Classification on Sanders Data using Hybrid Approach

Evolution of Symbolisation in Chimpanzees and Neural Nets

Words come in categories

Development and Innovation in Curriculum Design in Landscape Planning: Students as Agents of Change

Noun incorporation in Sora: A case for incorporation as morphological merger TLS: 19 February Introduction.

Advanced Grammar in Use

Review in ICAME Journal, Volume 38, 2014, DOI: /icame

Metadiscourse in Knowledge Building: A question about written or verbal metadiscourse

Ch VI- SENTENCE PATTERNS.

Entrepreneurial Discovery and the Demmert/Klein Experiment: Additional Evidence from Germany

Progressive Aspect in Nigerian English

Introduction to HPSG. Introduction. Historical Overview. The HPSG architecture. Signature. Linguistic Objects. Descriptions.

Universal Grammar 2. Universal Grammar 1. Forms and functions 1. Universal Grammar 3. Conceptual and surface structure of complex clauses

Project in the framework of the AIM-WEST project Annotation of MWEs for translation

Heads and history NIGEL VINCENT & KERSTI BÖRJARS The University of Manchester

The Pennsylvania State University. The Graduate School. College of the Liberal Arts THE TEACHABILITY HYPOTHESIS AND CONCEPT-BASED INSTRUCTION

Phonological and Phonetic Representations: The Case of Neutralization

Formulaic Language and Fluency: ESL Teaching Applications

AN INTRODUCTION (2 ND ED.) (LONDON, BLOOMSBURY ACADEMIC PP. VI, 282)

Describing Motion Events in Adult L2 Spanish Narratives

Age Effects on Syntactic Control in. Second Language Learning

An Empirical and Computational Test of Linguistic Relativity

Analysis of Lexical Structures from Field Linguistics and Language Engineering

1 Nonapriorism vs. apriorism

Aspectual Classes of Verb Phrases

Semantic Modeling in Morpheme-based Lexica for Greek

Program Matrix - Reading English 6-12 (DOE Code 398) University of Florida. Reading

STANDARDS. Essential Question: How can ideas, themes, and stories connect people from different times and places? BIN/TABLE 1

Modeling full form lexica for Arabic

IT Students Workshop within Strategic Partnership of Leibniz University and Peter the Great St. Petersburg Polytechnic University

Syntax Parsing 1. Grammars and parsing 2. Top-down and bottom-up parsing 3. Chart parsers 4. Bottom-up chart parsing 5. The Earley Algorithm

An Interactive Intelligent Language Tutor Over The Internet

ROSETTA STONE PRODUCT OVERVIEW

Chapter 9 Banked gap-filling

Guide to Teaching Computer Science

Chapter 3: Semi-lexical categories. nor truly functional. As Corver and van Riemsdijk rightly point out, There is more

Problems of the Arabic OCR: New Attitudes

Transcription:

Morphology DOI 10.1007/s11525-017-9311-1 BOOK REVIEW Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2016, 264 pp., ISBN 978-1-107-09970-8 Marios Andreou 1 Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2017 1 Overview In recent years there has been an upsurge of interest in the study of compounds (see among others Lieber and Štekauer 2009; Scalise and Vogel 2010; Arndt-Lappe et al. 2016). The Semantics of Compounding, edited by Pius ten Hacken, focuses on the semantic aspect of compounding and examines the issue of how to determine the meaning of compounds. The volume was inspired by the Workshop 130 The Semantics of Compounding that was organized at the 19th Congrès International des Linguistes/International Congress of Linguists, which took place in Geneva (21 27 July 2013). The primary goal of the volume is to advance our understanding of meaning in compounds by the use of three particular recent theories on the semantics of word formation. Thus, all chapters present work within three frameworks in which the semantic aspect plays a central role, namely Ray Jackendoff s Parallel Architecture (PA), Rochelle Lieber s Lexical Semantic Framework, and Pavol Štekauer s Onomasiological Theory of word formation. 2 Content The volume comprises twelve chapters; an introductory chapter, ten chapters that are divided into three parts, and a chapter that serves as a conclusion. In the introductory chapter (i.e. Chapter 1), ten Hacken states the main motivation for the volume, introduces the reader to the study of the meaning of compounds, and summarizes the individual volume contributions. B M. Andreou marios.andreou@uni-duesseldorf.de 1 Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, Düsseldorf, Germany

M. Andreou Chapter 1 is followed by three chapters (Chapters 2 4) that form the first part of the volume ( Part I Frameworks ). In Chapter 2, Ray Jackendoff addresses the issue of how the meaning of a noun-noun compound is built from the meanings of its constituent parts in conceptual semantics. Jackendoff treats the meaning of a compound as a function of the meanings of its constituents, F (X 1,X 2 ) and shows how his generative system creates an unlimited set of possible relations/functions. In Chapter 3, Rochelle Lieber models the interpretation of different types of compounds within her Lexical Semantic Framework. She presents the way the meanings of words can be decomposed into the semantic skeleton and the semantic body. The skeleton contains aspects of meaning that are relevant to the syntax, and the body covers encyclopedic aspects of meaning. In Lieber s framework, different interpretations follow from the characteristics of the skeleton and the body of the compound members, and the way these are co-indexed. For example, very similar skeletons and bodies give rise to coordinate interpretations. In Chapter 4, Pavol Štekauer shows how different types of compounds can be analyzed within a cognitive approach, namely the Onomasiological Theory of word formation. The onomasiological approach puts emphasis on the way new words come into existence. Štekauer in this chapter analyzes word formation, in general, and compounding, in particular, as specific acts of naming by language users who choose particular naming strategies that are represented by a variety of onomasiological types. Part II Noun-noun compounds comprises four chapters. In Chapter 5, Pierre Arnaud aims to categorize the modification relations in French relational subordinative [NN] N compounds. Arnaud proposes a detailed taxonomy of 58 relations between the head and the non-head in French noun-noun compounds and applies Jackendoff s Conceptual Semantics model to parts of his data. He also applies the proposed taxonomy to a random sample of 200 English relational compounds. In Chapter 6, Zoe Gavriilidou focuses on noun-noun constructs in Greek that consist of two inflected words. She classifies these formations based on the classification of Scalise and Bisetto (2009) and analyzes their semantics within Lieber s Lexical Semantic Framework. In Chapter 7, Ingmarie Mellenius and Maria Rosenberg focus on the semantics of compounds in Swedish child language. In particular, they examine 387 spontaneous noun-noun compounds produced by tree monolingual Swedish children and focus on the status of the head, the semantic relations between the constituents, and the frequency of these semantic relations. They classify semantic relations based on Jackendoff s model of conceptual semantics. In Chapter 8, Jesús Fernández-Domínguez focuses on English primary compounds. In particular, his aim is to compare the frameworks of Štekauer and Jackendoff using non-lexicalized subordinate noun-noun compounds that carry the semantic roles Agent and Instrument as testbed. The author concludes that despite that the two models focus on different aspects of meaning, both models are needed in order to get a better understanding of the semantics of compounds. Part III Other compound types comprises three chapters. In Chapter 9, Carola Trips focuses on phrasal compounds in English and German. She examines their semantic properties within Jackendoff s Parallel Architecture and also comments briefly on the way these properties can be accounted for in Lieber s Lexical Semantic Framework.

In Chapter 10, Barbara Schlücker analyzes German adjective-noun compounds within Jackendoff s Parallel Architecture. She shows that these formations have a basic classificatory meaning and proposes the function is a subtype that captures the idea that these formations denote subconcepts of the concepts denoted by the head constituent. In Chapter 11, Renáta Panocová focuses on the analysis of neoclassical compounds English and Russian within Štekauer s onomasiological approach to compounding. First she shows how neoclassical compounds can be analyzed in terms of onomasiological types and proposes that under the onomasiological approach there is no principled difference between neoclassical and other types of compounds, since in this approach one need not define whether a constituent is a stem or an affix. She also proposes that English neoclassical compounds belong to the system of word formation, whereas Russian neoclassical formations are borrowings and thus belong to the Lexicon. In Chapter 12, which concludes the volume, Pius ten Hacken aims to compare the frameworks of Jackendoff, Lieber, and Štekauer in order to reveal similarities and differences between the three frameworks. The author concludes that although the three models are to some extent compatible, one has to choose one of the three frameworks as a starting point since the models make different assumptions with respect to meaning architecture. 3 General assessment The volume under review is rich in data and it is informed by corpus data (e.g. Chapter 9) and child language (Chapter 7). The volume is carefully edited, the chapters contain appropriate cross-references, and both the front matter and the back matter provide the reader with useful information. The volume meets its primary goal, that is, to enquire into the way three particular recent theories on the semantics of word formation can advance our understanding of meaning in compounds. This goal, nevertheless, has an impact on Part I of the volume which for the most part does not present original research. In particular, Chapter 2 is for the most part excerpted from Jackendoff (2010) and the reader is referred to that version for more discussion. Chapters 3 and 4 are also for the most part distillations of previous work conducted within Rochelle Lieber s Lexical Semantic Framework and Pavol Štekauer s onomasiological approach respectively. This particular state of affairs, nevertheless, gives the opportunity to scholars who are interested in these frameworks to use this volume as a reference guide. The volume covers a broad number of languages (English, Dutch, German, Greek, Swedish, French, and Russian). The selection of this set of languages, however, poses a limitation on the types of compounds that are covered in the volume. In particular, data come from Indo-European languages and, for the most part, the individual contributions tackle the semantics of nominal compounds. An analysis of other types of compounds (e.g. compounds headed by a verb) would had been a nice addition to the volume. Despite a few shortcomings, it is really useful to note that although the three frameworks that figure in the volume make different background assumptions, they

M. Andreou provide us with an arsenal to tackle in a systematic manner the issue of how best to account for the semantics of compounds. Given that the relations between the members of compounds may never be exhaustive, this is certainly a non-trivial task. How is the meaning of a compound built from the meanings of its constituents? Jackendoff offers an analysis within the realms of his framework of Conceptual Semantics. His analysis is based on that the meaning of a compound is a function (F ) of the meanings of its constituents. But how many and which are these functions? Jackendoff proposes 13 basic functions and a generative system that creates an unlimited set of possibilities for F. For example, in order to describe the meaning of swordfish one has to compose the basic functions PART and SIMILAR; a swordfish is a fish with a part that is like a sword. Jackendoff s account attributes an important role to pragmatics, in that given the simple syntax compounds are based on, pragmatic aspects of meaning are crucial for the interpretation of compounds. In Lieber s account, there is a rather clear-cut distinction between the grammatical aspects and the pragmatic aspects of words, simple and complex. In particular, Lieber follows a decompositional approach (like Jackendoff does), and proposes two parts for the meaning of words: the skeleton and the body. The semantic skeleton contains aspects of meaning that are syntactically relevant, and the semantic body contains all aspects of meaning that are encyclopedic in nature. Both meaning parts play a role in the way the meaning of a compound is built. In subordinate compounds there is an argumental relation between the two compound members. In Lieber s framework, these compounds involve indexation between the nonhead element and a verbal argument of the head. Coordinate interpretations arise when both the skeleton and the body features of the compound members are identical except for a few encyclopedic aspects of meaning. Attributive interpretations arise in those compounds in which there is no argumental relation between the compound members that would give rise to a subordinate compound, and at the same time, the skeletons and bodies of the compound members are not compatible enough to be interpreted as coordinates. Štekauer shifts the focus to the way speakers name a concept. This approach attributes no particular status to compounds since it is not based on the traditional classification of processes into compounding and affixation. Rather, it makes use of onomasiological types. In Štekauer s framework, the formation of compounds is viewed as a specific act of naming by a language user who actively chooses one of several naming strategies represented by various onomasiological types. Thus, this approach highlights the role of sociolinguistic factors in the naming of concepts. In a nutshell, this volume gives a thorough overview of previous and recent theoretical approaches to the semantics of compounds. Considered collectively, the chapters in Part II and Part III of the volume extend the frameworks of Jackendoff, Lieber, and Štekauer across languages and, thus, offer a typology of semantic relations in compounds in Indo-European languages. To conclude, The Semantics of Compounding touches upon an issue that has escaped proper treatment in morphological theory and shows that although the analysis of the relations between the members of compounds may never be exhaustive, it is nevertheless systematic. As such, it is an informative contribution to the field.

Acknowledgements The author gratefully acknowledges funding by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft SFB 991 The Structure of Representations in Language, Cognition, and Science (Project: C08, The semantics of derivational morphology: A frame-based approach ). References Arndt-Lappe, S., Bell, M. J., Schäfer, M., & Schlücker, B. (Eds.) (2016). Special issue: Modelling compound properties. Morphology, 26(2). Jackendoff, R. (2010). The ecology of English noun-noun compounds. In Meaning and the lexicon: The parallel architecture, 1975 2010 (pp. 413 451). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Lieber, R. & Štekauer, P. (Eds.) (2009). The Oxford handbook of compounding. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Scalise, S., & Bisetto, A. (2009). The classification of compounds. In R. Lieber & P. Štekauer (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of compounding (pp. 34 53). Oxford: Oxford University Press. Scalise, S. & Vogel, I. (Eds.) (2010). Cross-disciplinary issues in compounding. Amsterdam: Benjamins.