Compositionality and Event Retrieval in Complement Coercion: A Study of Language Models in a Low-resource Setting

Matteo Radaelli, Emmanuele Chersoni, Alessandro Lenci, Giosuè Baggio


Abstract
In sentences such as John began the book, the complement noun, lexically denoting an entity, is interpreted as an event. This phenomenon is known in linguistics as complement coercion: the event associated with the verb is not overtly expressed but can be recovered from the meanings of other constituents, context and world knowledge. We investigate whether language models (LMs) can exploit sentence structure and compositional meaning to recover plausible events in complement coercion. For the first time, we tested different LMs in Norwegian, a low-resource language with high syntactic variation in coercion constructions across aspectual verbs. Results reveal that LMs struggle with retrieving plausible events and with ranking them above less plausible ones. Moreover, we found that LMs do not exploit the compositional properties of coercion sentences in their predictions.
Anthology ID:
2025.conll-1.31
Volume:
Proceedings of the 29th Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning
Month:
July
Year:
2025
Address:
Vienna, Austria
Editors:
Gemma Boleda, Michael Roth
Venues:
CoNLL | WS
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Publisher:
Association for Computational Linguistics
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Pages:
469–480
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URL:
https://preview.aclanthology.org/acl25-workshop-ingestion/2025.conll-1.31/
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Cite (ACL):
Matteo Radaelli, Emmanuele Chersoni, Alessandro Lenci, and Giosuè Baggio. 2025. Compositionality and Event Retrieval in Complement Coercion: A Study of Language Models in a Low-resource Setting. In Proceedings of the 29th Conference on Computational Natural Language Learning, pages 469–480, Vienna, Austria. Association for Computational Linguistics.
Cite (Informal):
Compositionality and Event Retrieval in Complement Coercion: A Study of Language Models in a Low-resource Setting (Radaelli et al., CoNLL 2025)
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https://preview.aclanthology.org/acl25-workshop-ingestion/2025.conll-1.31.pdf