LFG Bulletin, March 2001
Miriam Butt
mutt at CALLISTO.SPRACHWISS.UNI-KONSTANZ.DE
Tue Apr 10 15:54:52 UTC 2001
LFG BULLETIN
MARCH 2001
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* LINGUISTICS IN THE NEWS *
---------------------------------
Q. Please explain how to diagram a sentence.
A. First spread the sentence out on a clean, flat surface, such
as an ironing board. Then, using a sharp pencil or X-Acto
knife, locate the "predicate," which indicates where the
action has taken place and is usually located directly behind
the gills. For example, in the sentence: "LaMont never would
of bit a forest ranger," the action probably took place in a
forest. Thus your diagram would be shaped like a little tree
with branches sticking out of it to indicate the locations of
the various particles of speech, such as your gerunds,
proverbs, adjutants, etc.
[Dave Barry, lifted from
http://www.ling.upenn.edu/~beatrice/humor/index.html]
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* OTHER NEWS *
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Upcoming LFG Conferences:
-------------------------
- LFG2001, Hong Kong, June 25-27, 2001
Invited Speaker: Sam Mchombo
organizer: Adams Bodomo
email: lfg2001 at hkusua.hku.hk
web page: http://www.hku.hk/linguist/research/LFG2001.html
The program for LFG01 will be out soon!
- LFG2002:
organizer: Stella Markantonatou (marks at ilsp.gr)
venue: Athens, Greece
- LFG2003: somewhere in the USA
If you are interested in hosting the LFG conference in
the US, please contact Tracy Holloway King
(thking at parc.xerox.com).
PROPOSALS ARE STILL BEING ACCEPTED!
Hopefully a decision will be made in Hong Kong during
the LFG2001 business meeting.
Computational Linguistics Fall School in Konstanz
-------------------------------------------------
- 1st Fall School of the Computational Linguistics Section of the
German Linguistics Society (DGfS).
Place: Konstanz
Time: September 10-21, 2001
Courses:
Stefan Mueller (DFKI) and Jonas Kuhn (IMS Stuttgart)
Grammar Development in constraint-based Formalisms:
HPSG and LFG
Henning Reetz (Konstanz)
From the Speechsignal to the Word
Tibor Kiss (Bochum)
Perl for Linguists
Heike Zinsmeister and Sabine Schulte im Walde (IMS Stuttgart)
Statistical Methods in Grammar Development
Invited Speakers: Mary Dalrymple (Xerox PARC)
Louisa Sadler (Essex)
More information at:
http://ling.uni-konstanz.de/pages/conferences/dgfs-cl00.html
The deadline to register is June 1!
Recent LFG Publications:
------------------------
(Please send us the citation for your recent publications to include
in the next issue; announcements of publicly available theses are
encouraged.)
RECENT LFG PUBLICATIONS:
DALRYMPLE, Mary and Ronald M. Kaplan. 2000. Feature Indeterminacy and
feature resolution. Language 76(4):759-798.
MORIMOTO, Yukiko. "Discourse Configurationality in Bantu Morphosyntax"
(Stanford University, PhD dissertation). Available at:
http://www-csli.stanford.edu/~morimoto
as a gzipped ps file.
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* ILFGA *
-----------
Elections for two new executive committee members will occur
this summer. Join now to be eligible to vote.
If you haven't yet, you can still join ILFGA, the International
Lexical Functional Grammar Association by sending mail to:
majordomo at lists.stanford.edu with the message:
subscribe ilfga-members
In addition, please add yourself to the ILFGA linguist database.
To do so, send email to Chris Culy (culy at ai.sri.com) with the
following information:
NAME
AFFILIATION
OFFICIAL ADDRESS
EMAIL ADDRESS
WEB PAGE
RESEARCH INTERESTS
RESEARCH LANGUAGES
The database can be accessed at:
http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/ilfga/member-database/ilfga-namelist.html
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* EDITORS *
-----------
Please send updates, suggestions and news for inclusion in the next
LFG Bulletin (June 2001) to:
miriam.butt at uni-konstanz.de
thking at parc.xerox.com
Most importantly, please send information about:
- your recent publications or papers
- publically available grammars
- current grammar development efforts
- recent dissertations
Thank you,
Miriam Butt and Tracy Holloway King
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Frequently Asked Questions: FAQs
Information on the following topics is available on the LFG WebPages:
http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/
http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg
1. WHAT IS LEXICAL-FUNCTIONAL GRAMMAR?
2. WHAT ARE THE BEST INTRODUCTORY BOOKS/ARTICLES TO LFG?
3. THE LFG WWW SITE
4. THE LFG MAILING LIST
5. LFG BIBLIOGRAPHY, RECENT PUBLICATIONS IN LFG
6. HOW TO RETRIEVE LFG DOCUMENTS
7. PUBLICALLY AVAILABLE LFG SYSTEMS
8. CURRENT GRAMMAR DEVELOPMENT EFFORT
9. UPCOMING EVENTS
If you have access to ftp, but no access to Web, you can get a copy of
the FAQ by ftp or email (see "How to Retrieve LFG Documents" below).
Please help keep this document and the FAQ up to date!
Send updates and suggestions for improvements to the FAQ to
doug at essex.ac.uk.
Send updates, suggestions and news for inclusion in the LFG Bulletin
to miriam.butt at uni-konstanz.de or thking at parc.xerox.com, or post them
on the LFG list (LFG at listserv.linguistlist.org). Most importantly,
please send information about:
- your recent publications or papers
- publically available grammars
- current grammar development efforts
---
* HOW TO RETRIEVE LFG DOCUMENTS *
Some LFG documents are available on the web, by FTP, or by email.
There are three ways to get them.
(1) Most of the documents are accessible via the WWW:
The current version of the list of Frequently Asked Questions about LFG:
http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/lfg-information.html
Introductions to LFG:
http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/Introductions.html
http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/Introductions.html
The LFG bibliography:
http://www-lfg.stanford.edu/lfg/bibliography.html
http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/LFG/Bibliography.html
The bibliography is also available at the CL/MT Group Bibliographic
Search Page, maintained by Doug Arnold of the University of Essex.
The URL is:
http://clwww.essex.ac.uk/search/
(2) You can get the documents by anonymous FTP from:
ftp-lfg.stanford.edu
All of the documents are in subdirectories of the directory
/pub/lfg. Here is a list of some of the files in that directory that
are relevant for LFG researchers:
in the directory /pub/lfg/bibliography:
The LFG Bibliography in various versions and formats.
in the directory /pub/lfg/lfg-information:
FAQ [the latest version of the list of
Frequently Asked Questions about LFG]
in the directory /pub/lfg/lfg-introductions:
pracinstrucsforlfg.ps [an introduction to LFG notation by
Michael Wescoat]
formal-architecture.ps [an introduction to LFG by Ron Kaplan]
neidle.ps [an introduction to LFG by Carol Neidle]
sadler.ps [a paper on recent developments in LFG by
Louisa Sadler]
in the directory /pub/lfg/lfg-presentations:
Slides and handouts from LFG conferences and courses.
in the directory /pub/lfg/papers:
Papers that have been submitted to the LFG Archive.
Compressed versions of some of these files are also available.
The file names of the compressed versions are the same, except
they have ".gz" at the end. There may be other LFG-related files
in that directory as well, which you are welcome to retrieve.
(3) You can get some files by email, via the Listserv "get"
command. A list of currently available files can be obtained by
sending a message to
LISTSERV at listserv.linguistlist.org
(please note: address the message to LISTSERV, not LFG). The
message should contain the following command:
index lfg
The following files are available, and there may be additional files
as well:
LFG-bulletin.txt [the latest version of the LFG Bulletin]
FAQ.txt [the list of Frequently Asked Questions]
lfgbib.text [the LFG bibliography]
To get a file, send a message to LISTSERV at listserv.linguistlist.org
containing the following command:
get <filename>
For example, if you want to get the latest version of the FAQ, you
would send a message to LISTSERV at listserv.linguistlist.org with
the following command:
get FAQ.txt
You will receive the file in an email message.
More information about the LFG
mailing list