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The word as a unit of internal predictability

John Mansfield

2021Linguistics22 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract A long-standing problem in linguistics is how to define word . Recent research has focused on the incompatibility of diverse definitions, and the challenge of finding a definition that is crosslinguistically applicable. In this study I take a different approach, asking whether one structure is more word-like than another based on the concepts of predictability and information. I hypothesize that word constructions tend to be more “internally predictable” than phrase constructions, where internal predictability is the degree to which the entropy of one constructional element is reduced by mutual information with another element. I illustrate the method with case studies of complex verbs in German and Murrinhpatha, comparing verbs with selectionally restricted elements against those built from free elements. I propose that this method identifies an important mathematical property of many word-like structures, though I do not expect that it will solve all the problems of wordhood.

Topics & Concepts

PredictabilityLinguisticsWord (group theory)Computer scienceElement (criminal law)PhraseGermanProperty (philosophy)Natural language processingInformation structureEntropy (arrow of time)Artificial intelligenceMathematicsPhilosophyLawPhysicsPolitical scienceQuantum mechanicsStatisticsEpistemologyNatural Language Processing TechniquesSyntax, Semantics, Linguistic Variationlinguistics and terminology studies
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