International audienceThis paper deals with underived nouns that denote events in French (e.g. crime ‘crime’, procès ‘trial’, séisme ‘earthquake’). We compare the properties of these nouns with those of deverbal nominalizations, especially as regards argument structure and lexical aspect. The heterogeneity and specificities of underived event nouns (UENs) are brought out. First, the event denotation for UENs can have various semantic origins and be derived metaphorically or metonymically from a non-event meaning. Second, some UENs are completely autonomous event nouns and never combine with participant-denoting complements, whereas others are role assignors and determine the semantics of their prepositional complements. Despite those spec...
This paper provides a state-of-the-art overview of the semantics of nouns denoting actions (ANs) in ...
International audienceWe present a manually constructed seed lexicon encoding the inferential profil...
<p>As a typical verb-framed language, French has only limited ability to combine manner verbs ...
International audienceThis paper deals with underived nouns that denote events in French (e.g. crime...
International audienceThe literature on nominalizations often distinguishes classes of derived (deve...
This paper examines the properties of three of the suffixes available to create eventive deverbal no...
In this work, we examine the factors allowing or disallowing French Complex Event Nominals (CENs, i....
This article provides a semantic comparison of several of the most common event nominalization proce...
The aim of the paper is to propose a classification of complex event nouns based on event structure....
xxx, 406 p. : ill. ; 30 cm.PolyU Library Call No.: [THS] LG51 .H577P CBS 2013 WangIn the philosophy ...
The main topic of this thesis is the analytic predicate with event nouns with the suffix -ement in F...
Verbs of action and their derivatives (verbal nouns) are in strong connection. The class of verbal n...
Two categories of nouns denoting events [ENs], i.e. of nouns which can be the subject of avoir lieu ...
This paper addresses the formation of French deverbal nominals denoting participants in the event(ua...
The subject area of constructions with event predicative nouns, such as Die Besetzung von Berlin erf...
This paper provides a state-of-the-art overview of the semantics of nouns denoting actions (ANs) in ...
International audienceWe present a manually constructed seed lexicon encoding the inferential profil...
<p>As a typical verb-framed language, French has only limited ability to combine manner verbs ...
International audienceThis paper deals with underived nouns that denote events in French (e.g. crime...
International audienceThe literature on nominalizations often distinguishes classes of derived (deve...
This paper examines the properties of three of the suffixes available to create eventive deverbal no...
In this work, we examine the factors allowing or disallowing French Complex Event Nominals (CENs, i....
This article provides a semantic comparison of several of the most common event nominalization proce...
The aim of the paper is to propose a classification of complex event nouns based on event structure....
xxx, 406 p. : ill. ; 30 cm.PolyU Library Call No.: [THS] LG51 .H577P CBS 2013 WangIn the philosophy ...
The main topic of this thesis is the analytic predicate with event nouns with the suffix -ement in F...
Verbs of action and their derivatives (verbal nouns) are in strong connection. The class of verbal n...
Two categories of nouns denoting events [ENs], i.e. of nouns which can be the subject of avoir lieu ...
This paper addresses the formation of French deverbal nominals denoting participants in the event(ua...
The subject area of constructions with event predicative nouns, such as Die Besetzung von Berlin erf...
This paper provides a state-of-the-art overview of the semantics of nouns denoting actions (ANs) in ...
International audienceWe present a manually constructed seed lexicon encoding the inferential profil...
<p>As a typical verb-framed language, French has only limited ability to combine manner verbs ...