NooJ grammars for Italian transformational analysis: a brief outline
As known, Transformational Grammar (TG) focuses on bidirectional relationships between sentences sharing the same lexical material, in some cases also the same meaning, but always differing in terms of formal structure and word distribution. We represent such relationships with the symbol “=” (equal...
Guardado en:
| Autor principal: | |
|---|---|
| Formato: | Artículo revista |
| Lenguaje: | Inglés |
| Publicado: |
Universidad Nacional de Rosario
2024
|
| Materias: | |
| Acceso en línea: | https://aprendoconnooj.unr.edu.ar/index.php/revista/article/view/32 |
| Aporte de: |
| id |
I15-R219-article-32 |
|---|---|
| record_format |
ojs |
| spelling |
I15-R219-article-322024-08-13T18:20:28Z NooJ grammars for Italian transformational analysis: a brief outline Gramáticas NooJ para el análisis transformacional del italiano: breve resumen Monteleone, Mario NooJ Gramáticas locales de NooJ Análisis Transformacional del italiano Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural Autómatas de Estado Finito Gráficos NooJ NooJ Local Grammars Italian Transformational Analysis Natural Language Processing Finite State Automata Graphs As known, Transformational Grammar (TG) focuses on bidirectional relationships between sentences sharing the same lexical material, in some cases also the same meaning, but always differing in terms of formal structure and word distribution. We represent such relationships with the symbol “=” (equal to). For instance, we can connect a declarative sentence to its negative and/or passive forms. Similarly, we can connect complex sentences to the respective simple sentences, which make them up, such as sentences with reciprocal verbs and collective subjects, obtained through the coordination of two simple sentences. According to Maurice Gross [1] and Max Silberztein [2,3], examples of possible transformations are those going from declarative sentences to Interrogatives, Pronominalization, Juxtapositions, or other processes producing the so-called Mirror Transformations. In addition, two or more transformations can operate simultaneously on a declarative sentence. Como es sabido, la Gramática Transformacional (TG) se centra en relaciones bidireccionales entre oraciones que comparten el mismo material léxico, en algunos casos también el mismo significado, pero siempre difieren en términos de estructura formal y distribución de palabras. Representamos tales relaciones con el símbolo “=" (igual a), usado para conectar, por ejemplo, una oración declarativa con sus formas negativas y/o pasivas, u oraciones complejas con las oraciones simples que las forman, como por ejemplo oraciones con verbos recíprocos y sujetos colectivos obtenidos coordinando dos oraciones simples. Según Maurice Gross [1] y Max Silberztein [2,3], ejemplos de posibles transformaciones son aquellas que van de oraciones declarativas a Interrogativas, Pronominalización, Yuxtaposiciones o las que producen las llamadas Transformaciones Espejo. Además, una o más combinaciones pueden operar simultáneamente en una oración declarativa. Universidad Nacional de Rosario 2024-05-31 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Artículo revisado por pares application/pdf https://aprendoconnooj.unr.edu.ar/index.php/revista/article/view/32 10.35305/an.vi4.32 Aprendo con NooJ; Núm. 4 (2024) 2718-8574 eng https://aprendoconnooj.unr.edu.ar/index.php/revista/article/view/32/40 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ |
| institution |
Universidad Nacional de Rosario |
| institution_str |
I-15 |
| repository_str |
R-219 |
| container_title_str |
Aprendo con NooJ |
| language |
Inglés |
| format |
Artículo revista |
| topic |
NooJ Gramáticas locales de NooJ Análisis Transformacional del italiano Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural Autómatas de Estado Finito Gráficos NooJ NooJ Local Grammars Italian Transformational Analysis Natural Language Processing Finite State Automata Graphs |
| spellingShingle |
NooJ Gramáticas locales de NooJ Análisis Transformacional del italiano Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural Autómatas de Estado Finito Gráficos NooJ NooJ Local Grammars Italian Transformational Analysis Natural Language Processing Finite State Automata Graphs Monteleone, Mario NooJ grammars for Italian transformational analysis: a brief outline |
| topic_facet |
NooJ Gramáticas locales de NooJ Análisis Transformacional del italiano Procesamiento del Lenguaje Natural Autómatas de Estado Finito Gráficos NooJ NooJ Local Grammars Italian Transformational Analysis Natural Language Processing Finite State Automata Graphs |
| author |
Monteleone, Mario |
| author_facet |
Monteleone, Mario |
| author_sort |
Monteleone, Mario |
| title |
NooJ grammars for Italian transformational analysis: a brief outline |
| title_short |
NooJ grammars for Italian transformational analysis: a brief outline |
| title_full |
NooJ grammars for Italian transformational analysis: a brief outline |
| title_fullStr |
NooJ grammars for Italian transformational analysis: a brief outline |
| title_full_unstemmed |
NooJ grammars for Italian transformational analysis: a brief outline |
| title_sort |
nooj grammars for italian transformational analysis: a brief outline |
| description |
As known, Transformational Grammar (TG) focuses on bidirectional relationships between sentences sharing the same lexical material, in some cases also the same meaning, but always differing in terms of formal structure and word distribution. We represent such relationships with the symbol “=” (equal to). For instance, we can connect a declarative sentence to its negative and/or passive forms. Similarly, we can connect complex sentences to the respective simple sentences, which make them up, such as sentences with reciprocal verbs and collective subjects, obtained through the coordination of two simple sentences. According to Maurice Gross [1] and Max Silberztein [2,3], examples of possible transformations are those going from declarative sentences to Interrogatives, Pronominalization, Juxtapositions, or other processes producing the so-called Mirror Transformations. In addition, two or more transformations can operate simultaneously on a declarative sentence. |
| publisher |
Universidad Nacional de Rosario |
| publishDate |
2024 |
| url |
https://aprendoconnooj.unr.edu.ar/index.php/revista/article/view/32 |
| work_keys_str_mv |
AT monteleonemario noojgrammarsforitaliantransformationalanalysisabriefoutline AT monteleonemario gramaticasnoojparaelanalisistransformacionaldelitalianobreveresumen |
| first_indexed |
2024-08-12T21:47:14Z |
| last_indexed |
2024-09-04T02:42:24Z |
| _version_ |
1809231637389508608 |