Open Information Extraction from Real Internet Texts in Spanish
... Although fast and robust, the systems based on rules over POS-tag sequences are not errorfree. Fader et al. (2011) showed that, although the ReVerb Open IE system for English achieves good precision and usually avoids incoherent extractions that are typical for the systems of the former subcategory ...
... Although fast and robust, the systems based on rules over POS-tag sequences are not errorfree. Fader et al. (2011) showed that, although the ReVerb Open IE system for English achieves good precision and usually avoids incoherent extractions that are typical for the systems of the former subcategory ...
23 THE SYNTACTIC FUNCTIONS OF PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES
... Example : They take a rest after the swimming championship In this sentence, after the swimming championship is the prepositional phrase because it consists of after ( preposition ) + the swimming championship ( noun phrase ). In this sentence, after is the preposition and the swimming championship ...
... Example : They take a rest after the swimming championship In this sentence, after the swimming championship is the prepositional phrase because it consists of after ( preposition ) + the swimming championship ( noun phrase ). In this sentence, after is the preposition and the swimming championship ...
Grammar Context
... Mouse, added sound and music to his movies, and produced the first full-length animated film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Many people think he was a great cartoonist, but he wasn’t. Instead, he was a great ...
... Mouse, added sound and music to his movies, and produced the first full-length animated film, Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Many people think he was a great cartoonist, but he wasn’t. Instead, he was a great ...
Syntactic structur and pattern of word
... represented as A+N, that of the verbal groups take books and build houses as V+N, and so on. •-i.. .Verbs converted from nouns (denominal verbs). . ...
... represented as A+N, that of the verbal groups take books and build houses as V+N, and so on. •-i.. .Verbs converted from nouns (denominal verbs). . ...
Laura A. Michaelis University of Colorado at Boulder Proceedings of
... takes as input a pragmatically enriched representation (see also Bickel 1997). Herweg contrasts implicit and explicit quantizing as follows: There are two means of quantizing a state: either by explicitly assigning a duration to the state or by implicitly taking a maximum period at which the state c ...
... takes as input a pragmatically enriched representation (see also Bickel 1997). Herweg contrasts implicit and explicit quantizing as follows: There are two means of quantizing a state: either by explicitly assigning a duration to the state or by implicitly taking a maximum period at which the state c ...
The role of discourse context in the processing of a flexible word
... Human languages differ in the amount of word order flexibility they permit. Some languages, including English, have fairly rigid word order. If the word order of an English sentence—e.g. The bird ate a worm—is changed, the meaning of the sentence also changes: A worm ate the bird. This is a conseque ...
... Human languages differ in the amount of word order flexibility they permit. Some languages, including English, have fairly rigid word order. If the word order of an English sentence—e.g. The bird ate a worm—is changed, the meaning of the sentence also changes: A worm ate the bird. This is a conseque ...
The Poetics of Foregrounding: The Lexical Deviation in Ulysses
... Additionally, these words are not only compact in meanings, but also rich in cultural connotations, and they are worthy of our close attention. Let us start with the grammatically unusual kind. Filled with his god he thrones, Buddh under plantain. Gulfer of souls, engulfer. Hesouls, shesouls, shoals ...
... Additionally, these words are not only compact in meanings, but also rich in cultural connotations, and they are worthy of our close attention. Let us start with the grammatically unusual kind. Filled with his god he thrones, Buddh under plantain. Gulfer of souls, engulfer. Hesouls, shesouls, shoals ...
Morphological phrasemes and Totonacan verbal morphology*
... In (1a), the prefix ik- marks the first-person singular subject, and in (1b), the suffix -w marks the first-person plural inclusive subject. However, in (1c), nei ther of these affixes contributes to the word form precisely the same meaning as in the previous examples; instead, the two affixes take ...
... In (1a), the prefix ik- marks the first-person singular subject, and in (1b), the suffix -w marks the first-person plural inclusive subject. However, in (1c), nei ther of these affixes contributes to the word form precisely the same meaning as in the previous examples; instead, the two affixes take ...
NOUNS AND NOUN PHRASES
... islands other than where the main villages are situated. The people therefore travel frequently to work in their gardens, either for a single day or for up to several weeks at a time. Garden produce includes taro, cassava, pumpkin, sugar cane, sweet potato and cucumber. The main types of fruit grown ...
... islands other than where the main villages are situated. The people therefore travel frequently to work in their gardens, either for a single day or for up to several weeks at a time. Garden produce includes taro, cassava, pumpkin, sugar cane, sweet potato and cucumber. The main types of fruit grown ...
OBJECTIVE CONJUGATION AND MEDIALISATION
... cases derivational morphemes (e.g., in Indonesian) or some form of steminternal inflection on the verb etc. 2.2.2. Within person marking, in which case there are at least two sets of Vx-es and the choice between the two is determined by the object in some way. 3. Object-dependent verbal conjugation, ...
... cases derivational morphemes (e.g., in Indonesian) or some form of steminternal inflection on the verb etc. 2.2.2. Within person marking, in which case there are at least two sets of Vx-es and the choice between the two is determined by the object in some way. 3. Object-dependent verbal conjugation, ...
Parts of the Sentence
... Read the following passages from Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky, a Russian writer born in Moscow in 1821. Divide your paper into four columns: simple subject, complete subject, simple predicate, and complete predicate. Look at the underlined words in the passage and write them under the a ...
... Read the following passages from Crime and Punishment by Fyodor Dostoevsky, a Russian writer born in Moscow in 1821. Divide your paper into four columns: simple subject, complete subject, simple predicate, and complete predicate. Look at the underlined words in the passage and write them under the a ...
referential argument
... Such concepts are called predicates, the entities they concern are called arguments. Predicates are applied to their arguments. Predicates with one argument are one-place predicates , with two arguments two-place predicates, and so on If a predicate is applied to an appropriate set of arguments, i ...
... Such concepts are called predicates, the entities they concern are called arguments. Predicates are applied to their arguments. Predicates with one argument are one-place predicates , with two arguments two-place predicates, and so on If a predicate is applied to an appropriate set of arguments, i ...
The English relative clause - Machine Translation Archive
... might also generate such sentences as: They called the girl up. He calls the girl up. etc. ...
... might also generate such sentences as: They called the girl up. He calls the girl up. etc. ...
Chapter 4: THE PRESENT PERFECT AND THE PAST PERFECT
... • Ever is frequently used as an intensifier in front of since. The use of ever has little, if any, effect on the meaning of since. I’ve lived here ever since May. • In example (a), since is used as a preposition, and in examples (f ) and (g) as a subordinating conjunction. Subordinating conjunctions ...
... • Ever is frequently used as an intensifier in front of since. The use of ever has little, if any, effect on the meaning of since. I’ve lived here ever since May. • In example (a), since is used as a preposition, and in examples (f ) and (g) as a subordinating conjunction. Subordinating conjunctions ...
A Study of the Microstructure of Monolingual Urdu Dictionaries
... not to provide lexical relations. The figures in Table 2-b and the discussion indicate that these Urdu dictionaries mostly include synonyms as meanings, even though it creates ambiguities. This may be the reason these dictionaries avoid giving importance to synonymy as an additional element. The NOD ...
... not to provide lexical relations. The figures in Table 2-b and the discussion indicate that these Urdu dictionaries mostly include synonyms as meanings, even though it creates ambiguities. This may be the reason these dictionaries avoid giving importance to synonymy as an additional element. The NOD ...
Syntactic analysis of Arabic adverb`s between Arabic and English: X
... Arabic sentence but the English translation got different, all what happens just by shifting the dominant locus from state to another. So who unacquainted with the Arabic language rules will not notice the difference among the above sentences, which every sentence from the three have different meani ...
... Arabic sentence but the English translation got different, all what happens just by shifting the dominant locus from state to another. So who unacquainted with the Arabic language rules will not notice the difference among the above sentences, which every sentence from the three have different meani ...
VaYishLach - RashiYomi
... 1-2-Hey roots are conjugated on the last syllable 1-Vav-2 roots are conjugated on the next to last syllable. ...
... 1-2-Hey roots are conjugated on the last syllable 1-Vav-2 roots are conjugated on the next to last syllable. ...
Practice - Macmillan/McGraw-Hill
... • A dictionary is a book that tells what words mean. • All entry words are in ABC order. • A sample sentence tells how each word is used. • Each dictionary page has two guide words at the top. The guide word on the left tells the first word on the page. The guide word on the right tells the last wor ...
... • A dictionary is a book that tells what words mean. • All entry words are in ABC order. • A sample sentence tells how each word is used. • Each dictionary page has two guide words at the top. The guide word on the left tells the first word on the page. The guide word on the right tells the last wor ...
French language course
... Also remember that you are learning a new skill. Try to master the simple stuff before moving on to the more complex concepts. We all have to add and subtract before we can do calculus. French is a complete language. While this course can teach you to read and write in French, these are only half of ...
... Also remember that you are learning a new skill. Try to master the simple stuff before moving on to the more complex concepts. We all have to add and subtract before we can do calculus. French is a complete language. While this course can teach you to read and write in French, these are only half of ...
here - The Elvish Linguistic Fellowship
... túle "came"; OEA: cóm. Evidently a past tense of tul- "come" (Etym s.v. TUL), formed by the lengthening of the stem-vowel and addition of the past suffix -e; the same formation could be seen in ohta-káre below. In Etym, however, past tense of kar- "make, do" is given as karne, so Tolkien might have ...
... túle "came"; OEA: cóm. Evidently a past tense of tul- "come" (Etym s.v. TUL), formed by the lengthening of the stem-vowel and addition of the past suffix -e; the same formation could be seen in ohta-káre below. In Etym, however, past tense of kar- "make, do" is given as karne, so Tolkien might have ...
The Oxford Guide to English Usage CONTENTS Table of Contents
... I should or I would 4.27 I who, you who, etc. 4.28 like 4.29 -lily adverbs 4.30 may or might 4.31 measurement, nouns of 4.32 need 4.33 neither...nor 4.34 neither (pronoun) 4.35 none (pronoun) 4.36 ought 4.37 participles 4.38 preposition at end 4.39 quantity, nouns of 4.40 reflexive pronouns 4.41 rel ...
... I should or I would 4.27 I who, you who, etc. 4.28 like 4.29 -lily adverbs 4.30 may or might 4.31 measurement, nouns of 4.32 need 4.33 neither...nor 4.34 neither (pronoun) 4.35 none (pronoun) 4.36 ought 4.37 participles 4.38 preposition at end 4.39 quantity, nouns of 4.40 reflexive pronouns 4.41 rel ...
An Introduction to Cognitive Grammar RONALD
... views enjoy a rough consensus and are widely accepted without serious question. Points of general agreement include the following: (a) language is a self-contained system amenable to algorithmic characterization, with sufficient autonomy to be studied in essential isolation from broader cognitive co ...
... views enjoy a rough consensus and are widely accepted without serious question. Points of general agreement include the following: (a) language is a self-contained system amenable to algorithmic characterization, with sufficient autonomy to be studied in essential isolation from broader cognitive co ...
VERBS AND OBJECTS IN SEMANTIC AGREEMENT: MINOR
... lexical areas languages may vary in this respect, although it would also seem natural to expect, for example, that if certain animals play a considerable role in a culture, the language might have predicates for the exclusive purpose of denoting the culturally most salient activities of these animal ...
... lexical areas languages may vary in this respect, although it would also seem natural to expect, for example, that if certain animals play a considerable role in a culture, the language might have predicates for the exclusive purpose of denoting the culturally most salient activities of these animal ...