Stefan Müller
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stefanmuelller.lingo.lol.ap.brid.gy
Stefan Müller
@stefanmuelller.lingo.lol.ap.brid.gy
I am a linguist working at the @HumboldtUni. My main topics are German syntax and morphology. I am cofounder of @langscipress, a community-run open access […]

[bridged from https://lingo.lol/@StefanMuelller on the fediverse by https://fed.brid.gy/ ]
„Sign-Based Construction Grammar is an extension of Berkeley Construction Grammar.“ But can there be an extension of something inconsistent?

Logically you can infer everything from inconsistent stuff. If you add things it does not get better. Or worse.

I would […]

[Original post on lingo.lol]
December 19, 2025 at 5:58 AM
Somebody just found out that the source code of @langscipress books is available on the page of the books and thanked me enthusiastically.

So, in case you do not know this yet. The source code of ALL our 308 books is available on github and linked from within the books and from the langsci book […]
Original post on lingo.lol
lingo.lol
December 17, 2025 at 6:24 PM
Reposted by Stefan Müller
One of the best pieces I've read in awhile. Emily Bressler in @mcsweeneys.net writes "I Work for an Evil Company, but Outside Work, I’m Actually a Really Good Person":

https://www.mcsweeneys.net/articles/i-work-for-an-evil-company-but-outside-work-im-actually-a-really-good-person
I Work For an Evil Company, but Outside Work, I’m Actually a Really Good Person
I love my job. I make a great salary, there’s a clear path to promotion, and a never-ending supply of cold brew in the office. And even though my job requires me to commit sociopathic acts of evil that directly contribute to making the world a measurably worse place from Monday through Friday, five days a week, from morning to night, outside work, I’m actually a really good person. Let me give you an example. Last quarter, I led a team of engineers on an initiative to grow my company’s artificial intelligence data centers, which use millions of gallons of water per day. My work with AI is exponentially accelerating the destruction of the planet, but once a month, I go camping to reconnect with my own humanity through nature. I also bike to and from the office, which definitely offsets all the other environmental destruction I work tirelessly to enact from sunup to sundown for an exorbitant salary. Check out this social media post of me biking up a mountain. See? This is who I really am. Does the leadership at my company promote a xenophobic agenda and use the wealth I help them acquire to donate directly to bigoted causes and politicians I find despicable? Yeah, sure. Did I celebrate my last birthday at Drag Brunch? Also yes. I even tipped with five-dollar bills. I contain multitudes, and would appreciate it if you focused on the brunch one. Mathematically, it might seem like I spend a disproportionate amount of my time making the world a significantly less safe and less empathetic place, but are you counting all the hours I spend sleeping? You should. And when you do, you’ll find that my ratio of evil hours to not evil hours is much more even, numerically. I just don’t think working at an evil company should define me. I’ve only worked here for seven years. What about the twenty-five years before, when I didn’t work here? In fact, I wasn’t working at all for the first eighteen years of my life. And for some of those early years, I didn’t even have object permanence, which is oddly similar to the sociopathic detachment with which I now think about other humans. And besides, I don’t plan to stay at this job forever, just for my prime working years, until I can install a new state-of-the-art infinity pool in my country home. The problem is that whenever I think I’m going to leave, there’s always the potential for a promotion, and also a new upgrade for the pool, like underwater disco lights. Time really flies when you’re not thinking about the effect you have on others. But I absolutely intend to leave at some point. And when I do, you should define me by whatever I do next, unless it’s also evil, in which case, define me by how I ultimately spend my retirement. Because here’s the thing: It’s not me committing these acts of evil. I’m just following orders (until I get promoted; then I’ll get to give them). But until then, I do whatever my supervisor tells me to do, and that’s just how work works. Sure, I chose to be here, and yes, I could almost certainly find a job elsewhere, but redoing my résumé would take time. Also, I don’t feel like it. Besides, once a year, my company mandates all employees to help clean up a local beach, and I almost always go. Speaking of the good we do at work, sometimes I wear a cool Hawaiian shirt on Fridays, and it’s commonly accepted that bad people don’t wear shirts with flowers on them. That’s just a fact. There’s something so silly about discussing opportunities to increase profits for international arms dealers while wearing a purple button-down covered in bright hibiscus blossoms. And when it comes to making things even, I put my money where my mouth is. I might make more than 99 percent of all Americans, but I also make sure to donate almost 1 percent of my salary to nonprofits. This way, I can wear their company tote bag to my local food coop. Did I mention I shop at a local food coop? It’s quite literally the least I could do. Of course, I don’t love everything the company does, but true love means loving something because of its flaws, not despite them. And more importantly, I’ve completely detached myself from reality and real suffering and intend to continue to do so as long as I work here and after I leave.
www.mcsweeneys.net
November 15, 2025 at 8:19 PM
Working on a conference paper. A reviewer asked for the term "primary object". I wanted to add a footnote and did not remember the exact publication this term was defined in. But what I did remember was that the word "eschew" was used. I learned the word back then and liked it. =:-)
December 11, 2025 at 3:51 PM
OK. Did not know this. I first thought this was a hallucination of #chatgpt, but Gerhard Helbig really published a book in the VEB Niemeyer in Halle in East Germany. And this book was copublished by Mouton and therefore is now available at De Gruyter.

Hm.
December 10, 2025 at 7:03 PM
Reposted by Stefan Müller
#elsevier finally (after 25 years) retracted the primary study concluding that #glyphosate is safe for humans. Glyphosate is the active ingredient in #roundup herbicide and manufactured by #Monsanto.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0273230099913715

h/t @civodul […]
Original post on fediscience.org
fediscience.org
December 7, 2025 at 6:34 PM
When I retire, I will start a collection of versions of the Argument Realization Principle in HPSG.

This one (wrongly) predicts that only elements that are final in the ARG-ST can be extracted.
December 3, 2025 at 6:20 PM
It is fun to read papers from around 2000 and be absolutely sure that this must have been written with #chatgpt, since it does not make any sense at all.

But this must have been #NaturalFoolishness.
December 2, 2025 at 6:22 PM
I find it strange that one has to supply a list of societies in which one is a member for CVs. One can be a member of a lot of societies by just paying money without doing anything.
November 30, 2025 at 5:02 PM
This is an article about reduplication in Madarin Chinese. By Yanru Lu and me. It grew out of Ynaru Lu's masther thesis and will appear in 2027 in the Journal of Linguistics.

Have fun.

https://lingbuzz.net/lingbuzz/009505

#linguistics #language #chinese #syntax #morphology #semantics #HPSG
November 17, 2025 at 3:50 PM
Hm. So #ConstructionGrammar is about #LLMs now? I think this is the wrong way to go.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1MnyaPhopxCGZgH7iWAwbmx4X4N7xY759/view

#cxg
Schedule - CxGsNLP2.pdf
drive.google.com
November 8, 2025 at 12:58 PM
Reposted by Stefan Müller
October 9, 2025 at 9:09 AM
October 8, 2025 at 6:07 PM
The #HPSG website from Tübingen has been archived by Frank Richter, who is in Frankfurt/Main now.

It is over 20 years old:

https://www.english-linguistics.de/archives/hpsg/starten.html

If you want to have a glimps of the design back then …
HPSG in Tübingen
www.english-linguistics.de
September 24, 2025 at 3:43 PM
This is the result of an #OpenAccess and #OpenSource publication in the Grammars and dictionaries series. A #Dagaare-#English Dictionary Web Application.

Thanks to @langscipress! And to Adams Bodomo and to Omar Zintan Mwinila-Yuori.

https://zintan.pythonanywhere.com/
LanguageSpace
zintan.pythonanywhere.com
September 8, 2025 at 5:49 AM
Just found another way to derive my #erdosnumber of 4:

0 Paul Erdős
1 Patrick Eugene O'Neill
2 Gerhard Weikum
3 Ulrich Schäfer/Hans Uszkoreit
4 Stefan Müller (An Integrated Archictecture for Shallow and Deep Processing)
September 3, 2025 at 8:54 AM
100.000 downloads. Robots excluded. This is what authors want: to be read. The do not want prohibitively high book prices.

#grammar #syntax #linguistics #OpenAccess #diamondoa

https://langsci-press.org/catalog/book/380
Grammatical theory: From transformational grammar to constraint-based approaches | Language Science Press
langsci-press.org
August 31, 2025 at 7:19 AM
Reposted by Stefan Müller
3+1 years fully funded PhD position in Experimental and/or Computational Psycholinguistics. Official application deadline today, but applications submitted until August 25 will receive full consideration.

https://tmalsburg.github.io/job_ad_2025_phd.html
Fully Funded PhD Position in Experimental and/or Computational Psycholinguistics
tmalsburg.github.io
August 15, 2025 at 8:53 AM
1/ How to detect #spam? It started with journal spam and now we have conference spam. They offered me to give a keynote talk.

https://linguistic-society.com/event/syntax-2026-online/

The description says:
„Syntax 2026 brings together international voices in syntactic theory, experimental […]
Original post on lingo.lol
lingo.lol
August 5, 2025 at 12:18 PM
This is really funny. In Chomskyan times, Chomsky revised his framework every three years so that all computational linguists got frustrated since it takes about three years to develop a computational system with certain basic assumptions. (talk to Ed Stabler or […]

[Original post on lingo.lol]
July 31, 2025 at 1:46 PM
Two sad things I learned during the #lfg2025 conference:

1) #hajross died this year.

2) #csli died this year.

Joan Bresnan told me that they are dissolving the CSLI. Those that are still around get offices elsewhere.

I met Hai Ross several times in 2011 and 2012.

Some pictures are at […]
Original post on lingo.lol
lingo.lol
July 26, 2025 at 2:38 PM
Pictures from a more peaceful time. 2013 in #israel.

This was a workshop near Haifa in a conference center. With Mark Steedman and the #HPSG crowd working on grammar implementation.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/lingphot/albums/72177720327520476/

#lingphot
2015-06-23 Haifa Workshop on grammar development
Explore this photo album by Stefan Müller (LingPhoto) on Flickr!
www.flickr.com
July 26, 2025 at 10:11 AM
Hi everybody, is the following good in English? And if so, are there papers dealing with this?

(1) He fished her the pond empty.

(2) He sneezed her the napkin of the table.

This is possible in German. It is an interaction of the benefactive construction (adding a dative) and the resultative […]
Original post on lingo.lol
lingo.lol
July 19, 2025 at 2:59 PM
At this years #lfg conference, I will talk about #TAG and what it shows us for the old phrasal vs. lexical discussion:

https://lingbuzz.net/lingbuzz/009130

I think valence information has to be encoded lexically and lexical rules or empty heads or transformations should be used to derive […]
Original post on lingo.lol
lingo.lol
July 3, 2025 at 3:26 PM
1/ I am proud to announce that my paper on Generative approaches to Germanic syntax is published:

https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780199384655.013.1073

You may often have asked yourself what we need publishers for. Well, there was peer review and a good editorial process, but my main partner […]
Original post on lingo.lol
lingo.lol
June 26, 2025 at 3:12 PM