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An ongoing academic and research program, the “Vocabula Grammatica” lexicon, implemented by the Centre for the Greek Language (Thessaloniki, Greece), aims at lemmatizing all the philological, grammatical, rhetorical, and metrical terms in the written texts of scholars (philologists and scholiasts) who curated the ancient Greek literature from the beginning of the Hellenistic period (4th/3rd c. BC) until the end of the Byzantine era (15th c. AD). In particular, it aspires to fill serious gaps (a) in the study of ancient Greek scholarship and (b) in the lexicography of the ancient Greek language and literature. By providing specific examples, we will highlight the typical and methodological features of the forthcoming dictionary.
“Die Sprach-Checker” (Eng. “Language Checkers”) are young citizen scientists from Mannheim’s highly diverse district Neckarstadt-West. Together with linguists, they investigate a tremendous treasure: their own multilingualism. They are exploring and (re)discovering their own languages and the other languages used in their environment while documenting and reflecting on their everyday experiences in and with different linguistic practices. Our aim is to raise awareness of their strengths and to promote appreciation for their language biographies, thus fostering a sense of identification with one’s own linguistic surroundings. Such a joint research endeavour offers empirical opportunities to address (linguistic) issues of societal relevance by collecting authentic data from the multicultural district and involving its residents and local stakeholders. In this paper, we will provide insights regarding the project’s background, conception, and outcomes. We address everyone who is planning or conducting a citizen science project with young people, especially children and adolescents, or who works at the interface between science and society.
‘Can’ and ‘must’-type modal verbs in the direct sanctioning of misconduct across European languages
(2023)
Deontic meanings of obligation and permissibility have mostly been studied in relation to modal verbs, even though researchers are aware that such meanings can be conveyed in other ways (consider, for example, the contributions to Nuyts/van der Auwera (eds.) 2016). This presentation reports on an ongoing project that examines deontic meaning but takes as its starting point not a type of linguistic structure but a particular kind of social moment that presumably attracts deontic talk: The management of potentially ‚unacceptable‘ or untoward actions (taking the last bread roll at breakfast, making a disallowed move during a board game, etc.). Data come from a multi-language parallel video corpus of everyday social interaction in English, German, Italian, and Polish. Here, we focus on moments in which one person sanctions another’s behavior as unacceptable. Using interactional-linguistic methods (Couper-Kuhlen/Selting 2018), we examine similarities and differences across these four languages in the use of modal verbs as part of such sanctioning attempts. First results suggest that modal verbs are not as common in the sanctioning of misconduct as one might expect. Across the four languages, only between 10%–20% of relevant sequences involve a modal verb. Most of the time, in this context, speakers achieve deontic meaning in other ways (e.g., infinitives such as German nicht so schmatzen, ‚no smacking‘). This raises the question what exactly modal verbs, on those relatively rare occasions when they are used, contribute to the accomplishment of deontic meaning. The reported study pursues this question in two ways: 1) By considering similarities across languages in the ways that modal verbs interact with other (verbal) means in the sanctioning of misconduct.; 2) By considering differences across languages in the use of modal verbs. Here, we find that the relevant modal verbs are used similarly in some activity contexts (enforcing rules during board games), but less so in other activity contexts (mundane situations with no codified rules). In sum, the presented study adds to cross-linguistically grounded knowledge about deontic meaning and its relationships to linguistics structures.
In the course of the last years, digital lexicography has opened up a variety of avenues fostering the conceptualisation, application and use of constructicons, a type of lexicographical reference work which has revealed itself highly promising in terms of connectivity and flexibility, at the same time, however, also challenging as to its technical implementation. The present paper takes up the ambitious aim to propose some reflections as well as a first draft for a possible model of a multilingual ‘periphrasticon’ as a subtype of a bigger constructicon focusing on a specific typology-related structural feature, i. e. periphrasticity. Taking periphrastic verbal constructions in French, Italian and Spanish as a starting point, it tries to sketch out a unified constructional network including not only equivalent (or corresponding) constructions within Romance, but also establishing (formal and functional) cross-linguistic connections to German and English. Comprising the major languages available to most language learners in (at least) German-speaking environments, the model is also supposed to pave the way for multilingual constructicography which, on the one hand, is able to account for intra- and cross-linguistic relations and, on the other hand, can also prove a valuable tool for language learning and use.
Eine syntaktische Besonderheit der kontinentalwestgermanischen Sprachen ist die Bildung satzfinaler Verbalkomplexe (" ... dass sie das Buch gelesen haben muss"), für die ein hohes Maß an sprach- bzw. dialektübergreifender und idiolektaler Verbstellungsvariation charakteristisch ist. Der niederdeutsche Verbalkomplex gilt in Überblicksdarstellungen als streng kopffinal, wobei bisher – anders als für niederländische und hochdeutsche (besonders: oberdeutsche) Mundarten – kaum empirische Studien vorliegen. Der Aufsatz präsentiert eine deskriptive Analyse des zweigliedrigen Verbalkomplexes im Märkisch-Brandenburgischen, dem südöstlichsten der niederdeutschen Dialektverbände.
Im Gegensatz zum Standarddeutschen und anderen niederdeutschen Mundarten wie dem Nordniederdeutschen, weist das Brandenburgische selbst bei nur zwei verbalen Elementen in der rechten Satzklammer Variation auf ("dass sie lesen kann/kann lesen"). Anhand von Tonaufnahmen aus dem bisher kaum erschlossenen DDR-Korpus wird folgenden Fragen nachgegangen: Welche Verbstellungsvarianten sind in welchen Syntagmen möglich bzw. werden präferiert? Welche Unterschiede bestehen zwischen Haupt- und Nebensatzkomplexen? Wie verhält sich der brandenburgische Verbalkomplex in Bezug auf nicht-verbale Intervenierer (sog. Verb Projection Raising)? Wie verhalten sich Modal- und andere infinitivregierende Verben unter Perfekteinbettung (d.h. in stddt. Ersatzinfinitivkontexten)?
Am Ende steht eine erste typologische Einordnung des brandenburgischen Verbalkomplexes im Vergleich mit anderen kontinentalwestgermanischen Varietäten, wobei sich areallinguistisch interessante Ähnlichkeiten mit dem südlich angrenzenden Ostmitteldeutschen zeigen.
The focus of this paper will be on lexical information systems and the framework guidelines for the definition of the curricula within the educational system of the Autonomous Province of Bolzano/ Bozen (Italy). In Italy, the competences to be achieved at different school levels are published in the form of general guidelines. On this basis each school has to specify the general competency goals and to spell them out in a concrete curriculum. In this paper I will examine to what extent lexical information systems are represented in the framework guidelines within the German and the Italian educational system of the Autonomous Province, these being separate systems. In a second step, I will check the representations of the resources against the “Villa Vigoni Theses on Lexicography“. Finally, I will discuss the results and give an outlook for further research.
Zur Vorbereitung eines zweisprachigen Fachworterbuchs zur Tourismusfachsprache werden korpuslinguistische Verfahren eingesetzt, um Auffalligkeiten in der jeweiligen Fachsprache im Vergleich zum allgemeinsprachlichen Gebrauch aufzuspüren. Neben den hervorstechenden Elementen des Vokabulars, den Schlüsselwortern als potentiellen Stichwortern, geht es vor allem um sprach- und fachsprachspezifische typische Formulierungen und deren Ubersetzungsaquivalente. Fur die gemeinsame, interlinguale Betrachtung des Sprachenpaars Deutsch-Italienisch wurde ein kleines Fachsprachenkorpus aufgebaut und innerhalb der Sketch Engine-Umgebung unter Zuhilfenahme der darin integrierten Referenzkorpora ausgewertet. Fur eine weitere intralinguale Untersuchung der deutschsprachigen Komponente wurde auf das Deutsche Referenzkorpus DeReKo und weitere, intern zu Verfügung stehende Instrumente des Instituts für Deutsche Sprache zuruckgegriffen. Neben üblichen Verfahren der quantitativen Ein- oder Mehrwortbewertung wird ein Ansatz ergänzend getestet, der der dunnen Datengrundlage im fachsprachlichen Bereich Rechnung trägt: Diese ergibt sich nicht nur aus der Korpusgrobe, sondern auch daraus, dass bestimmte feste Floskeln (wie ,eine Reiserücktrittsversicherung abschlieben‘) selten rekurrent, vielmehr eher nur einmal pro Text verwendet werden. Auch wenn dieser Ansatz aufgrund infrastruktureller Artefakte in Einzelfallen an seine Grenzen stößt, die hier selbstkritisch nicht verschwiegen werden sollen, so zeigt sich doch an vielen Stellen auch das grobe Potential. Abschließend wird beispielhaft illustriert, wie Evidenzen dieser und der anderen korpuslinguistischen Auswertungen lexikographisch umgesetzt wurden.
Wortgeschichte digital (‘digital word history’) is a new historical dictionary of New High German, the most recent period of German reaching from approximately 1600 AD up to the present. By contrast to many historical dictionaries, Wortgeschichte digital has a narrated text – a “word history” – at the core of its entries. The motivation for choosing this format rather than traditional microstructures is
briefly outlined. Special emphasis it put on the way these word histories interact with other components of the dictionary, notably with the quotation section. As Wortgeschichte digital is an online only project, visualizations play an important role for the design of the dictionary. Two examples are presented: first, the “quotation navigator” which is relevant for the microstructure of the entries, and, second, a timeline (“Zeitstrahl”) which is part of the macrostructure as it gives access to the lemma inventory from a diachronic point of view.
This paper will address the challenge of creating a knowledge graph from a corpus of historical encyclopedias with a special focus on word sense alignment (WSA) and disambiguation (WSD). More precisely, we examine WSA and WSD approaches based on article similarity to link messy historical data, utilizing Wikipedia as aground-truth component – as the lack of a critical overlap in content paired with the amount of variation between and within the encyclopedias does not allow for choosing a ”baseline” encyclopedia to align the others to. Additionally, we are comparing the disambiguation performance of conservative methods like the Lesk algorithm to more recent approaches, i.e. using language models to disambiguate senses.
Word Families in Diachrony. An epoch-spanning structure for the word families of older German
(2022)
The ‘Word Families in Diachrony’ project (WoDia), for which a funding application to the DFG is in preparation, aims to provide a database driven online research environment that will enable processes of change in the entire historical vocabulary of German to be investigated by focusing on the changes in word families and the individual means of word formation. WoDia will embed the vocabularies of Old High German (OHG), Middle High German (MHG), Old Saxon (OS), and Middle Low German (MLG) in a database, resulting in a word-family structure for High and Low German from the beginnings up to the 15th century (for High German) and up to the 17th century (for Low German). The basis of the vocabulary is provided by reference dictionaries of the four historical varieties, whereas the word families’ historical structure is based on the word-family dictionary of OHG by Jochen Splett (1992). Each lemma in the database will be assigned, where appropriate, to a word family. The individual word-formation elements and the word-formation hierarchy will be mapped in a structural formula. The etymologically corresponding lemmas and word families of the different periods/varieties of older German will be linked so that an analysis across the varieties will also be possible. The annotations of word families in the database (e. g., relating to word structure) will be supplemented by linking their lemmas to the online dictionaries and to the reference corpora of Old German (OS and OHG), MHG, and MLG.