S. William, W. Lewis, and D. Langendoen. In “Semantic Web Meets Language Resources: Papers from the AAAI Workshop, page 11--16. AAAI Press, Menlo Park, (2002)
Abstract
This paper discusses some of the design criteria for a linguistic ontology that can be used to support multilingual and crosslinguistic searches and queries on the Internet. It focuses on integrating linguistic concepts and instances into an upper-level ontology, and shows that the result can be understood and analyzed as a feature (structure) system. It considers various types of linguistic structure ranging from segment types to grammatical properties and relations, and linguistic inventories including phoneme tables, inflectional paradigms, lexicons, and grammatical descriptions
%0 Conference Paper
%1 William02anontology
%A William, Scott Farrar
%A Lewis, William D.
%A Langendoen, D. Terence
%B In “Semantic Web Meets Language Resources: Papers from the AAAI Workshop
%D 2002
%I AAAI Press, Menlo Park
%K imported lingont printed nlp2rdf_relevant
%P 11--16
%T An Ontology for Linguistic Annotation
%U http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.58.5282
%X This paper discusses some of the design criteria for a linguistic ontology that can be used to support multilingual and crosslinguistic searches and queries on the Internet. It focuses on integrating linguistic concepts and instances into an upper-level ontology, and shows that the result can be understood and analyzed as a feature (structure) system. It considers various types of linguistic structure ranging from segment types to grammatical properties and relations, and linguistic inventories including phoneme tables, inflectional paradigms, lexicons, and grammatical descriptions
@inproceedings{William02anontology,
abstract = {This paper discusses some of the design criteria for a linguistic ontology that can be used to support multilingual and crosslinguistic searches and queries on the Internet. It focuses on integrating linguistic concepts and instances into an upper-level ontology, and shows that the result can be understood and analyzed as a feature (structure) system. It considers various types of linguistic structure ranging from segment types to grammatical properties and relations, and linguistic inventories including phoneme tables, inflectional paradigms, lexicons, and grammatical descriptions},
added-at = {2010-01-10T15:50:24.000+0100},
author = {William, Scott Farrar and Lewis, William D. and Langendoen, D. Terence},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/21480c80534de09647434f2a9d8564c80/sebastian},
booktitle = {In “Semantic Web Meets Language Resources: Papers from the AAAI Workshop},
description = {An Ontology for Linguistic Annotation},
interhash = {67e42820541453ef186c83eb00930d10},
intrahash = {1480c80534de09647434f2a9d8564c80},
keywords = {imported lingont printed nlp2rdf_relevant},
pages = {11--16},
publisher = {AAAI Press, Menlo Park},
timestamp = {2013-07-07T16:28:17.000+0200},
title = {An Ontology for Linguistic Annotation},
url = {http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.58.5282},
year = 2002
}