Lexical category
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− | # | + | '''Lexical category''' is the topmost level of the part of speech. It indicates the general morphological, syntactic and semantic behaviour of the entry. |
+ | |||
+ | == Natural Language == | ||
+ | The UNL<sup>arium</sup> framework acknowledges 11 different lexical categories in natural languages: | ||
+ | |||
+ | {{#tree:id=lex|openlevels=0|root=Lexical Categories| | ||
+ | *'''adjectives''' (J) (adjectives and participles) | ||
+ | *'''adpositions''' (P) (prepositions, postpositions, circumpositions) | ||
+ | *'''adverbs''' (A) (specifier adverbs, adjunct adverbs, conjunts and disjuncts) | ||
+ | *'''affixes''' (I) (prefixes, infixes, suffixes and circumfixes) | ||
+ | *'''conjunctions''' (C) (subordinating and coordinating conjunctions) | ||
+ | *'''determiners''' (D) (articles, quantifiers, possessives and demonstratives) | ||
+ | *'''nouns''' (N) (common nouns and proper nouns) | ||
+ | *'''numerals''' (U) (cardinal, ordinal, multiplicative, partitive, distributive) | ||
+ | *'''pronouns''' (R) (demonstrative, personal, possessive, indefinite, interrogative, reflexive, reciprocal, relative, emphatic) | ||
+ | *'''verbs''' (V) (full verb, auxiliary, modal, copula) | ||
+ | *'''others''' (O) (particles, classifiers, interjections) | ||
+ | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | == UNL == | ||
+ | As UWs represent only open-class items, there are only four lexical categories in UNL: | ||
+ | {{#tree:id=tagset|openlevels=0|root=Lexical Category (LEX)| | ||
+ | **Adjectival UWs (J) designate attributes. | ||
+ | **Adverbial UWs (A) designate circumstances. | ||
+ | **Nominal UWs (N) designate things. | ||
+ | **Verbal UWs (V) designate occurrence or performance of an action, or the existence of a state or condition. | ||
+ | }} |
Revision as of 12:50, 20 May 2010
Lexical category is the topmost level of the part of speech. It indicates the general morphological, syntactic and semantic behaviour of the entry.
Natural Language
The UNLarium framework acknowledges 11 different lexical categories in natural languages:
UNL
As UWs represent only open-class items, there are only four lexical categories in UNL: