In our workshop, we would like to subject the polysemy of agent nouns to closer scrutiny. |
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On this account, it is the polysemy of the indefinite article that gives rise to the ambiguity of the indefinite noun phrase. |
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The standard approach to polysemy in natural language processing has been to break down the problem into sub-tasks. |
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Yet polysemy is endemic to natural languages, as a detailed analysis of just about any word will confirm. |
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All the words for actual snow have been removed, and I'm ignoring the extensive polysemy of snow and many of its derivatives. |
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For my part, therefore, I am inclined to see features of both monosemy and polysemy in a word's semantic structure. |
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The artistry of the hidden beauty lies in its polysemy, and that of the visible in its unsurpassed preeminence. |
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These concern the distinction between polysemy and homonymy, and between polysemy and monosemy. |
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It is significant that many linguists have sought to limit the role of polysemy in linguistic semantics, if not to eliminate it altogether. |
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For it, he drew on Renaissance technical terms, derivations, compounds, archaisms, polysemy, etymological meanings, and idioms. |
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We have relations of meaning such as synonymy and antonymy, polysemy and homonymy, ways of organizing the vocabulary. |
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Such polysemy do not give opportunities to apprehend told during the story. |
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The imperfections of polysemy analyses have not deterred computational linguists from attempting to devise algorithms for disambiguation and sense selection. |
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Importantly, single lexical items typically inhere to different domains, and this is one of the factors responsible for their polysemy. |
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The aim is therefore to resort to a language that allows evocation, polysemy, non-linear thought, a certain complexity: the language of images. |
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It may be that that the main risk with the concept of accountability lies in its fuzziness and polysemy. |
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His work is also logically based on polysemy and the excess of possible meanings, which is represented in the text by the extensive use of irony. |
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The risk is that frequent use of a few short words brings a great polysemy among them. |
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Disambiguation and polysemy filtering are required to count tweets that are actually about each politician. |
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At first, our project aims to build a common basis of understanding of this polysemy. |
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Literariness was not merely the quality that distinguished poetics from pragmatics, it was the guarantee and promise of linguistic richness, of polysemy. |
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The extended mechanism turned out to be capable of giving a principled account of lexical blocking, the pragmatics of adjectives, and systematic polysemy. |
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You may have noticed that homonymy and polysemy are very similar. |
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An ELMo-equipped language engine won't be nearly as good as a human with years of experience parsing language, but even working knowledge of polysemy is hugely helpful in understanding a language. |
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Meanwhile, lexical relations deal with sense relations like synonyms, antonyms, polysemy, hyponyms, acronyms, etc. |
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It's not easy for a non-technical translator to choose the right variant of translation among huge amount of variants generated from foreign languages' polysemy of politechnical terminology. |
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The rediscovery of the poetic, expressive and meta-literary functions of the word invites one to give the text's polysemy all its place, including in an exegesis that is concerned with the historical system of reference. |
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Form and materials, oils generously deployed in strong, vivid line augmented by diffuse patches of colour, all these have precedence over figuration to allow the evocation of each painting's polysemy. |
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It was valued as a cerebral activity whose aesthetic legitimacy was grounded in complexity and polysemy. |
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The reciprocal anaphors or quantifiers seem to have no other use in many languages, whereas polysemy is the standard situation for reciprocal affixes and reciprocal pronouns. |
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The polysemy of la in French, which Flaubert used, is important. |
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