Grammar rules for Clausal Coordinate Ellipsis (CCE) are based nearly exclusively on linguistic judgments (intuitions). For German, the extent to which grammar rules based on this type of empirical evidence generate all and only CCE structures that populate text cor-pora, has only been explored with the TIGER treebank of written newspaper text. How well these rules fit spoken German is unknown. In this paper, we study the applicability of judgment-based CCE rules to spontaneously spoken German by means of the TüBa-D/S tree-bank, which is based on dialogues for appointment scheduling and travel planning from the VERBMOBIL project. The judgment-based CCE rules are shown to hold nearly equally well for spoken as for written text: The proportion...
In his first approach to recursion in clausal embedding, Chomsky (1957) postulates a proform in the ...
We present an overview of several corpus studies we carried out into the frequencies of argument NP ...
Does linguistic rhythm matter to syntax, and if so, what kinds of syntactic decisions are susceptibl...
Syntactic parsers and generators need highquality grammars of coordination and coordinate ellipsis—s...
From two corpus studies into varieties of clausal coordination in English (Meyer, 1995 and Greenbaum...
Proceedings of the 16th Nordic Conference of Computational Linguistics NODALIDA-2007. Editors: Jo...
This article presents a psycholinguistically inspired approach to the syntax of clause-level coordin...
This paper is an abridged version (in Dutch) of an in-press article by the same author (Kempen, G. (...
Present-day sentence generators are often in-capable of producing a wide variety of well-formed elli...
Present-day sentence generators are often in-capable of producing a wide variety of well-formed elli...
With our experiment, we show how we can detect and annotate clausal coordinate ellipsis with Constra...
This book presents a hypothesis-based description of the clausal structure of German Sign Language (...
The scope order of clausal categories has been claimed to be universal. In this paper we adopt a uni...
This book presents a hypothesis-based description of the clausal structure of German Sign Language (...
In his first approach to recursion in clausal embedding, Chomsky (1957) postulates a proform in the ...
We present an overview of several corpus studies we carried out into the frequencies of argument NP ...
Does linguistic rhythm matter to syntax, and if so, what kinds of syntactic decisions are susceptibl...
Syntactic parsers and generators need highquality grammars of coordination and coordinate ellipsis—s...
From two corpus studies into varieties of clausal coordination in English (Meyer, 1995 and Greenbaum...
Proceedings of the 16th Nordic Conference of Computational Linguistics NODALIDA-2007. Editors: Jo...
This article presents a psycholinguistically inspired approach to the syntax of clause-level coordin...
This paper is an abridged version (in Dutch) of an in-press article by the same author (Kempen, G. (...
Present-day sentence generators are often in-capable of producing a wide variety of well-formed elli...
Present-day sentence generators are often in-capable of producing a wide variety of well-formed elli...
With our experiment, we show how we can detect and annotate clausal coordinate ellipsis with Constra...
This book presents a hypothesis-based description of the clausal structure of German Sign Language (...
The scope order of clausal categories has been claimed to be universal. In this paper we adopt a uni...
This book presents a hypothesis-based description of the clausal structure of German Sign Language (...
In his first approach to recursion in clausal embedding, Chomsky (1957) postulates a proform in the ...
We present an overview of several corpus studies we carried out into the frequencies of argument NP ...
Does linguistic rhythm matter to syntax, and if so, what kinds of syntactic decisions are susceptibl...