Losing one's mind over meaning : analysing the behaviour of possessive idioms

Idioms are commonly found in everyday language and reflect the conventionalisations in speech communities. Regarding English idioms, past research have examined the syntactic and semantic analysis of idioms (Villavicencio & Copestake, 2002), along with their decomposability (Nunberg, 1978; Gibbs...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ho, Jia Qian
Other Authors: Francis Bond
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/62737
_version_ 1811687335616577536
author Ho, Jia Qian
author2 Francis Bond
author_facet Francis Bond
Ho, Jia Qian
author_sort Ho, Jia Qian
collection NTU
description Idioms are commonly found in everyday language and reflect the conventionalisations in speech communities. Regarding English idioms, past research have examined the syntactic and semantic analysis of idioms (Villavicencio & Copestake, 2002), along with their decomposability (Nunberg, 1978; Gibbs, 1989a,b) and comprehension (Titone & Connine, 1994; Cacciari & Tabossi, 2014). However, there has been little research on English possessive idioms despite their uniqueness and interesting properties. This thesis thus seeks to analyze the syntax and semantics of possessive idioms and describe their behaviour in terms of their decomposability and plausibility. A total of 514 idioms were categorized into co-indexed and separate possessive idioms and then grouped syntactically in order to be incorporated into new templates in the English Resource Grammar (Flickinger, 2011). Subsequently, the meaning of either each idiom component or paraphrase component was linked to WordNet (Fellbaum, 1998a) by choosing the most appropriate sense. The resulting comprehensive syntactic and semantic idiom descriptions allowed for analyses of their syntax, semantics, decomposability and plausibility. Results demonstrated the interplay between syntax and semantics and revealed novel aspects of possessive idioms, such as alternation and transformation in idioms. Furthermore, results confirmed that a degree of decomposability exists and suggested that possessive idioms could be categorized into four groups according to their projectability. The comprehensive idiom database will be released under an open license where it can be used as a dictionary and to further improve natural language processing applications.
first_indexed 2024-10-01T05:14:41Z
format Final Year Project (FYP)
id ntu-10356/62737
institution Nanyang Technological University
language English
last_indexed 2024-10-01T05:14:41Z
publishDate 2015
record_format dspace
spelling ntu-10356/627372019-12-10T14:31:56Z Losing one's mind over meaning : analysing the behaviour of possessive idioms Ho, Jia Qian Francis Bond School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Library and information science Idioms are commonly found in everyday language and reflect the conventionalisations in speech communities. Regarding English idioms, past research have examined the syntactic and semantic analysis of idioms (Villavicencio & Copestake, 2002), along with their decomposability (Nunberg, 1978; Gibbs, 1989a,b) and comprehension (Titone & Connine, 1994; Cacciari & Tabossi, 2014). However, there has been little research on English possessive idioms despite their uniqueness and interesting properties. This thesis thus seeks to analyze the syntax and semantics of possessive idioms and describe their behaviour in terms of their decomposability and plausibility. A total of 514 idioms were categorized into co-indexed and separate possessive idioms and then grouped syntactically in order to be incorporated into new templates in the English Resource Grammar (Flickinger, 2011). Subsequently, the meaning of either each idiom component or paraphrase component was linked to WordNet (Fellbaum, 1998a) by choosing the most appropriate sense. The resulting comprehensive syntactic and semantic idiom descriptions allowed for analyses of their syntax, semantics, decomposability and plausibility. Results demonstrated the interplay between syntax and semantics and revealed novel aspects of possessive idioms, such as alternation and transformation in idioms. Furthermore, results confirmed that a degree of decomposability exists and suggested that possessive idioms could be categorized into four groups according to their projectability. The comprehensive idiom database will be released under an open license where it can be used as a dictionary and to further improve natural language processing applications. Bachelor of Arts 2015-04-28T06:17:00Z 2015-04-28T06:17:00Z 2015 2015 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/62737 en Nanyang Technological University 49 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Library and information science
Ho, Jia Qian
Losing one's mind over meaning : analysing the behaviour of possessive idioms
title Losing one's mind over meaning : analysing the behaviour of possessive idioms
title_full Losing one's mind over meaning : analysing the behaviour of possessive idioms
title_fullStr Losing one's mind over meaning : analysing the behaviour of possessive idioms
title_full_unstemmed Losing one's mind over meaning : analysing the behaviour of possessive idioms
title_short Losing one's mind over meaning : analysing the behaviour of possessive idioms
title_sort losing one s mind over meaning analysing the behaviour of possessive idioms
topic DRNTU::Library and information science
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/62737
work_keys_str_mv AT hojiaqian losingonesmindovermeaninganalysingthebehaviourofpossessiveidioms