Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Computer analysis of spelling variants in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales
-
Geoff Barnbrook
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- i-iv i
- Preface v
- Contents vii
-
Part I. Corpus design and text encoding
- The optimum corpus sample size? 3
- Corpus sampling 21
- International Corpus of English: Corpus design – problems and suggested solutions 33
- The Northern Ireland Transcribed Corpus of Speech 65
- Problems in the compilation of a corpus of standard Caribbean English: A pilot study 75
- The Text Encoding Initiative: A progress report 97
-
Part II. Automated syntactic and semantic text analysis
- Pinpointing problematic tagging decisions 111
- Inferences and lexical relations 123
- Developing a scheme for annotating text to show anaphoric relations 153
- Information retrieval and corpora 191
-
Part III. Corpora in language description
- Relative infinitives in spoken and written English 213
- Who(m)? Case marking of wh-pronouns in written British and American English 231
- Discourse category and text type classification: Procedural discourse in the Brown and the LOB corpora 247
- Opaque and transparent features of Indian English 263
- Computer analysis of spelling variants in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales 277
- Pitch contours and tones in the Lancaster/IBM spoken English corpus 289
- What do you think of that: A pilot study of the phraseology of the core words of English 301
- Sequences of spatial and temporal adverbials in spoken and written English 319
- Grammatical or nativelike? 329
- Collocation and bilingual text 345
- Key Word Index 359
- 369-370 369
Chapters in this book
- i-iv i
- Preface v
- Contents vii
-
Part I. Corpus design and text encoding
- The optimum corpus sample size? 3
- Corpus sampling 21
- International Corpus of English: Corpus design – problems and suggested solutions 33
- The Northern Ireland Transcribed Corpus of Speech 65
- Problems in the compilation of a corpus of standard Caribbean English: A pilot study 75
- The Text Encoding Initiative: A progress report 97
-
Part II. Automated syntactic and semantic text analysis
- Pinpointing problematic tagging decisions 111
- Inferences and lexical relations 123
- Developing a scheme for annotating text to show anaphoric relations 153
- Information retrieval and corpora 191
-
Part III. Corpora in language description
- Relative infinitives in spoken and written English 213
- Who(m)? Case marking of wh-pronouns in written British and American English 231
- Discourse category and text type classification: Procedural discourse in the Brown and the LOB corpora 247
- Opaque and transparent features of Indian English 263
- Computer analysis of spelling variants in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales 277
- Pitch contours and tones in the Lancaster/IBM spoken English corpus 289
- What do you think of that: A pilot study of the phraseology of the core words of English 301
- Sequences of spatial and temporal adverbials in spoken and written English 319
- Grammatical or nativelike? 329
- Collocation and bilingual text 345
- Key Word Index 359
- 369-370 369