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33.1 Frames and Frames 33.1 Frames and Frames
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33.1.1 Cognitive Frames 33.1.1 Cognitive Frames
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33.1.2 Frame Semantics 33.1.2 Frame Semantics
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33.2 Frame Semantics and the FrameNet Project 33.2 Frame Semantics and the FrameNet Project
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33.2.1 General Outline of the FrameNet Process 33.2.1 General Outline of the FrameNet Process
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33.2.2 A Sample Frame: Compliance 33.2.2 A Sample Frame: Compliance
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33.2.3 The Variety of Frames 33.2.3 The Variety of Frames
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33.2.4 Frame Elements 33.2.4 Frame Elements
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33.2.5 Syntactic Contexts for FE Realization 33.2.5 Syntactic Contexts for FE Realization
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33.2.6 Null Instantiation 33.2.6 Null Instantiation
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33.3 Frame-to-Frame and Fe-to-Fe Relations 33.3 Frame-to-Frame and Fe-to-Fe Relations
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33.3.1 Types of Frame-to-Frame Relations 33.3.1 Types of Frame-to-Frame Relations
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33.3.2 Commerce: A Detailed Example of Frame Relations 33.3.2 Commerce: A Detailed Example of Frame Relations
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33.4 A Frames Perspective on Familiar Issues in Linguistic Semantics 33.4 A Frames Perspective on Familiar Issues in Linguistic Semantics
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33.4.1 Polysemy 33.4.1 Polysemy
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33.4.2 Antonymy and Negation 33.4.2 Antonymy and Negation
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33.4.3 Synonymy and Paraphrase 33.4.3 Synonymy and Paraphrase
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33.4.4 Coherence and Anaphora 33.4.4 Coherence and Anaphora
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33.5 Beyond English: FrameNets in Other Languages 33.5 Beyond English: FrameNets in Other Languages
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33.6 Beyond the Lexicon 33.6 Beyond the Lexicon
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33 A frames Approach to Semantic Analysis
Get accessCharles J. Fillmore is Emeritus Professor at the University of California at Berkeley. His early work included contributions to generative grammar (cyclic rule application), the grammar and semantics of English verbs, case grammar, deixis, frame semantics, and construction grammar. After retirement he has been associated with FrameNet, a computational lexicography project at the International Computer Science Institute, supported mainly by the US National Science Foundation. He served as President of the Linguistic Society of America in 1991.
Collin Baker received a Ph.D. in Linguistics from University of California at Berkeley in 1999, and since 2000 has been manager of the FrameNet Project at the International Computer Science Institute. Recent publications include The Structure of the FrameNet Database (2003) (with Charles Fillmore and Beau Cronin) and FrameNet and Representing the Link between Semantic and Syntactic Relations (2004) (with Fillmore and Josef Ruppenhofer), along with a number of conference papers and tutorials at Language Resources and Evaluation Conference (LREC), Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL), and Linguistic Society of America (LSA). His current research focuses on efficiently extending the FrameNet lexicon and on annotating large corpora with semantic frames.
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Published:09 July 2015
Cite
Abstract
The chapter explains the cognitive and linguistic aspects of Frame Semantics, and its implementation in FrameNet, a lexicon of English using annotated corpus examples to document the syntactic–semantic valences of verbs, nouns, and adjectives. It also covers frame relations, extensions to other languages, and implications for theories of polysemy, anaphora, coherence, etc.
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