Towards verb modification in frames: A case study on German “schlagen” (to hit)

Publication date

2017

Authors

Goldschmidt, A.ISNI 000000049330036X
Petersen, Wiebke
Geuder, Wilhelm
Gamerschlag, Thomas
Gabrovska, Ekaterina

Editors

Hvid Hansen, Helle
Murray, Sarah
Sadrzadeh, Mehrnoosh
Zeevat, Henk

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Hit-verbs have three basic meaning components, namely movement, contact and force (e.g. [12], Levin 1993), which interact with the verbs’ argument structure in various ways. In this paper, we map out the different grammatical constructions of the German verb schlagen (usually, though loosely, translated as ‘hit’; also ‘beat’, ‘strike’) and their restrictions on agentivity and the force component. Using modification by pure manner adverbs as a tool to test for possible default values of the force component, and agent-oriented adverbs to discover possible interactions with agentivity, we show that German schlagen is rather liberal with respect to its force component. Crucially, the force component may not only be modified by standard, force-denoting manner adverbs such as lightly and hard, but also through agent-oriented adverbs such as playfully, via a defeasible inference. We show further that our findings can be profitably modelled in Frame Semantics, a framework which is especially well suited for modelling a fine-grained decomposition of word meaning, including the manner-related components of verbs.

Keywords

hit-verbs, modification, force, agentivity, Frame Semantics, Taverne

Citation

Goldschmidt, A, Petersen, W, Geuder, W, Gamerschlag, T & Gabrovska, E 2017, Towards verb modification in frames : A case study on German “schlagen” (to hit). in H Hvid Hansen, S Murray, M Sadrzadeh & H Zeevat (eds), Lecture Notes in Computer Science : Proceedings of the 11th International Tbilisi Symposium of Logic, Language, and Computation, TbiLLC 2015. vol. 10148, pp. 18-36. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-54332-0_2