Contextually-Dependent Lexical Semantics
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Abstract
This thesis is an investigation of phenomena at the interface between syntax, semantics,
and pragmatics, with the aim of arguing for a view of semantic interpretation as lexically driven
yet contextually dependent. I examine regular, generative processes which operate
over the lexicon to induce verbal sense shifts, and discuss the interaction of these processes
with the linguistic or discourse context. I concentrate on phenomena where only an interaction
between all three linguistic knowledge sources can explain the constraints on verb
use: conventionalised lexical semantic knowledge constrains productive syntactic processes,
while pragmatic reasoning is both constrained by and constrains the potential interpretations
given to certain verbs. The phenomena which are closely examined are the behaviour of
PP sentential modifiers (specifically dative and directional PPs) with respect to the lexical
semantic representation of the verb phrases they modify, resultative constructions, and logical
metonymy.
The analysis is couched in terms of a lexical semantic representation drawing on Davis
(1995), Jackendoff (1983, 1990), and Pustejovsky (1991, 1995) which aims to capture “linguistically
relevant” components of meaning. The representation is shown to have utility for
modeling of the interaction between the syntactic form of an utterance and its meaning.
I introduce a formalisation of the representation within the framework of Head Driven
Phrase Structure Grammar (Pollard and Sag 1994), and rely on the model of discourse
coherence proposed by Lascarides and Asher (1992), Discourse in Commonsense Entailment.
I furthermore discuss the implications of the contextual dependency of semantic interpretation
for lexicon design and computational processing in Natural Language Understanding
systems.
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