<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Semantics / Pacman / Subject / Verb argument / Valency / Programming language / Voice / Object-oriented programming / Auxiliary verb / Linguistics / Syntax / Grammar
Date: 2014-02-14 14:48:52
Semantics
Pacman
Subject
Verb argument
Valency
Programming language
Voice
Object-oriented programming
Auxiliary verb
Linguistics
Syntax
Grammar

Toward a Programmatic Semantics of Natural Language

Add to Reading List

Source URL: larifari.org

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 117,80 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES 2011, 26 (9), 1402!1456 Electrophysiological evidence for use of the animacy hierarchy, but not thematic role assignment, during verb-argument processing

DocID: 1tGvi - View Document

Syntax / Linguistics / Grammar / Syntactic categories / Argument / Clause / Adjunct / Noun phrase / Verb / X-bar theory

Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition 2006, Vol. 32, No. 5, 1045–1056 Copyright 2006 by the American Psychological Association/$12.00 DOI:

DocID: 1rj5n - View Document

Linguistics / Syntax / Grammar / Grammatical cases / Parts of speech / Reflexive verb / Nominal / Partitive / Preposition and postposition / Object / Genitive case / Argument

Empirical Issues in Syntax and Semantics 8 O. Bonami & P. Cabredo Hofherr (eds, pp. 221–237 http://www.cssp.cnrs.fr/eiss8 Syntax and Semantics of Bare NPs: Objects of Intensive Reflexive Verbs in Russian

DocID: 1r8E3 - View Document

Linguistics / Syntax / Cognitive science / Syntactic categories / Psycholinguistics / Linguistic typology / Sentence processing / Argument / Clause / English grammar / Relative clause / Verb phrase

/home/dr/Thesis/Dissertation/Language/sent-props.agr

DocID: 1r7Bj - View Document

Thematic roles / Linguistics / Semantics / Cognitive science / Resultative / Theta role / Argument / Thematic relation / Patient

Participant Sharing in Chinese Resultatives Mingming Liu (Rutgers University) Introduction: Chinese resultatives take the form of verb compounds V1-V2, V1 denoting an activity e1 and V2 its resultant state s2. An example

DocID: 1r1Pn - View Document