Making sense of spoken plurals
Abstract
Distributional semantics offers new ways to study the semantics of morphology. This study focuses on the semantics of noun singulars and their plural inflectional variants in English. Our goal is to compare two models for the conceptualization of plurality. One model (FRACSS) proposes that all singular-plural pairs should be taken into account when predicting plural semantics from singular semantics. The other model (CCA) argues that conceptualization for plurality depends primarily on the semantic class of the base word. We compare the two models on the basis of how well the speech signal of plural tokens in a large corpus of spoken American English aligns with the semantic vectors predicted by the two models. Two measures are employed: the performance of a form-to-meaning mapping and the correlations between form distances and meaning distances. Results converge on a superior alignment for CCA. Our results suggest that usage-based approaches to pluralization in which a given word's own semantic neighborhood is given priority outperform theories according to which pluralization is conceptualized as a process building on high-level abstraction. We see that what has often been conceived of as a highly abstract concept, [+plural], is better captured via a family of mid-level partial generalizations.
- Publication:
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arXiv e-prints
- Pub Date:
- July 2022
- DOI:
- 10.48550/arXiv.2207.01947
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2207.01947
- Bibcode:
- 2022arXiv220701947S
- Keywords:
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- Computer Science - Computation and Language;
- J.5
- E-Print:
- 29 pages including references, 24 pages excluding references, 11 Figures, 3 Tables. This article is under review in "The Mental Lexicon" journal