Nominalization in French can be done by means of conversion, which is characterized by the identity between the base and the derived lexeme. Since both noun→verb and verb→noun conversions exist, this property raises directionality issues, and sometimes leads to contradictory analyses of the same examples. The paper presents two approaches of conversion: derivational and non-derivational ones. Then it discusses various criteria used in derivational approaches to determine the direction of conversion: diachronic ones, such as dates of first attestation or etymology; and synchronic ones, such as semantic relations, noun gender or verb inflection. All criteria are evaluated on a corpus of 3,241 French noun~verb pairs. It is shown that none of t...
International audienceWeb vs dictionaries. French nominalizations in-age and in-ment. This article a...
International audienceWeb vs dictionaries. French nominalizations in-age and in-ment. This article a...
Abstract:In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count nou...
In the theoretical framework of the lexematic morphology, the thesis is devoted to two lexeme-format...
In the theoretical framework of the lexematic morphology, the thesis is devoted to two lexeme-format...
In the theoretical framework of the lexematic morphology, the thesis is devoted to two lexeme-format...
This paper focuses on non-anaphoric nominalized adjectives denoting abstract concepts, such as le vr...
This paper focuses on non-anaphoric nominalized adjectives denoting abstract concepts, such as le vr...
This paper deals with the purported interchangeability between nouns and adjectives derived from nou...
International audienceThis paper will provide an account for the existence of pairs of deverbal nomi...
Many European languages have both nominal and verbal nominalized infinitives. They differ, however, ...
This article provides a semantic comparison of several of the most common event nominalization proce...
This article provides a semantic comparison of several of the most common event nominalization proce...
In this paper, I discuss verb to noun conversion in French. The properties of the input verb and the...
In this paper, I discuss verb to noun conversion in French. The properties of the input verb and the...
International audienceWeb vs dictionaries. French nominalizations in-age and in-ment. This article a...
International audienceWeb vs dictionaries. French nominalizations in-age and in-ment. This article a...
Abstract:In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count nou...
In the theoretical framework of the lexematic morphology, the thesis is devoted to two lexeme-format...
In the theoretical framework of the lexematic morphology, the thesis is devoted to two lexeme-format...
In the theoretical framework of the lexematic morphology, the thesis is devoted to two lexeme-format...
This paper focuses on non-anaphoric nominalized adjectives denoting abstract concepts, such as le vr...
This paper focuses on non-anaphoric nominalized adjectives denoting abstract concepts, such as le vr...
This paper deals with the purported interchangeability between nouns and adjectives derived from nou...
International audienceThis paper will provide an account for the existence of pairs of deverbal nomi...
Many European languages have both nominal and verbal nominalized infinitives. They differ, however, ...
This article provides a semantic comparison of several of the most common event nominalization proce...
This article provides a semantic comparison of several of the most common event nominalization proce...
In this paper, I discuss verb to noun conversion in French. The properties of the input verb and the...
In this paper, I discuss verb to noun conversion in French. The properties of the input verb and the...
International audienceWeb vs dictionaries. French nominalizations in-age and in-ment. This article a...
International audienceWeb vs dictionaries. French nominalizations in-age and in-ment. This article a...
Abstract:In many languages, common nouns are divided into two morpho-syntactic subclasses, count nou...