Linguistics >
Useful links
Title | URL | Description | Category |
---|---|---|---|
Indonesian Loanword Search Engine | http://getnocms.com/loanword_searchengine/ | Bahasa | |
http://www.coelang.tufs.ac.jp/mt/id/dmod/class/ja_01.html | http://www.coelang.tufs.ac.jp/mt/id/dmod/class/ja_01.html | Free Indonesian course | Bahasa |
David Moeljadi Research website | http://compling.hss.ntu.edu.sg/who/david | Original from http://www.tufs.ac.jp/st/personal/13/david/ | Blog |
LingPipe Blog | http://lingpipe-blog.com/ | Natural Language Processing and Text Analytics | Blog |
Mimi & Deunice | http://mimiandeunice.com/ | Mimi & Eunice are written/drawn by Nina Paley, better known for the animated feature film Sita Sings the Blues. | Blog |
Douglas E. Comer's home page | https://www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/dec/ | with interesting essays on PhD & Computer Science | Blog |
ERG Online | http://erg.delph-in.net/logon | Syntactic tree, MRS and stuffs | Computational Linguistics |
LOGON Installation | http://moin.delph-in.net/LogonInstallation | This page provides installation instructions for the LOGON infrastructure | Computational Linguistics |
A Digital Archive of Research Papers in Computational Linguistics | http://aclweb.org/anthology/ | The ACL Anthology currently hosts over 24,500 papers on the study of computational linguistics and natural language processing. | Computational Linguistics |
Semcor Wordnet 3.0 | http://lit.csci.unt.edu/~rada/downloads/semcor/semcor3.0.tar.gz | Homepage: http://web.eecs.umich.edu/~mihalcea/downloads.html | Computational Linguistics |
Multi Semcor + | http://multisemcor.fbk.eu/download.php | Computational Linguistics | |
Grammar Engineering for Dummies | http://moin.delph-in.net/TuanAnhLe/GramEng4Dummies | Grammar Engineering with LOGON | Computational Linguistics |
TDL Syntax | http://depts.washington.edu/uwcl/twiki/bin/view.cgi/Main/TdlSyntax | A very basic guide to tdl syntax | Computational Linguistics |
Valediction | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valediction | Expressions used to say farewell, especially a word or phrase used to end a letter or message,[3][4] or the act of saying parting words whether brief or extensive. | English |
Onomatopoeia | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Onomatopoeia | Words that phonetically imitates or suggests the source of the sound that it describes. | English |
Transliteration | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transliteration | Systematic transliteration is a mapping from one system of writing into another, word by word, or ideally letter by letter. Most transliteration systems are one-to-one, so a reader who knows the system can reconstruct the original spelling. | English |
Plain English Lexicon | http://www.clearest.co.uk/pages/publications/plainenglishlexicon | The lexicon (second edition, June 2011) draws on two important pieces of research evidence: the ‘Living Word Vocabulary’ (a rare book published in the USA and not available in online form) and the 100-million-word British National Corpus. | English |
Eng.li | http://eng.li/ | Eng.li provides free tools that help you learn vocabulary in English or any other language - Linguistic tools (translate, dictionary, read) | English |
BabelNet | http://babelnet.org | BabelNet is both a multilingual encyclopedic dictionary, with lexicographic and encyclopedic coverage of terms in 50 languages, and a semantic network which connects concepts and named entities in a very large network of semantic relations, made up of more than 9 million entries. | English |
Politics & English (George Orwell) | Download | PDF file | English |
OWL: General Writing Resources | https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/section/1/ | These OWL resources will help you with the writing process: pre-writing (invention), developing research questions and outlines, composing thesis statements, and proofreading. While the writing process may be different for each person and for each particular assignment, the resources contained in this section follow the general work flow of pre-writing, organizing, and revising. For resources and examples on specific types of writing assignments, please go to our Common Writing Assignments area. | English |
Academic Word List Coxhead (2000) | http://www.uefap.com/vocab/select/awl.htm | Academic Word List Coxhead (2000). The most frequent word in each family is in italics. There are 570 headwords and about 3000 words altogether. For more information see The Academic Word List. For more practice see: Schmitt & Schmitt (2005), or the Compleat Lexical Tutor. | English |
Getting Started with LaTeX | http://www.maths.tcd.ie/~dwilkins/LaTeXPrimer/ | In addition to the HTML pages listed below, the primer Getting Started with LaTeX is also available in the form of a LaTeX2e input file, and as a DVI file or PDF file. | LaTeX |
Ling-TeX home page | http://heim.ifi.uio.no/~dag/ling-tex.html | The concept behind Ling-TeX is straightforward -- it is a mailing list for people interested in typesetting linguistics material with TeX. We hope to use this list as a means of identifying, examining, testing, and comparing macros, fonts, style files, etc. It is meant to provide an avenue for the active exchange of information and experience. The list is aimed at both current and potential users of TeX for linguistics, providing a common area for questions and answers, suggestions, explanations, and samples of what can be done. | LaTeX |
LyX - LaTeX visual editor | http://www.lyx.org/ | LyX is a document processor that encourages an approach to writing based on the structure of your documents (WYSIWYM) and not simply their appearance (WYSIWYG). | LaTeX |
The LaTeX for Linguists Home Page | https://www.essex.ac.uk/linguistics/external/clmt/latex4ling/ | LaTeX | |
CTAN - Comprehensive TeX Archive Network | http://www.ctan.org/ctan/ | The Comprehensive TeX Archive Network is a set of Internet sites around the world that offer TeX-related material for download. | LaTeX |
LaTeX on Wikibooks | http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/LaTeX | There's a dedicate section about using LaTeX for writing linguistics papers. | LaTeX |
Detexify2 - LaTeX symbol classifier | http://detexify.kirelabs.org/classify.html | Anyone who works with LaTeX knows how time-consuming it can be to find a symbol in symbols-a4.pdf that you just can't memorize. Detexify is an attempt to simplify this search. | LaTeX |
the UK List of TeX Frequently Asked Questions on the Web | http://www.tex.ac.uk/ | This is a set of Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) for English-speaking users of TeX. The questions answered here cover a wide range of topics, but typesetting issues are mostly covered from the viewpoint of a LaTeX user. Some of the questions answered have little relevance to today’s users; this is inevitable — it’s easier to add information than it is to decide that information is no longer needed. The set of answered questions is therefore in a state of slow flux: new questions are answered, while old questions are deleted … but the whole process depends on the time available for FAQ maintenance. | LaTeX |
LaTeX - Table of Contents | https://texblog.org/2013/04/29/latex-table-of-contents-list-of-figurestables-and-some-customizations/ | LaTeX | |
Leipzig Glossing Rules | http://www.eva.mpg.de/lingua/resources/glossing-rules.php | Version 05 Feb 2008 | Linguistics |
Complementizer | http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complementizer | In linguistics (especially generative grammar), a complementizer (or complementiser) is a lexical category (part of speech) including those words that can be used to turn a clause into the subject or object of a sentence. For example, the word that is generally called a complementizer in English sentences like Mary believes that it is raining. Complementizer is a technical term in linguistics; in traditional grammar, such words are normally considered conjunctions. | Linguistics |
IPA Chart | http://www.paulmeier.com/ipacharts/ | Linguistics | |
http://facultyoflanguage.blogspot.sg/ | http://facultyoflanguage.blogspot.sg/ | Linguistics | |
LkbEmacs | http://moin.delph-in.net/LkbEmacs | Tools & resources | |
GIT guide | http://rogerdudler.github.io/git-guide/ | Tools & resources | |
Tex Packages for Linguists | http://mathserver.neu.edu/~ling/tex/ | Maintained by John Frampton at Northeastern University | Tools & resources |
IEEE Manuscript Templates for Conference Proceedings | http://www.ieee.org/conferences_events/conferences/publishing/templates.html | Tools & resources | |
NTU-HSS-LMS Learning Resources | http://www.hss.ntu.edu.sg/Programmes/linguistics/Pages/Student-Resources.aspx | postgraduate Confirmation Exercise Guidelines, softwares, etc. | Tools & resources |
Agree - .NET tool for grammar engineering | http://moin.delph-in.net/AgreeTop | Tools & resources | |
JGram | http://www.jgram.org | JGram is dedicated to helping people learn to speak Japanese, in the most effective interactive way: by communicating, sharing knowledge, and talking between Japanese and non-native speakers. This is an interactive community where you are encouraged to contribute your knowledge to our growing database of Japanese grammar. We also encourage you to spread the word and recruit your friends (especially any native speaking friends) to contribute. | Tools & resources |
楽しいJapanese | http://www.tanoshiijapanese.com/dictionary/ | Tanoshii Japanese Dictionary | Tools & resources |
Unified Verb Index | http://verbs.colorado.edu/verb-index/index.php | The Unified Verb Index is a system which merges links and web pages from four different natural language processing projects: VerbNet - Download! PropBank FrameNet OntoNotes Sense Groupings | Tools & resources |
Santa Barbara Corpus of Spoken American English | http://www.linguistics.ucsb.edu/research/santa-barbara-corpus | Parts 1-4 of the Santa Barbara Corpus of Spoken American English (SBCSAE) are now available, for a total of approximately 249,000 words. The Santa Barbara Corpus includes transcriptions, audio, and timestamps which correlate transcription and audio at the level of individual intonation units. | Tools & resources |
Doulos SIL font | https://software.sil.org/doulos/ | Doulos SIL is a Unicode-based font family that supports the wide range of languages that use the Latin and Cyrillic scripts, whether used for phonetic or orthographic needs. Linguists appreciate the wide range of characters and symbols useful in their work. This font makes use of state-of-the-art font technologies to support complex typographic issues, such as the need to position arbitrary combinations of base glyphs and diacritics optimally. | Tools & resources |
Showing 46 items