@article{danlos-etal-2018-primary,
title = "Primary and secondary discourse connectives: definitions and lexicons",
author = "Danlos, Laurence and
Rysova, Katerina and
Rysova, Magdalena and
Stede, Manfred",
editor = "Traum, David and
Demberg, Vera and
Stent, Amanda and
Taboada, Maite and
Stede, Manfred and
Poesio, Massimo",
journal = "Dialogue {\&} Discourse",
volume = "9",
month = jun,
year = "2018",
address = "Bielefeld, Germany",
publisher = "University of Bielefeld",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/2018.dnd-9.6/",
doi = "10.5087/dad.2018.102",
pages = "50--78",
abstract = "Starting from the perspective that discourse structure arises from the presence of coherence relations, we provide a map of linguistic discourse structuring devices (DRDs), and focus on those for written text. We propose to structure these items by differentiating between primary and secondary connectives on the one hand, and free connecting phrases on the other. For the former, we propose that their behavior can be described by lexicons, and we show one concrete proposal that by now has been applied to three languages, with others being added in ongoing work. The lexical representations can be useful both for humans (theoretical investigations, transfer to other languages) and for machines (automatic discourse parsing and generation)."
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<abstract>Starting from the perspective that discourse structure arises from the presence of coherence relations, we provide a map of linguistic discourse structuring devices (DRDs), and focus on those for written text. We propose to structure these items by differentiating between primary and secondary connectives on the one hand, and free connecting phrases on the other. For the former, we propose that their behavior can be described by lexicons, and we show one concrete proposal that by now has been applied to three languages, with others being added in ongoing work. The lexical representations can be useful both for humans (theoretical investigations, transfer to other languages) and for machines (automatic discourse parsing and generation).</abstract>
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%0 Journal Article
%T Primary and secondary discourse connectives: definitions and lexicons
%A Danlos, Laurence
%A Rysova, Katerina
%A Rysova, Magdalena
%A Stede, Manfred
%J Dialogue & Discourse
%D 2018
%8 June
%V 9
%I University of Bielefeld
%C Bielefeld, Germany
%F danlos-etal-2018-primary
%X Starting from the perspective that discourse structure arises from the presence of coherence relations, we provide a map of linguistic discourse structuring devices (DRDs), and focus on those for written text. We propose to structure these items by differentiating between primary and secondary connectives on the one hand, and free connecting phrases on the other. For the former, we propose that their behavior can be described by lexicons, and we show one concrete proposal that by now has been applied to three languages, with others being added in ongoing work. The lexical representations can be useful both for humans (theoretical investigations, transfer to other languages) and for machines (automatic discourse parsing and generation).
%R 10.5087/dad.2018.102
%U https://aclanthology.org/2018.dnd-9.6/
%U https://doi.org/10.5087/dad.2018.102
%P 50-78
Markdown (Informal)
[Primary and secondary discourse connectives: definitions and lexicons](https://aclanthology.org/2018.dnd-9.6/) (Danlos et al., DND 2018)
ACL