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Vocabulary of natural language processing

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Concept information

Preferred term

bound pronoun  

Broader concept

Example

  • According to him bound pronouns are merely copies of the phi-features of a quantifier in the numeration set. (Chung, 2000)
  • Some examples are restrictions on what type of bound pronoun can be used with a given verb the conjugation class of a verb or the presence of a mandatory prefix. (Kazantseva, Maracle, Maracle & Pine, 2018)
  • The bound pronouns are divided into three groups: active pronouns (3; roughly for situations where the actor is human and the patient is not or where there is no patient) passive pronouns (4; for situations where the patient is human and the agent is not) and "transitive" pronouns (5; for situations when both the actor and the patient are human). (Kazantseva, Maracle, Maracle & Pine, 2018)
  • What exactly counts as bound anaphora varies between different accounts of the phenomena but the rough intuition is that semantically a bound pronoun plays the role of a variable bound by the logical form (a quantifier) of its antecedent. (Pereira, 1989)
  • What exactly counts as bound anaphora varies between different accounts of the phenomena but the rough intuition is that semantically a bound pronoun plays the role of a variable bound by the logical form (a quantifier) of its antecedent. (Pereira, 1990)

In other languages

URI

http://data.loterre.fr/ark:/67375/8LP-NNFQDGX7-F

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