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About the SEAlang Library Buginese Text Corpus |
Relatively little Buginese text is available - if you know of more, please
let us know.
This mononlingual corpus consists of Buginese texts (primarily religious materials) retrieved from
Internet sources. It also includes Buginese sentence examples from Gene Ammarell's
database. It contains some 165,000 words (about 1.4MB of text) in total.
Usage Try engka as a search term. |
- context searches show how the search target appears in context, taking both leading and trailing collocates (or neighboring words) into account. This search returns a merged list of leading and trailing collocates. |
- collocate searches are better for focusing on the search target's immediate neighbor. This search returns separate lists of leading and trailing collocates. |
- merged view allows for fast switching between collocate and context views. Try brief first - downloaded pages may be very large, and a slow browser may fall behind in displaying the detailed view. The Go! button invokes the brief view. |
- raw contexts show the search word in context without any attempt at analysis or sanity-checking (local segmentation that helps ensure that a real word has been found). |
-
restrict collocates requires (or forbids) all collocates to have at least
one sense with a particular part of speech or usage.
Additional tips |
Because the underlying text corpus may be quite large, results may be taken from a random sample of hits. For common words, this means that sample contexts and exact collocate frequencies will vary from run to run. |
Clicking on a word/collocate with the mouse starts a new search:
yellow
searches for contexts, and
black
searches for collocates.
Thanks Thanks to Prof. Gene Ammarell (Ohio University) for sharing his database with the project. |