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Strong generative capacity. The semantics of linguistic formalism

Autor Philip H. Miller

Editorial CSLI PUBLICATIONS

Strong generative capacity. The semantics of linguistic formalism
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The concept of 'strong generative capacity' (SGC) of a linguistic formalism was introduced by Chomsky in the early sixties in order to characterize descriptive capacity. However, the original definition proposed by Chomsky turned out to be unusable, ...

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  • Editorial CSLI PUBLICATIONS
  • ISBN13 9781575862149
  • ISBN10 157586214X
  • Tipo LIBRO
  • Páginas 158
  • Año de Edición 1999
  • Encuadernación Rústica

Strong generative capacity. The semantics of linguistic formalism

Autor Philip H. Miller

Editorial CSLI PUBLICATIONS

The concept of 'strong generative capacity' (SGC) of a linguistic formalism was introduced by Chomsky in the early sixties in order to characterize descriptive capacity. However, the original definition proposed by Chomsky turned out to be unusable, ...

-10% dto.    21,50€
19,35€
Ahorra 2,15€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

The concept of 'strong generative capacity' (SGC) of a linguistic formalism was introduced by Chomsky in the early sixties in order to characterize descriptive capacity. However, the original definition proposed by Chomsky turned out to be unusable, especially when one wished to compare the SGC of different types of formalisms. This book provides for the first time a rigorous and useful characterization of SGC, defining it as the model theoretic semantics of linguistic formalism. Specifically, abstract interpretation domains are defined in theory-neutral set-theoretical terms, and the SGC of a theory with respect to a given interpretation domain is characterized as the range of a specific interpretation function mapping structural descriptions of that theory into elements of that domain. Interpretation domains are defined for such notions as labeled constituency, dependency, endocentricity and linking and applied to the analysis of a range of linguistic formalisms, among which context-free grammars, dependency grammars, X-bar grammars, tree-adjoining grammars, transformational grammars and categorial grammars.