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A phrasal template is a phrase-long collocation that contains one or several empty slots which may be filled by words to produce individual phrases. Often there are some restrictions on the grammatic category of the words allowed to fill particular slots. An example is the phrase "common stocks rose Phrasal templates are akin to forms in which blanks are to be filled with data. A word game that makes use of phrasal templates is Mad Libs. The notion is used in natural language processing systems〔Joseph D. Becker, The phrasal lexicon, Proceedings of the 1975 workshop on Theoretical issues in natural language processing, June 10-13, 1975, Cambridge, Massachusetts, ()〕 and in language generators, such as application-oriented report generators.〔Karen Kukich. "Knowledge-Based Report Generation: A Knowledge Engineering Approach to Natural Language Report Generation." Ph.D. Thesis, Information Science Department, University of Pittsburgh, 1983.〕〔L. Boubeau, D. Carcagno, E. Goldberg, R. Kittredge, and A. Polguere. "Bilingual generation of weather forecasts in an operations environment." In Proceedings of the 13 th International Conference on Computational Linguistics (COLING-90), Volume 1, pages 9—92, Helsinki, 1990.〕 The neologism "snowclone" was introduced to refer to a special case of phrasal templates that "clone" popular clichés. For example, a misquotation of Diana Vreeland's "Pink is the navy blue of India"〔(ON THE TRAIL OF "THE NEW BLACK" (AND "THE NAVY BLUE") ), ''Language Log'', December 28, 2006〕 gave rise to the template "() is the new black," which in turn evolved into "() is the new ()" constructions such as "pink is the new red" and ''Quiet Is the New Loud''. ==See also== *Computational humor; usage of phrasal templates for computer generation of jokes *Phrase structure rules *Joke template 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「phrasal template」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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