Semantics 2, SoSe 2018: Difference between revisions
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You can find some help on the page with the mock exam for the Semantics 1 class of the summer term 2015: [[Semantics_1,_SoSe_2015_%28Sailer%29#Mock_exam|mock exam SoSe 2015]] | You can find some help on the page with the mock exam for the Semantics 1 class of the summer term 2015: [[Semantics_1,_SoSe_2015_%28Sailer%29#Mock_exam|mock exam SoSe 2015]] | ||
If you have successfully passed the '''written exam''' of a Semantics 1 course by Frank Richter or Manfred Sailer in one of the last three terms, you need not do the entrance test. | If you have successfully passed the '''written exam''' of a Semantics 1 course by Frank Richter or Manfred Sailer in one of the last three terms, you need not do the entrance test. |
Revision as of 20:47, 4 November 2017
Preparational material
Course description
In Semantics 1, we showed how to arrive at an interpretation for simple English sentences. In this follow-up course the participants will extend their analytic skills to more advanced phenomena, such as:
- scope ambiguity ("Everything that glitters isn't gold.")
- the semantics of embedded clauses
- semantic concord phenomena (as in substandard "nobody ain't doin' nothing")
- the semantics of modal auxiliaries ("must", "can", ...)
- idioms and collocations
Entrance test
In order to participate in the course you need to send your solutions to the following test to sailer@em.uni-frankfurt.de no later than April 1, 2018. (note: extended deadline from a previous announcement!)
SoSe18-Semantics2-EntranceTest.pdf
You can find some help on the page with the mock exam for the Semantics 1 class of the summer term 2015: mock exam SoSe 2015
If you have successfully passed the written exam of a Semantics 1 course by Frank Richter or Manfred Sailer in one of the last three terms, you need not do the entrance test.