Word Grammar

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Word Grammar

Relevance for AGI

Word Grammar is a grammatical theory that seems to intuitively match the nature of human cognition very nicely. However it has not yet been computationally implemented in any serious way. Information on Word Grammar may be found at

http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/dick/wg.htm

PROWL Grammar

A speculative, not yet implemented fusion of Link Grammar, Word Grammar and Probabilistic Logic Networks has been conceived. It's called PROWL Grammar

Introduction

Word grammar is a grammar model developed by Richard Hudson in the 1980s. It is based on the dependency grammar model, in which information is almost entirely contained in the lexical entries for particular words, and syntax is seen as consisting primarily of rules for combining words. The central syntactic relation is that of dependency between words; constituent structure is not recognized except in the special case of coordinate structures. Statements about words and their properties form a complex network of propositions.

Word grammar is in the tradition of cognitive linguistics, modeling language as part of general knowledge and not as a specialised mental faculty. This is in contrast to the nativism of Noam Chomsky and his students.

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