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In linguistics, cross-serial dependencies (also called crossing dependencies by some authors) occur when the lines representing the dependency relations between two series of words cross over each other. They are of particular interest to linguists who wish to determine the syntactic structure of natural language; languages containing an arbitrary number of them are non-context-free. By this fact, Dutch and Swiss-German have been proved to be non-context-free.

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  • Cross-serial dependencies (en)
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  • In linguistics, cross-serial dependencies (also called crossing dependencies by some authors) occur when the lines representing the dependency relations between two series of words cross over each other. They are of particular interest to linguists who wish to determine the syntactic structure of natural language; languages containing an arbitrary number of them are non-context-free. By this fact, Dutch and Swiss-German have been proved to be non-context-free. (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Cross-serial_dependencies.png
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Cross-serial_dependencies_2.png
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Schematic_of_cross-serial_dependency.png
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  • A Swiss-German sentence containing cross-serial dependencies . The English translation with its dependencies, which do not cross, is shown for comparison. (en)
  • A more complicated example. (en)
date
  • February 2014 (en)
  • August 2016 (en)
direction
  • vertical (en)
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  • Cross-serial dependencies 2.png (en)
  • Cross-serial_dependencies.png (en)
reason
  • In formal language theory, a language is a set of sentences, whereas the swiss example is a signals sentence. An exponent n denotes n-fold repetition in the cited book, whereas e.g. 'em Hans em Hans' is not valid Swiss. (en)
  • "Image" has not been previously used or defined (en)
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  • In linguistics, cross-serial dependencies (also called crossing dependencies by some authors) occur when the lines representing the dependency relations between two series of words cross over each other. They are of particular interest to linguists who wish to determine the syntactic structure of natural language; languages containing an arbitrary number of them are non-context-free. By this fact, Dutch and Swiss-German have been proved to be non-context-free. (en)
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