2021
DOI: 10.1556/2062.2021.00001
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NPs, not DPs: The NP vs. DP debate in the context of dependency grammar

Abstract: This paper considers the NP vs. DP debate from the perspective of dependency grammar (DG). The message is delivered that given DG assumptions about sentence structure, the traditional NP-analysis of nominal groups is preferable over the DP-analysis. The debate is also considered from the perspective of phrase structure grammar (PSG). While many of the issues discussed here do not directly support NP over DP given PSG assumptions, some do. More importantly, one has to accept the widespread presence of null dete… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Dependency parsing is a crucial task in NLP, and recent years have seen significant advancements in this field [10]. According to Kübler et al [9], dependency parsing models can be broadly classified into two major groups: grammar-based dependency parsing and data-driven dependency parsing.…”
Section: Dependency Parsingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dependency parsing is a crucial task in NLP, and recent years have seen significant advancements in this field [10]. According to Kübler et al [9], dependency parsing models can be broadly classified into two major groups: grammar-based dependency parsing and data-driven dependency parsing.…”
Section: Dependency Parsingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dependency grammar (DG) is a grammatical theory first articulated by [28]; it is based on the dependency connection [29] instead of the constituency relation of phrase structure. Dependency is the idea that words are linked to one another in a specific way, and the verb is the focal point of the phrase.…”
Section: ) Dependency Grammarmentioning
confidence: 99%