Accounts of semantic phenomena often involve extending types of meanings and revising composition rules at the same time. The concept of monads allows many such accounts -- for intensionality, variable binding, quantification and focus -- to be stated uniformly and compositionally.
%0 Generic
%1 Shan2001
%A chieh Shan, Chung
%D 2001
%K functionalprogramming monads lambdacalculus semantics
%T Monads for natural language semantics
%U http://www.citebase.org/abstract?id=oai:arXiv.org:cs/0205026
%X Accounts of semantic phenomena often involve extending types of meanings and revising composition rules at the same time. The concept of monads allows many such accounts -- for intensionality, variable binding, quantification and focus -- to be stated uniformly and compositionally.
@misc{Shan2001,
abstract = {Accounts of semantic phenomena often involve extending types of meanings and revising composition rules at the same time. The concept of monads allows many such accounts -- for intensionality, variable binding, quantification and focus -- to be stated uniformly and compositionally.},
added-at = {2007-01-28T11:26:49.000+0100},
author = {chieh Shan, Chung},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2978f187e14a7cf98c86050315dcbe25a/tmalsburg},
description = {Monads for natural language semantics},
interhash = {10923d5298f06fc758b60c881015834f},
intrahash = {978f187e14a7cf98c86050315dcbe25a},
keywords = {functionalprogramming monads lambdacalculus semantics},
timestamp = {2007-01-28T11:26:49.000+0100},
title = {Monads for natural language semantics},
url = {http://www.citebase.org/abstract?id=oai:arXiv.org:cs/0205026},
year = 2001
}