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The Open English WordNet
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Reorganization of Adjectives #953

Open jmccrae opened 1 year ago

jmccrae commented 1 year ago

Currently adjectives in OEWN are organized in the 'dumbbell' model, which creates some issues, most notably #35, but also issues due to having 'satellite adjective' as a different type of part-of-speech.

This proposal would eliminate the dumbbell model and replace it with an organization of adjectives that aims to connect the adjective hierarchy with the noun and verb hierarchy and contribute to the goal of #172.

The first part of this proposal is to introduce new relations based on the intuition that many adjectives are morphologically related to a verb or noun. These relations will be at a synset-level and so will be semantic even though they are closely related to syntactic derivations.

An initial sample of 100 adjectives suggests these derivations cover 42% of adjective (present 9%, resultant 8%, potential 3%, lacking 2%, full_of <1%, resembling 4%, quality 16%)

For the remaining adjectives we can use relations that mostly already exist

Overall the most important of these from the sample appears to be hypernyms (35%), followed by antonyms (11%), pertainyms (7%) and scalars (4%)

I would also note that many synsets may have multiple of these relations

arademaker commented 10 months ago

These relations will be at a synset-level and so will be semantic even though they are closely related to syntactic derivations.

Why not making them sense-sense relations? Any special reason for keep them at synset level? The Morphosemantic Database from https://wordnet.princeton.edu/download/standoff-files are sense-sense relations.

1313ou commented 10 months ago

Are you referring to adjectives ? (because morphosemantic standoff files are indeed sense-to-sense relations but do not involve adjectives, afaik)

jmccrae commented 10 months ago

I think we want to use synset-level relations to express that these relations are purely semantic, that is that they exist even when there is not a morphological relation. This also means that many of these links do not correspond to morphological processes, e.g., 'visible' means can be seen, but is not morphologically related to the verb 'see'.