S-rule
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**FUT:=IH([will]); (add the lemma "will" as the head of the inflectional phrase in case of future) | **FUT:=IH([will]); (add the lemma "will" as the head of the inflectional phrase in case of future) | ||
*government | *government | ||
− | **VC(PP([in])); (the complement of the verb | + | **VC(PP([in])); (the complement of the verb is a prepositional phrase headed by the preposition "in") |
*agreement | *agreement | ||
**VS(ANUM,APER); (the specifier of the verb assigns number (ANUM) and person (APER) to its head | **VS(ANUM,APER); (the specifier of the verb assigns number (ANUM) and person (APER) to its head |
Revision as of 11:01, 23 March 2010
S-rule (syntactic rule) is the formalism used for describing syntactic structures and syntactic operations in the UNLarium framework.
Contents |
When to use S-rules
S-rules are used for:
- creating compounds out of the base forms (such as "take">"take into account");
- generating complex grammar structures (such as "love">"will love");
- defining syntactic roles (such as "subject", "object", etc);
- defining dependency relations (such as agreement);
- defining the distribution (i.e., order and adjacency) of word forms; and
- projecting syntactic structures out of the constituents.
When not to use S-rules
S-rules are not used for for affixation (prefixation, infixation, suffixation) or spelling changes, which must be addressed by A-rules and Ph-rules, respectively.
Types of S-rules
There are four types of S-rules:
- Head extension extends a given head.
- Specification creates a specifier (determiner) to the head;
- Complementation creates a complement (object) to the head; and
- Adjunction creates an adjunct (modifier) to the head.
For further information on the constituents "head", "specifier", "complement" and "adjunct", see Syntax.
Syntax
S-rules comply with the following syntax:
CONDITION := RELATION(HEAD; ARGUMENT);
Where
- CONDITION (optional) is a tag or list of tags, extracted from the UNDLF Tagset, that indicates when the rule should be applied. It may also be a relation or a list of relations in case of projection rules. The condition must be omitted in case of general rules (i.e., when the rule is always applied).
- RELATION is the syntactic relation, extracted from the syntactic roles, between the head and its argument. An S-rule may comprise several different relations, to be separated by ",".
- HEAD (optional) is the head of the syntactic structure, which is to be omitted when does not undergo any change;
- ARGUMENT (optional in case of head-only relations) is the argument (the specifier, the complement or the adjunct) of the head.
The HEAD and the ARGUMENT may be expressed as:
- a "string" (strings must come between parentheses);
- a [lemma] (lemmas must come between square brackets);
- a feature or a set of features, separated by comma, and extracted from the the UNDLF Tagset;
- a direction (">",">>","<","<<");
- an index between the left and the right side of the rule (to be specified by the syntax %name);
- an action, to be performed through an A-rule; and
- a syntactic relation itself.
Examples
Examples of S-rules:
- word-formation
- VA("into account"); (add the string "into account" as the adjunct of the verb)
- compound tenses:
- FUT:=IH([will]); (add the lemma "will" as the head of the inflectional phrase in case of future)
- government
- VC(PP([in])); (the complement of the verb is a prepositional phrase headed by the preposition "in")
- agreement
- VS(ANUM,APER); (the specifier of the verb assigns number (ANUM) and person (APER) to its head
- distribution
- VA(>>); (the adjunct of the verb comes at the right side after a blank space)
- projection
- VS(%head;%spec)VB(%head;%comp):=VP(VB(%head;%comp);%spec); (integrate the two relations on the left side into a single relation)