9.582, Sum: Universality of Irony

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Fri Apr 17 13:47:38 UTC 1998


LINGUIST List:  Vol-9-582. Fri Apr 17 1998. ISSN: 1068-4875.

Subject: 9.582, Sum: Universality of Irony

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=================================Directory=================================

1)
Date:  Thu, 16 Apr 1998 17:56:23 +0200 (MET DST)
From:  Arthur Merin <arthur at IMS.Uni-Stuttgart.DE>
Subject:  Report of Test for Universality of Irony

-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------

Date:  Thu, 16 Apr 1998 17:56:23 +0200 (MET DST)
From:  Arthur Merin <arthur at IMS.Uni-Stuttgart.DE>
Subject:  Report of Test for Universality of Irony

In Vol. 9.388 (17 March 1998) the following query was posed:

  Are there cultures in which there is no institution
  of (verbal) irony?

No affirmative reports have been received. Verbal irony
looks like being a language universal.


Arthur Merin
Institute for Language and Computation (IMS)
University of Stuttgart
Azenbergstr. 12
70174 Stuttgart
Germany



















Arthur Merin
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- -------------------------------- Message 2 -------------------------------

Date:  Sun, 15 Mar 1998 17:55:48 -0400
From:  "Juan Antonio Peqa" <jpena1 at rrpac.upr.clu.edu>
Subject:  Computer Program for Transcription

Dear LINGUIST friends,

    My wife is working on her thesis dealing with nasal sounds. She
recorded several people and analyzed the recordings in order to discover
how many bilabial, alveolar, velar and so on nasal sounds those people
said. It has been a very tough job. We were wondering if there happens
to be any sort of computer program that, once fed with the recordings,
could do a transcription into phonetic symbols. We thought there probably
is something. Could any fellow linguist give us a hint or some reference
regarding this point?

Thanks for the time and effort.


- -------------------------------- Message 3 -------------------------------

Date:  Tue, 17 Mar 1998 10:46:56 -0500 (EST)
From:  ivy sichel <isichel at email.gc.cuny.edu>
Subject:  Wh-questions

Dear Linguists,
I am trying to figure out how to represent Wh-questions in
non-transformational theories such as HPSG, LFG, and Relational Grammar. The
literature I have read discusses Wh-questioning of subjects and objects, but
I haven't yet found anything on adjuncts or on the mechanics of subject-aux
inversion, or on modal structure more generally, as in the following example:

    1.  How can John fix the car?

If anyone can help me with the representation of such a sentence in any of
the theories above, either by providing the structure or by referral to the
relevant literature, it would be greatly appreciated. Please respond
directly to my account, and I will post a summary if there is interest.
Thanks in advance,
Ivy Sichel     isichel at email.gc.cuny.edu


- -------------------------------- Message 4 -------------------------------

Date:  Sun, 15 Mar 1998 22:51:40 -0800
From:  "palma, adriano p" <adriano.palma at usa.net>
Subject:  'if-then'

Does any of you note any difference in structure, semantics, pragmatics,
or whatever
between the two following forms



IF x    q


IF x    THEN q



(the claim is presented by Grice that there is indeed a difference, a
detectable one)
I would appreciate any example or consideration on this.
thank you


adriano palma



cogsci/phil
CCU 621 taiwan ROC

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