Semantics via Conceptual and Lexical Relations

We give a brief outline of the design of the English lexical database WordNet. The meanings of nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs are represented in terms of their relations to other (groups of) lexical items, with which they are interlinked by means of conceptual-semantic and lexical relations. A relational approach to the lexicon is particularly useful in studying discrepancies between the conceptual and the lexical inventory of a language and detecting lexical gaps. We compare WordNet’s semantic classification of the verb lexicon with a syntactically-driven approach like the one undertaken by Levin (1993). These two approaches do not always overlap in terms of yielding the same verb classes, but the relational approach, which structures verbs primarily into hierarchies and allows for nodes occupied by non-lexicalized concepts, can provide for more fine-grained structures that reconcile both semantic and syntactic classifications.1