Natural-language syntax as procedures for interpretation: the dynamics of ellipsis construal R.Kempson, E.Gregoromichelaki, W.Meyer-Viol Philosophy Department King’s College London M Purver, G.White School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science Queen Mary University of London R. Cann Linguistics and English Language University of Edinburgh Abstract In this paper we set out the preliminaries needed for a formal theory of context, relative to a linguistic framework in which natural-language syntax is defined as procedures for context-dependent interpretation. Dynamic Syntax provides a formalism where both representations of content and context are defined dynamically and structurally, with time-linear monotonic growth across sequences of partial trees as the core structure-inducing notion. The primary data involve elliptical fragments, as these provide less familiar evidence of the requisite con- cept of context than anaphora, but equally central. As part of our sketch of the framework, we show how apparent anomalies for a time- linear basis for interpretation can be straightforwardly characterised once we adopt a new perspective on syntax as the dynamics of transi- tions between parse-states. We then take this as the basis for providing an integrated account of ellipsis construal. And, as a bonus, we will show how this intrinsically dynamic perspective extends in a seamless way to dialogue exchanges with free shifting of role between speaking and hearing (split-utterances ). We shall argue that what is required to explain such dialogue phenomena is for contexts, like representations of content, to include not merely partial structures but also the sequence of actions that led to such structures. 1 Preliminaries Despite extensive research on the context-dependence of natural-language (NL) understanding over the last thirty years, with formal modelling of a wide range of individual phenomena, there has been little attempt to