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| أدوات الموضوع | انواع عرض الموضوع |
08-04-2022, 02:56 AM | #6336 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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If we are dealing with speech, we need a phonological model of the word; if we are dealing with reading, we will need an orthographic one.
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08-04-2022, 02:59 AM | #6337 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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We can assume that the two are closely related, and are connected to the same unit of meaning. So forms of the word GIVE might be linked in this way:
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08-04-2022, 03:04 AM | #6338 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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• The situation is not quite as simple as this account suggests:
✓Both phonological and orthographic representations have to allow for variation → They have to take account of the fact that a speaker may have any one of a number of regional accents or that a written text may appear in any one of a number of different typefaces. ✓ There is the issue of homonymy. For example, there is a single phonological and orthographic representation of the word LIKE, but it must be connected to two entirely different entries, as in: I LIKE ice-cream. She looks LIKE my sister. |
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08-04-2022, 03:13 AM | #6339 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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• We also need to store information on the derivational morphology of a word.
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08-04-2022, 03:16 AM | #6340 |
{رَبِّ ابْنِ لِي عِندَكَ بَيْتًا فِي الْجَنَّةِ}.🤍
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• The meaning component of a lexical entry is sometimes referred to as its lemma.
• The lemma includes syntactic information about a word. |
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