Adjective phrases
[ NP an [ AdjP interesting] period]
[ NP a [AdjP lengthy] [AdjP enjoyable] [AdjP interesting] period]]
→can be stacked
a brown leather old practical suitcase.
→sound quite odd.
→Semantic domain(evaluation-property-age-colour-provenance-manufacture-type)
Determinative phrases
[NP [DP These] [DP two] images] say it all.
If we’re accepted in
It seems plausible to assume that the source of the ambiguity of [an old French student] is structural in nature, and that part of the ambiguity relates to the fact that ‘old’ and ‘French’ has two different categorical functions above. We can support this analysis with empirical evidences according to syntactic, semantic, and phonological views.
1. Syntactic analysis
As you can see, [a
Big(“about size”) vs Red(“about color”)
: too few semantic features
- Antonym(x)
Buy(“change in possession”) vs Sell(“change in possession”)
: share all but one semantic feature(direction of the change)
- Antonym(O)
1.5.1.Semantic Features of Nouns
1.5.2.Semantic Features of Verbs
1.5.3.Semantic Features interact with different a
semantic properties of both its 1) subject
Ex. Colorless green ideas sleep furiously. -> semantically anomalous!
- “sleep” require animate subjects.
and its 2) complements.
Ex. (1) John threw/tosses/kicked/flung the boy the ball.
(2) *John pushed/pulled/lifted/hauled the boy the ball.
(3)Mary faxed/radioed/e-mailed/phoned Helen the news.
(4)*Mary murmured/mumbled/muttered/shrieked He
Professional journals
Journal of Advertising, Public Relations Review, Journal of Public Relations Research, Journal of Advertising Research, etc., 홍보학연구, 한국언론학보, 광고학연구, 한국광고홍보학보
Magazines and periodicals
Advertising Age, (www.adage.com/) and PR Week etc. (www. Prweekus.com)
Research summaries
The Internet
Everyday situations
Is the topic