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Dynamic Typing for Lexical Semantics A Case Study: the Genitive Construction

by Nicholas Asher, Pascal Denis
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Post-nominal genitives and prepositional phrases in German: a uniform analysis *

by Torgrim Solstad
"... Adnominal genitives and prepositional phrases (PPs) have a wide range of interpretations. For instance, they may be interpreted as arguments of an event nominalization or a relational noun. They may also express possession or some general associative relation, cf. the German Determiner Phrases ..."
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Adnominal genitives and prepositional phrases (PPs) have a wide range of interpretations. For instance, they may be interpreted as arguments of an event nominalization or a relational noun. They may also express possession or some general associative relation, cf. the German Determiner Phrases

Lexical Ambiguity as Type Disjunction

by Nicholas Asher, Pascal Denis
"... Phenomena such as logical polysemy and logical metonymy have recently received a precise treat-ment by using a rich composition logic that assumes complex types and rich introduction and exploita-tion rules for manipulating them (Asher and Puste-jovsky, 2005). An interesting question is whether this ..."
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Phenomena such as logical polysemy and logical metonymy have recently received a precise treat-ment by using a rich composition logic that assumes complex types and rich introduction and exploita-tion rules for manipulating them (Asher and Puste-jovsky, 2005). An interesting question is whether this approach can be extended and applied to other lexical semantics phenomena, in particular to con-trastive ambiguity (aka homonymy). This paper en-riches Asher and Pustejovsky’s Type Composition Logic with another type of complex types, namely disjunctive types, and accompanying exploitation and introduction rules to model homonymy. This results both in a more elegant and economical treat-ment of homonymy and in a more general account of lexical ambiguity. 1
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