Chu-Ren Huang | The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
An event noun is a special type of noun that lexically encodes eventive information. This paper examines a typical non-derived Mandarin Chinese noun, huìyì ‘conference; meeting’. It first establishes that huìyì is an event noun through distributional evidences. Then, it explores the semantic type system of huìyì using argument structure, event structure, and qualia structure, based on the Generative Lexicon theory (GL). The findings indicate that non-derived event nouns can represent eventive information and GL is versatile enough to represent such information encoded by nouns.
2021. Comparison of Changes Between Mainland China and Taiwan. In Chinese Lexical Semantics [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 12278], ► pp. 686 ff.
Wang, Shan, Le Wu & Qiaomin Gong
2021. The Collocations of Chinese Tactile Adjectives. In Chinese Lexical Semantics [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 12278], ► pp. 711 ff.
Wang, Shan, Le Wu & Qiaomin Gong
2022. The Collocations of Chinese Color Words. In Chinese Lexical Semantics [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 13249], ► pp. 121 ff.
Wang, Shan & Chu-Ren Huang
2017. Word sketch lexicography: new perspectives on lexicographic studies of Chinese near synonyms. Lingua Sinica 3:1
Wu, Yang & Shan Wang
2016. Applying Chinese Word Sketch Engine to Distinguish Commonly Confused Words. In Chinese Lexical Semantics [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 10085], ► pp. 600 ff.
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