Distribution: Difference between revisions
From UNLwiki
				
				
				Jump to navigationJump to search
				
				
| imported>Admin No edit summary | imported>Admin No edit summary | ||
| Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
| === Examples === | === Examples === | ||
| *very = BEF (In English, the intensifier "very" is a premodifier): ''He is very rich'' ( | *very = BEF (In English, the intensifier "very" is a premodifier): ''He is very rich'' (*''He is rich very'') | ||
| *well = AFT (In English, the adverb of manner "well" is a postmodifier): ''He speaks well'' ( | *well = AFT (In English, the adverb of manner "well" is a postmodifier): ''He speaks well'' (*''He well speaks'') | ||
| *yesterday = FRE (In English, the adverb of time "yesterday" may come either before or after the modified): ''Now I go'' or ''I go now''. | *yesterday = FRE (In English, the adverb of time "yesterday" may come either before or after the modified): ''Now I go'' or ''I go now''. | ||
| Line 33: | Line 33: | ||
| :BEF&AFT means that the word may occur both as a premodifier or as postmodifier; | :BEF&AFT means that the word may occur both as a premodifier or as postmodifier; | ||
| :BEF&MID means that the word may occur both as a premodifier or as a middle modifier. | :BEF&MID means that the word may occur both as a premodifier or as a middle modifier. | ||
| ;Order and  | ;Order and position may be combined to express specific distributions: | ||
| :BEF&IMM means that the word occurs right before the modified (as with English intensifiers) | :BEF&IMM means that the word occurs right before the modified (as with English intensifiers) | ||
| ;Position must be informed only when required: | ;Position must be informed only when required: | ||
Revision as of 08:35, 9 February 2010
Distribution (or word order) refers to the study of the order of the syntactic constituents of a language.
Natural Language
In the UNLarium framework, the distribution must be informed through s-rules, except in case of exceptional (non-default) cases, to be registered in the dictionary by the following values:
{{#tree:id=DIS|openlevels=0|root=Distribution (DIS)|
- order
- premodifier (BEF): coming before the modified
- postmodifier (AFT): coming after the modified
- middle position (MID): coming in the middle of the modified
- free distribution (FRE): coming in any position described in the grammar
 
- position
- immediate (IMM): coming right before or after the modified
- distant (FAR): coming before or after the specifiers and the complements of the modified
 
}}
Examples
- very = BEF (In English, the intensifier "very" is a premodifier): He is very rich (*He is rich very)
- well = AFT (In English, the adverb of manner "well" is a postmodifier): He speaks well (*He well speaks)
- yesterday = FRE (In English, the adverb of time "yesterday" may come either before or after the modified): Now I go or I go now.
Observations
- The distribution of words must be informed in the dictionary only if variable.
- The field "distribution" must be filled in only if different words of the same category may occur in different positions
- Adverbs, in English, may be premodifiers or postmodifiers. Therefore, distribution of adverbs must be informed in the dictionary.
- Articles, in English, are always premodifiers. Therefore, distribution of articles must not be informed in the dictionary.
 
- The distribution of words must be informed in the dictionary only if not the default one.
- The grammar brings the normal (default) distribution of the words in a language. Only exceptions to the rule must be informed in the dictionary.
- Adjectives, in English, are normally premodifiers. Therefore, distribution of premodifier adjectives (such as "beautiful") must not be informed in the dictionary. On the other hand, free order adjectives (such as "possible": "it is the only solution possible" or "it is the only possible solution") must be tagged, in the dictionary, with the corresponding feature (FRE).
 
- Middle position should be used only for words to be inserted inside others (i.e., between the prefix and the root, or the root and the suffix).
- 
- Adverbs coming between auxiliaries and verbs must be defined as premodifiers.
 
- Distribution values are not exclusive
- BEF&AFT means that the word may occur both as a premodifier or as postmodifier;
- BEF&MID means that the word may occur both as a premodifier or as a middle modifier.
- Order and position may be combined to express specific distributions
- BEF&IMM means that the word occurs right before the modified (as with English intensifiers)
- Position must be informed only when required
- 
- English intensifiers must come right before the intensified ("very well"), therefore BEF&IMM;
- Adverbs of manner normally comes after the complements ("She read the letter slowly"), therefore "AFT&FAR";
 
UNL
Word order is not informed in UNL.