How many spoken languages are there? How long have languages existed? Which language was the first one ever written? Which language has the most sounds? Which alphabet has the fewest letters? More ...
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Features
* (Jointly) visualize
o syntactic dependency graphs
o semantic dependency graphs (a la CoNLL 2008)
o Chunks (such as syntactic chunks, NER chunks, SRL chunks etc.)
* Compare gold standard trees to your generated trees (e.g. highlight false positive and negative dependency edges)
* Filter trees and visualize only what's necessary, for example
o only dependency edges with certain labels
o only the edges between certain tokens
* Search corpora for sentences with certain attributes using powerful search expressions, for example
o search for all sentences that contain the word "vantage" and the pos tag sequence DT NN
o search for all sentences that contain false positive edges and the word "vantage"
* Reads
o CoNLL 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2006 and 2008 format
o Lisp S-Expressions
o Malt-Tab format
o markov thebeast format
* Export to EPS
Check this screenshot to get a better idea.
This is a map of the wheel-ruts of modern English. Etymologies are not definitions; they're explanations of what our words meant and how they sounded 600 or 2,000 years ago.
The dates beside a word indicate the earliest year for which there is a surviving written record of that word (in English, unless otherwise indicated). This should be taken as approximate, especially before about 1700, since a word may have been used in conversation for hundreds of years before it turns up in a manuscript that has had the good fortune to survive the centuries.
The basic sources of this work are Weekley's "An Etymological Dictionary of Modern English," Klein's "A Comprehensive Etymological Dictionary of the English Language," "Oxford English Dictionary" (second edition), "Barnhart Dictionary of Etymology," Holthauzen's "Etymologisches Wörterbuch der Englischen Sprache," Ayto's "20th Century Words," and Chapman's "Dictionary of American Slang." A full list of sources used in this compilation can be found here.
Since this dictionary went up, it has benefited from the suggestions of dozens of people I have never met, from around the world. Tremendous thanks and appreciation to all of you.