@inproceedings{boullier-2000-range,
    title = "Range Concatenation Grammars",
    author = "Boullier, Pierre",
    editor = "Lavelli, Alberto  and
      Carroll, John  and
      Berwick, Robert C.  and
      Bunt, Harry C.  and
      Carpenter, Bob  and
      Carroll, John  and
      Church, Ken  and
      Johnson, Mark  and
      Joshi, Aravind  and
      Kaplan, Ronald  and
      Kay, Martin  and
      Lang, Bernard  and
      Lavie, Alon  and
      Nijholt, Anton  and
      Samuelsson, Christer  and
      Steedman, Mark  and
      Stock, Oliviero  and
      Tanaka, Hozumi  and
      Tomita, Masaru  and
      Uszkoreit, Hans  and
      Vijay-Shanker, K.  and
      Weir, David  and
      Wiren, Mats",
    booktitle = "Proceedings of the Sixth International Workshop on Parsing Technologies",
    month = feb # " 23-25",
    year = "2000",
    address = "Trento, Italy",
    publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
    url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-emnlp/2000.iwpt-1.8/",
    pages = "53--64",
    abstract = "In this paper we present Range Concatenation Grammars, a syntactic formalism which possesses many attractive features among which we underline here, power and closure properties. For example, Range Concatenation Grammars are more powerful than Linear Context-Free Rewriting Systems though this power is not reached to the detriment of efficiency since its sentences can always be parsed in polynomial time. Range Concatenation Languages are closed both under intersection and complementation and these closure properties may allow to consider novel ways to describe some linguistic processings. We also present a parsing algorithm which is the basis of our current prototype implementation."
}Markdown (Informal)
[Range Concatenation Grammars](https://preview.aclanthology.org/ingest-emnlp/2000.iwpt-1.8/) (Boullier, IWPT 2000)
ACL
- Pierre Boullier. 2000. Range Concatenation Grammars. In Proceedings of the Sixth International Workshop on Parsing Technologies, pages 53–64, Trento, Italy. Association for Computational Linguistics.