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Geoffrey Sampson

    1 januari 1944
    Evolutionary language understanding
    Grammar without grammaticality
    Liberty and language
    • Grammar is said to be about defining all and only the 'good' sentences of a language, implying that there are other, 'bad' sentences - but it is hard to pin those down. A century ago, grammarians did not think that way, and they were right: linguists can and should dispense with 'starred sentences'. Corpus data support a different model: individuals develop positive grammatical habits of growing refinement, but nothing is ever ruled out. The contrasting models entail contrasting pictures of human nature; our final chapter shows that grammatical theory is not value-neutral but has an ethical dimension.

      Grammar without grammaticality
    • This work records an attempt over a ten-year period to create programs to allow a computer to perform automatic parsing, that is, to work out the grammatical structures and logical forms underlying the word sequences comprising a written or spoken text.

      Evolutionary language understanding