KAMOKO is a structured and commented french learner-corpus. It addresses the central structures of the French language from a linguistic perspective (18 different courses). The text examples in this corpus are annotated by native speakers. This makes this corpus a valuable resource for (1) advanced language practice/teaching and (2) linguistics research.
The KAMOKO corpus can be used free of charge. Information on the structure of the corpus and instructions on how to use it are presented in detail in the KAMOKO Handbook and a video-tutorial (both in german). In addition to the raw XML-data, we also offer various export formats (see ZIP files – supported file formats: CorpusExplorer, TXM, WebLicht, TreeTagger, CoNLL, SPEEDy, CorpusWorkbench and TXT).
KUK 0.0 is a pilot version of a corpus of Czech legal and administrative texts designated as data for manual and automatic assessment of accessibility (comprehensibility or clarity) of Czech legal texts.
The LatinISE corpus is a text corpus collected from the LacusCurtius, Intratext and Musisque Deoque websites. Corpus texts have rich metadata containing information as genre, title, century or specific date.
This Latin corpus was built by Barbara McGillivray.
In the version 4 of the corpus the high frequency lemmas have been manually corrected and sentence boundaries have been added.
GeCzLex 1.0 is an online electronic resource for translation equivalents of Czech and German discourse connectives. It contains anaphoric connectives for both languages and their possible translations documented in bilingual parallel corpora (not necessarily anaphoric). The entries have been interlinked via semantic annotation of the connectives (taken from monolingual lexicons of connectives CzeDLex and DiMLex) according to the PDTB 3 sense taxonomy and translation possibilities aquired from the Czech and German parallel data of the Intercorp project. The lexicon is the first bilingual inventory of connectives with linkage on the level of individual pairs (connective + discourse sense).
This package provides an evaluation framework, training and test data for semi-automatic recognition of sections of historical diplomatic manuscripts. The data collection consists of 57 Latin charters issued by the Royal Chancellery of 7 different types. Documents were created in the era of John the Blind, King of Bohemia (1310–1346) and Count of Luxembourg. Manuscripts were digitized, transcribed, and typical sections of medieval charters ('corroboratio', 'datatio', 'dispositio', 'inscriptio', 'intitulatio', 'narratio', and 'publicatio') were manually tagged. Manuscripts also contain additional metadata, such as manually marked named entities and short Czech abstracts.
Recognition models are first trained using manually marked sections in training documents and the trained model can then be used for recognition of the sections in the test data. The parsing script supports methods based on Cosine Distance, TF-IDF weighting and adapted Viterbi algorithm.
Migrant Stories is a corpus of 1017 short biographic narratives of migrants supplemented with meta information about countries of origin/destination, the migrant gender, GDP per capita of the respective countries, etc. The corpus has been compiled as a teaching material for data analysis.
Czech morphological dictionary developed originally by Jan Hajič as a spelling checker and lemmatization dictionary. Currently it contains full morphological information for each covered wordform, as well as some derivational, semantic and named entity information.
MorfFlex CZ 2.0 is the Czech morphological dictionary developed originally by Jan Hajič as a spelling checker and lemmatization dictionary. MorfFlex is a flat list of lemma-tag-wordform triples. For each wordform, full inflectional information is coded in a positional tag. Wordforms are organized into entries (paradigm instances or paradigms in short) according to their formal morphological behavior. The paradigm (set of wordforms) is identified by a unique lemma. Apart from traditional morphological categories, the description also contains some semantic, stylistic and derivational information. For more details see a comprehensive specification of the Czech morphological annotation http://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/techrep/tr64.pdf .
Slovak morphological dictionary modeled after the Czech one. It consists of (word form, lemma, POS tag) triples, reusing the Czech morphological system for POS tags and lemma descriptions.
NER models for NameTag 2, named entity recognition tool, for English, German, Dutch, Spanish and Czech. Model documentation including performance can be found here: https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/nametag/2/models . These models are for NameTag 2, named entity recognition tool, which can be found here: https://ufal.mff.cuni.cz/nametag/2 .