Nathan Schneider أُعيد تغريده
Nathan Schneider
4.8K posts

Nathan Schneider
@complingy
Computational Linguist and Professional Nerd at Georgetown University he/him pronouns, ALL the prepositions @[email protected] @complingy.bsky.social
Washington, DC انضم Ocak 2019
1.2K يتبع4.9K المتابعون

@haspelmath Evidence of disagreement on what to call existential-sentence BE in English: x.com/complingy/stat…
Nathan Schneider@complingy
Terminology question for #LinguisticsTwitter: In an English existential sentence like "There is cake" or "There is cake in the kitchen", the be-verb
English

What is a “copula”, and what is “predicative inflection”? This new blogpost continues the comparison between the comparative concepts of Creissels et al. (2026) (in Bertinetto et al. 2026) and those of Haspelmath (2025): dlc.hypotheses.org/3865

English

@jammacleod1 Accepting applications here!: apply.interfolio.com/170055
English
Nathan Schneider أُعيد تغريده
Nathan Schneider أُعيد تغريده

Happy to share that our paper, "Natural Language Processing RELIES on Linguistics," will appear in Computational Linguistics!
Preprint: arxiv.org/abs/2405.05966

English
Nathan Schneider أُعيد تغريده

📣 New Paper ⚖️🧑⚖️🏛️ Large Language Models for Legal Interpretation? Don't Take Their Word for It 👩⚖️🏛️⚖️ with @BRwaldon, @complingy, Amir Zeldes, and @kevin_tobia papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cf…
English

@CogCompNeuro What's the difference between the Feb 17 and Feb 20 deadlines for 8-page papers?
English

Our website has more detailed guidelines on submission and now also has files for the new templates: 2025.ccneuro.org/paper-submissi…
All dates are on our website too: 2025.ccneuro.org/dates-and-dead…
English

@yuvalmarton @DailySyntaxTree I think "whom" refers to EJ (so "whom alongside Billy Joel" can be considered the plural subject) but I'm not sure it is a syntactic modifier of EJ. It follows a comma and seems to be an elaboration/supplement.
English

@complingy @DailySyntaxTree Well, I didn’t know the other two.. (or forgot). But this issue with “EJ docu” is NOT NP-external semantics. It’s syntactic: the wh clause modifies EJ (and Billy Joel) but is not its dep/sister node. Conversely, EJ is extracted from “EJ docu” with a mechanism I’m not familiar w/
English

@yuvalmarton @DailySyntaxTree Interesting, I didn't know the term "picture noun"; it looks like it comes from Binding Theory: lingref.com/cpp/tls/2004/p… There are also concepts like "shell noun" and "transparent noun". Here, NP-external morphosyntax can be sensitive not just to the head noun but its dependent.
English

@complingy @DailySyntaxTree Yes, I agree. I referred to “Elton John documentary” which I guess is a sort of a picture noun? (A sort unfamiliar to syntax-rusty me)
“Elton John” is the first conjunct in spite of being buried in the larger NP. In fact the whole whom-clause *functionally* modifies only “EJ”
English

@yuvalmarton @DailySyntaxTree I think "alongside" is being interpreted like "and" with respect to subject-verb agreement.
English

@complingy @DailySyntaxTree For (b-c) “are”(pl.) refers to both Elton John and Billy Joel imo. I half expected you to do tree gym to extract these proper nouns or their traces to a position nicely c-commanding “whom” (with a conjunction?), or otherwise explain how this is licensed 🤷♂️
English

@yuvalmarton "absolute two favorite artists" is an odd ordering too!
Here's what I've got for the CGEL-style tree. CC: @DailySyntaxTree

English

@yuvalmarton Wow that's quite a use of "whom"! (a) It's a subject so "who" would be expected, (b) it's anaphoric to a dependent of its head rather than the head itself, (c) I would have expected singular agreement in the relative clause but it's plural.
English

Also note that Georgetown is accepting applications for M.S. & Ph.D. in Computational Linguistics (core faculty: Ethan Wilcox @weGotlieb, Amir Zeldes, and myself).
Announcement: @list.elra.info/thread/NHERMXBSAGUQH75SNVZK5NC4AMRKKWZQ/" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">list.elra.info/mailman3/hyper…
English

@GrammarTable @jamesshewmaker Also "watch TV"—one never "sees TV". It's almost like a compound; or we could say "to TV-watch". (Linguists call this noun incorporation.)
English

@GrammarTable @jamesshewmaker BUT, perhaps "watch cartoons" is a collocation, and thus more idiomatic in general than "see cartoons".
English





