@inproceedings{luo-etal-2019-insanely,
title = "From Insanely Jealous to Insanely Delicious: Computational Models for the Semantic Bleaching of {E}nglish Intensifiers",
author = "Luo, Yiwei and
Jurafsky, Dan and
Levin, Beth",
editor = "Tahmasebi, Nina and
Borin, Lars and
Jatowt, Adam and
Xu, Yang",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the 1st International Workshop on Computational Approaches to Historical Language Change",
month = aug,
year = "2019",
address = "Florence, Italy",
publisher = "Association for Computational Linguistics",
url = "https://preview.aclanthology.org/moar-dois/W19-4701/",
doi = "10.18653/v1/W19-4701",
pages = "1--13",
abstract = "We introduce novel computational models for modeling semantic bleaching, a widespread category of change in which words become more abstract or lose elements of meaning, like the development of ``arrive'' from its earlier meaning `become at shore.' We validate our methods on a widespread case of bleaching in English: de-adjectival adverbs that originate as manner adverbs (as in ``awfully behaved'') and later become intensifying adverbs (as in ``awfully nice''). Our methods formally quantify three reflexes of bleaching: decreasing similarity to the source meaning (e.g., ``awful''), increasing similarity to a fully bleached prototype (e.g., ``very''), and increasing productivity (e.g., the breadth of adjectives that an adverb modifies). We also test a new causal model and find evidence that bleaching is initially triggered in contexts such as ``conspicuously evident'' and ``insanely jealous'', where an adverb premodifies a semantically similar adjective. These contexts provide a form of ``bridging context'' (Evans and Wilkins, 2000) that allow a manner adverb to be reinterpreted as an intensifying adverb similar to ``very''."
}
Markdown (Informal)
[From Insanely Jealous to Insanely Delicious: Computational Models for the Semantic Bleaching of English Intensifiers](https://preview.aclanthology.org/moar-dois/W19-4701/) (Luo et al., LChange 2019)
ACL