Title: Overview of Lexical Semantics of Verbs
1Overview of Lexical Semantics of Verbs
- Lori Levin
- December 1, 2003
2What is Lexical Semantics?
- Lexical semantics is about the meanings of words.
- It is not about sentence-level meaning
- Truth conditions of sentences
- How meanings noun phrases and verb phrases are
combined compositionally to make meanings of
sentences - Quantifier scope
- Etc.
3Aspects of lexical semantics not covered in this
lecture
- Nouns, adjectives, adverbs, and prepositions
- Selectional restrictions
- Colorless green ideas sleep furiously
- Count and mass nouns
- There was water all over the driveway.
- There was dog all over the driveway.
4Outline
- Transitivity alternations and semantic classes of
verbs - Lexical aspect
- Lexical conflation
- How universal is lexical semantics?
- Unaccusative verbs (non-agentive subjects)
- Survey of computational lexicon projects
5Transitivity Alternations
- Transitivity does the verb have a direct object
or not. - Transitivity alternations
- Broader meaning
- Changes in the number of arguments a verb has
- Changes in the grammatical relations of arguments
6English Transitivity Alternations
- Beth Levin, 1993
- Identified around 100 transitivity alternations
in English.
7Transitivity Alternations and Semantic Classes
Examples
- Causative-Inchoative change of state verbs
- Sam broke the glass. (causative)
- The glass broke. (inchoative)
- Sam opened the door.
- The door opened.
- Sam kicked the ball.
- The ball kicked.
- In other languages
- Inchoative verbs may be reflexive (e.g., Romance
languages) - There may be a causative marker on the transitive
verb. - Inchoative means beginning.
- Beginning a change of state?
8Transitivity Alternations and Semantic Classes
Examples
- Dative Shift giving and telling
- I gave Sam the book.
- I gave the book to Sam.
- I told the story to the children.
- I told the children the story.
- I drove the car to New York.
- I drove New York the car.
- In other languages
- The goal may not be able to become a direct
object. (Romance languages) - The goal may become a direct object in the
presence of an applicative morpheme. (Bantu
languages)
9Transitivity Alternations and Semantic Classes
Examples
- Spray-Load Alternation filling and covering.
- Sam sprayed the wall with paint.
- Sam sprayed paint on the wall.
- Sam loaded the truck with hay.
- Sam loaded hay onto the truck.
10Transitivity Alternations and Semantic Classes
Examples
- There Insertion stative, appearing
- Problems exist.
- There exist problems.
- A ghost appeared.
- There appeared a ghost.
- The students worked.
- There worked some students.
- The students disappeared.
- There disappeared some students.
11Transitivity Alternations and Semantic Classes
Examples
- Locative subjects
- Bees swarmed in the garden.
- The garden swarmed with bees.
- Temporal subjects
- 1990 saw the fall of the government.
12Transitivity Alternations and Semantic Classes
Examples
- Middle Telic verbs? (see below)
- You can cut this bread.
- This bread cuts easily.
- You can sell these books easily.
- These books sell well.
- People like these books.
- These books like well.
13Transitivity Alternations and Semantic Classes
Examples
- Resultative Secondary Predication theme version
- Sam hammered the nail.
- Sam hammered the nail flat.
- The lake froze.
- The lake froze solid.
14Transitivity Alternations and Semantic Classes
Examples
- Resultative Secondary Predication agent version
- He screamed himself hoarse.
- He cried himself to sleep.
15Class shifts
- Manner of motion to change of location
- The bottle floated.
- The bottle floated into the cave.
- The ball bounced.
- The ball bounced across the room.
- Sound to change of location
- The car rumbled.
- The car rumbled down the street.
- The dress rustled.
- She rustled across the room.
16How universal?
- How universal is argument structure?
- If an English word has an agent and a patient,
will the translation-equivalent in another
language have an agent and patient? - If an English word has a subject and object, will
the translation-equivalent in another language
have a subject and object? - Less likely
- I met him.
- I met with him.
17How Universal?
- How universal are alternations and semantic
classes? - If an English word undergoes a transitivity
alternation, will the translation equivalent in
another language undergo the same transitivity
alternation? - Even less likely. (Mitamura, 1989)
18Importance of Transitivity Alternations in
Language Technologies
- For any task that requires understanding
(question answering, information extraction,
machine translation) you need to know the
semantic roles of the NPs. - The glass broke. (subject is patient)
- The kids ate. (subject is agent)
- I gave them some books (object is recipient)
19Importance of Transitivity Alternations in
Language Technologies
- So you need multiple lexical mappings for each
verb - break lt agent patientgt
- subj obj
- break lt patient gt
- subj
- give lt agent theme recipientgt
- subj obj obl
- give lt agent theme recipientgt
- subj obj2 obj
20Importance of Transitivity Alternations in
Language Technologies
- To speed up lexicon acquisition, assigning a verb
to a semantic class and automatically generating
its alternations is faster than listing all of
its lexical mappings by hand. - I gave books to the students.
- I gave the students books.
- Books were given to the students.
- The students were given books.
- There were books given to the students.
- There were students given books.
21Lexical Aspect
- State
- The clock sat on the shelf.
- Activity
- The children painted.
- Accomplishment
- The children walked to school.
- Achievement
- The ambassador arrived in Moscow.
22Lexical Aspect
- Took examples from this web page
http//www.sfu.ca/person/dearmond/322/322.event.cl
ass.htm - Vendler, Linguistics in Philosophy, 1967
- Dowty, Word Meaning and Montague Grammar, 1979
- Tenny, Aspectual Roles and the Syntax-Semantics
Interface, 1994
23Activities and Accomplishments
- Activity
- The children painted for an hour.
- ?The children painted in an hour.
- The children will paint in an hour.
- They will start in an hour.
- The children almost painted.
- Almost started painting
- Test for telicity
- If you start to paint and stop, you have painted.
- Fails test for telicity.
- Accomplishment
- ?The children walked to school for an hour.
- The children walked to school in an hour.
- The children will walk to school in an hour.
- They will start in an hour, or it will take an
hour. - The children almost walked to school.
- Almost started walking, or almost reached school
- Test for telicity
- If you start to walk to school and stop, you may
not have walked to school. - Passes test for telicity.
24Telicity
- Telic has a goal or endpoint (accomplishment)
- Atelic does not have a goal or endpoint
(activity) - Telicity can change depending on the sentence
- He built houses for a year/in a year.
- He built a house in a year/?for a year.
25Achievements
- The ambassador almost arrived in Moscow.
- Only means almost finished not almost started.
26States (English)
- Stative Simple present tense means present
time. Present progressive does not sound good. - He knows the answer.
- He is knowing the answer.
- Non-stative Simple present tense means habitual
or generic. Present progressive means present
time. - He paints.
- He is painting.
27Consequences of Lexical Aspect for Language
Technologies
- English
- You have to know the lexical aspect of the verb
in order to know what the tense morphemes mean. - The simple present tense means habitual with a
non-stative verb, but means present time with a
stative verb. - You have to know the lexical aspect of the verb
in order to know what the adverbials mean. - Almost can mean almost started, almost
finished, or both.
28Consequences of Telicity
- Japanese
- Telic verbs with te iru have a resultative
meaning - Aite iru is open or has been opened, not is
opening - Otite iru is dropped (is on the floor), not is
dropping (unless it takes a very long time to
fall, like a leaf falling off of a sky scraper) - Atelic verbs with te iru have a progressive
meaning - Tabete iru is eating, not has eaten
29Consequences of Telicity
- Japanese -te aru (with passive-like meaning)
only applies to telic verbs because it focuses on
a resulting state. (e.g., wash (arau), but not
praise (homeru)) - Sara ga aratte aru.
- Plate subj wash
- ???Taroo ga homete aru.
30Consequences of Telicity Finnish
- Angelica Kratzer, Telicity and the Meaning of
Objective Case, International Round Table The
Syntax and Semantics of Aspect, Universite de
Paris, Nov. 2000. - Telic direct object can have partitive or
accusative case (with a slight difference in
meaning) - Ammu-i-n karhu-a
- Shoot-past-1sg bear-part
- I shot at a/the bear
- Ammu-i-n karhu-n
- Shoot-past-1sg bear-acc
- I shot the bear
- Atelic can only have partitive case despise,
admire, envy, love, study, play, listen, pull
31Consequences of Telicity Chinese
- Lisa Lai Shen Cheng, Aspects of the
Ba-Construction, Lexicon Project Working Papers
24, Carol Tenny (ed.), MIT, 1988. - Ta ba shu mai le.
- He BA book sell ASP
- He sold the book
- Factors determining grammaticality of the
ba-construction - Aspect markers occurs with le and zhe, but not
with zai and guo. - Definiteness The direct object has to be
interpretable as definite. - Telicity of the verb tui le (pushed) vs. tui
dao le (pushed down push-fall) la le (pull) vs.
la dao le (pull down pull-fall) dai le
(bring/carry) vs. dai lai le (bring here
carry-come)
32Ba and Telicity
- Wo ba Lisì tui-le.
- I BA Lisi push-ASP
- I pushed Lisi.
- Wo ba Lisì tui-dao-le.
- I BA Lisi push-fall ASP
- I pushed Lisi and he fell.
33Ba and Telicity
- Ta ba Zhangsan la-le.
- He BA Zhangsan pull-ASP
- He pulled Zhangsan.
- Ta ba Zhangsan la-dao-le.
- He BA Zhangsan pull-fall-ASP
- He pulled Zhangsan and Zhangsan fell.
34Ba and Telicity
- Ta ba dìan-nao dà i-le.
- He BA computer bring-ASP
- He brought the computer.
- (Does this really mean He carried the
computer?) -
- Ta ba dìan-nao dà i-lái-le.
- He BA computer bring-come-ASP
- He brought the computer here.
-
35Ba and Telicity
- Ta ba fángjian da-sao-le.
- He BA room hit-sweep-ASP
- He cleaned the room.
- Ta ba fángjian da-sao de hen ganjìng.
- He BA room hit-sweep DE very clean
- He cleaned the room and the result is that the
room is very clean.
36Two kinds of intransitive verbs subject is
agentive or not
- Sam worked.
agentive - Sam fell (by accident). non-agentive
- Unaccusative an intransitive verb whose subject
is not agentive. - Because the noun phrase would have been
accusative if the verb were transitive? - Unergative an intransitive verb whose subject is
agentive. - Because the noun phrase would have been ergative
if the verb were transitive? - Confusing terminology by David Perlmutter and
Paul Postal. - Highly influential and insightful contribution to
linguistic theory also by David Perlmutter and
Paul Postal.
37Consequences of Unaccusativity or Agentivity
- English Resultative secondary predication
- He screamed hoarse.
- ?He worked to exhaustion.
- He worked himself to exhaustion
- It broke to pieces.
- It froze solid.
38Consequences of Unaccusativity or Agentivity
German Impersonal Passive
- http//www.wm.edu/CAS/modlang/gasmit/grammar/passi
ve/impspass.htm - Hier wird nicht geparkt.
- No parking here.
- Im Gang wird nicht geraucht.
- No smoking in the corridor.
- Es wurde viel getanzt und gesungen.
- There was lots of dancing and singing.
- Works with agentive verbs only.
- Not with break, fall, etc.
39Consequences of Unaccusativity Italian partitive
clitics
- http//www.sfu.ca/person/dearmond/405/405.ergative
.unaccusative.htm - Sono passate tre settimane.
- Are passed three weeks
- Three weeks have passed.
-
- Ne sono passate tre.
- Of-them are passed three
- Three of them have passed.
-
- Ne sono arrivati(?) tre.
- Of-them are arrived three
- Three of them have arrived.
- Ne hanno telefonato(?) tre.
- Of-them have phoned three
- Three of them have arrived.
40Importance of unaccusativity
- Non agentive subjects, direct object, subjects of
passives - The water froze solid.
- He hammered the nail flat.
- The nail was hammered flat.
- Agentive subjects and subjects of active,
transitive verbs. - He hammered the nail exhausted.
- Doesnt mean that he became exhausted as a result
of hammering the nail. - He screamed hoarse.
- Doesnt mean that he became hoarse as a result of
screaming.
41Importance of Unaccusativity
- Non-agentive subjects behave like direct objects.
- Passive subjects correspond to direct objects of
active sentences. - The Unaccusative Hypothesis (Perlmutter and
Postal) Maybe non-agentive subjects are direct
objects at some level of representation.
42Example of insight from the unaccusative
hypothesis
- Why cant German unaccusative verbs become
impersonal passives? - They are already passive! The non-agentive
subject was at some point an object that got
promoted.
43An additional observation
- Theme and patient arguments alternate between
being in subject position and being in object
position - Sam broke the glass.
- The glass broke.
- Problems exist.
- There exist problems.
- Many people dwell in this village.
- In this village dwell many people.
- Agents do not alternate between being subject and
object. They are always subjects in active
sentences and obliques in passive sentences.
44Accounting for the observation
- Chomsky
- Themes and patients start out in object position
in deep structure. They move up to subject
position if it is open. - Agents originate in subject position.
- Movement is in only one direction up from
object to subject (so that the NP c-commands the
place it came from).
45Accounting for the observation
- Bresnan
- Themes and patients are linked to an
underspecified grammatical function (L. Levin,
1986). - There can be exactly one subject for each verb.
- The underspecified function can fully specified
as subject or object, depending on whether the
subject function has already been taken or not.