Chapter 3
Syntactic annotation of the Rhapsodie corpus
An overview
This chapter presents the principles underlying the syntactic annotation and in particular the reasons for separating this annotation into two levels, micro and macrosyntax, presented in Chapters 4 and 6. The particular focus on paradigmatic piles (coordination, lists, reformulation, disfluencies, etc., see Chapter 5) is justified, as well as the integration of hard-to-describe elements such as disfluencies or discourse markers at various level of the syntactic structure. Our decision to discard the notion of sentence and replace it by the notions of Illocutionary Units [IUs] and Government Units [GUs] is discussed.
Article outline
- 1.Annotating three mechanisms of cohesion and two levels of analysis
- 1.1Microsyntax: Government and listing
- 1.1.1Government
- 1.1.2Listing
- 1.2Macrosyntax
- 1.3Government Units and Illocutionary Units
- 2.The advantages of annotating a complex structure
- 2.1A rich syntactic treebank
- 2.2Discourse markers, reformulations and disfluencies as part of the syntactic structure of spoken language
- 2.3A syntactic annotation without sentences
- 3.Conclusion
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Note