CLIRMay 3, 2024

A quantitative and typological study of Early Slavic participle clauses and their competition

arXiv:2405.01972v31 citationsh-index: 1
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work provides insights into historical linguistics and typology, but it is incremental as it builds on existing methods for analyzing language variation.

The study analyzed Early Slavic participle clauses and their finite competitors using corpus data and typological methods to understand their functions and distribution, finding that compositionality and discourse reasoning explain their usage patterns.

This thesis is a corpus-based, quantitative, and typological analysis of the functions of Early Slavic participle constructions and their finite competitors ($jegda$-'when'-clauses). The first part leverages detailed linguistic annotation on Early Slavic corpora at the morphosyntactic, dependency, information-structural, and lexical levels to obtain indirect evidence for different potential functions of participle clauses and their main finite competitor and understand the roles of compositionality and default discourse reasoning as explanations for the distribution of participle constructions and $jegda$-clauses in the corpus. The second part uses massively parallel data to analyze typological variation in how languages express the semantic space of English $when$, whose scope encompasses that of Early Slavic participle constructions and $jegda$-clauses. Probabilistic semantic maps are generated and statistical methods (including Kriging, Gaussian Mixture Modelling, precision and recall analysis) are used to induce cross-linguistically salient dimensions from the parallel corpus and to study conceptual variation within the semantic space of the hypothetical concept WHEN.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes