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Title: A Corpus of Adpositional Supersenses for Mandarin Chinese
Adpositions are frequent markers of semantic relations, but they are highly ambiguous and vary significantly from language to language. Moreover, there is a dearth of annotated corpora for investigating the cross-linguistic variation of adposition semantics, or for building multilingual disambiguation systems. This paper presents a corpus in which all adpositions have been semantically annotated in Mandarin Chinese; to the best of our knowledge, this is the first Chinese corpus to be broadly annotated with adposition semantics. Our approach adapts a framework that defined a general set of supersenses according to ostensibly language-independent semantic criteria, though its development focused primarily on English prepositions (Schneider et al., 2018). We find that the supersense categories are well-suited to Chinese adpositions despite syntactic differences from English. On a Mandarin translation of The Little Prince, we achieve high inter-annotator agreement and analyze semantic correspondences of adposition tokens in bitext.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1812778
PAR ID:
10190643
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Proceedings of The 12th Language Resources and Evaluation Conference
Page Range / eLocation ID:
5986–5994
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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