Abstract
In this paper, we show how frames can be employed in the analysis of genitive constructions. We model the main approaches in the discussion about genitive constructions, i.e. the argument-only approach, the modifier-only approach and the split approach. Of these three, the split approach is modeled most naturally in frames. Thus, if frames are considered a cognitively adequate representation of concepts, our analysis supports the split approach to the interpretation of genitive constructions.
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Notes
- 1.
The former construction ‘brother of John’ is often referred to as a ‘postnominal genitive of phrase’ (Barker to appear). Whether the latter construction ‘a brother of John’s’ is a genitive construction is controversial. While some, including Partee and Borschev (2003), classify ‘of John’s’ as a postnominal Saxon genitive, Barker (2004) and others argue that it is not a true genitive but a partitive construction.
- 2.
Throughout this paper, we will concentrate on examples in which the main NP consists of a single noun. More complex NPs which involve relational adjectives, e.g., ‘John’s favorite movie’, will not be considered in detail here.
- 3.
- 4.
Exceptions occur when the node’s referent is uniquely determined, as will be discussed in Sect. 11.2.2.
- 5.
Note that this expression is not unique. We do not regard the dual question of which fragment of the λ-calculus is expressable by frames.
- 6.
He calls them conceptual types but to avoid confusion with the type hierarchy and with logical types, we stick to ‘classes’ in this paper.
- 7.
Again, please note that our examples are highly simplified.
- 8.
Remember that Löbner calls ‘type’ what we call ‘class’.
- 9.
We write predicates in the same fonts as in frames, i.e. A for an attribute and T for a type.
- 10.
This is an artefact of the λ-notation. In the graph notation, the central node is closed iff it is determined by an incoming arc from another open node or from context. If a construction fills that node or destroys the connection to the open node, the central node is open. In λ-notation, there is no such straightforward constraint.
- 11.
We write Pred (FC) to denote the predicative reading of the FC.
- 12.
For example, it can be argued that the genitive construction should be made with a minimal frame for the concept, like the one in Fig. 11.18. This, in turn, opens the question about definition and existence of minimal frames.
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Acknowledgements
Work on this paper was funded by the DFG, FOR 600. We would like to thank the audiences of ctf09 and Riga2010, an anonymous reviewer of an earlier version of this paper, and Marie-Luise Fischer, Janine Reinert, Eva Nowack, Albert Ortmann, Ralf Naumann and Sebastian Löbner for helpful comments.
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Petersen, W., Osswald, T. (2014). Concept Composition in Frames: Focusing on Genitive Constructions. In: Gamerschlag, T., Gerland, D., Osswald, R., Petersen, W. (eds) Frames and Concept Types. Studies in Linguistics and Philosophy, vol 94. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01541-5_11
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