Lexicography: Difference between revisions
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Notes from '''Electronic Lexicography''' by Sylviane Granger, Magali Paquot | = Notes from '''Electronic Lexicography''' by Sylviane Granger, Magali Paquot = | ||
= Introduction: Electronic lexicography - from challenge to opportunity = | == Introduction: Electronic lexicography - from challenge to opportunity == | ||
* The first lexical database was ''Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English'' (1978) | |||
* Six innovations of digital lexicography | |||
** corpus integration | |||
*** as upstream - data to be sourced | |||
*** as downstream - data to be used | |||
*** "no serious compiler would undertake a large dictionary project nowadays without one" | |||
** more and better data | |||
** efficiency of access | |||
** customization | |||
** hybridization | |||
** user input | |||
= Resources = | |||
* [https://wordnet.princeton.edu/ WordNet, English Lexical DB] | |||
* [https://link.springer.com/article/10.3758/s13428-018-1038-3 Chinese lexical database (CLD)] | |||
* [http://www.cjk.org/ CJKI Lexical DB] |
Revision as of 06:54, 16 January 2021
Notes from Electronic Lexicography by Sylviane Granger, Magali Paquot
Introduction: Electronic lexicography - from challenge to opportunity
- The first lexical database was Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English (1978)
- Six innovations of digital lexicography
- corpus integration
- as upstream - data to be sourced
- as downstream - data to be used
- "no serious compiler would undertake a large dictionary project nowadays without one"
- more and better data
- efficiency of access
- customization
- hybridization
- user input
- corpus integration