The segment captures the funeral of writer Alois Jirásek held in Prague on 16 March 1930. Crowds stream to the Pantheon of the National Museum, where the coffin containing the late writer´s remains is displayed. A car carrying President Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk arrives at the National Museum. In the upper part of Wenceslaus Square, a monumental cenotaph is erected and passed by a number of commemorative processions, Sokols, soldiers, legionnaires, and members of political parties and various associations. Officials of the Czechoslovak Sokol Society carry the coffin with the deceased from the Pantheon of the National Museum. University dignitaries and distinguished Czech writers walk behind the coffin. The event is also attended by the guard of honour of the Vysoké Mýto 30th Infantry Regiment of Alois Jirásek. Prominent politicians present at the ceremony. The segment concludes with a view of the urn containing the writer´s remains in a car heading to the late writer´s final resting place in his native Hronov.
Segment from the weekly Elekta-journal 1929 No. 5 captures the funeral of writer František Herites held in Prague on 22 January 1929. The flag of mourning is raised above the National Museum. The coffin with the deceased is carried out of the Pantheon of the National Museum. The funeral procession, which includes church dignitaries and Sokol representatives, heads to the Main Railway Station, from where the coffin will be transported to Vodňany to be interred in the family tomb.
A segment from the Elektajournal Production Company captures the funeral of writer Josef Holeček held in Prague on 9 March 1929. The coffin is carried out of the Pantheon of the National Museum. The funeral procession with a horse-drawn hearse makes its way along Vinohrady Street towards the final resting place at Vinohrady Cemetery.
Segment of the Československý zvukový týdeník Aktualita (Czechoslovak Aktualita Sound Newsreel) 1939 No. 1 caputres the funeral of writer Karel Čapek at Vyšehrad Cemetery in Prague on 29 December 1938. The coffin with the deceased is carried out of the Church of St. Peter and St. Paul and across the cemetery to the grave. Theatre director Vojta Novák delivers a speech at the grave. The coffin is lowered into the grave. The mourners include Karel Čapek´s widow, actress and writer Olga Scheinpflugová, his brother-in law, journalist Karel Scheinpflug, writer Ferdinand Peroutka, Karel Čapek´s brother, painter and writer Josef Čapek, actor Hugo Haas, poet and theatre critic Hanuš Jelínek, poet Josef Hora, sociologist Miloslav Disman and others. The segment conludes with the Czech anthem.
The segment captures the funeral of writer Karel Matěj Čapek-Chod held in Prague on 7 November 1927. The funeral procession sets out from the National Museum and continues along Vinohradská Street towards Olšany Cemetery. General Rudolf Medek is among the mourners.
Opera singer Gabriela Horvátová, at first on her own and later in the company of two men on Bohumil Veselý's balcony. An image of Horvátová in Její pastorkyňa (Jenůfa, dir. Rudolf Měšťák, 1929).
GATE-ANNIE, developed by the GATE group at the University of Sheffield (http;//www.gate.ac.uk; Cunningham et al., 2002,) is an Information Extraction (IE) web service for English. It consists of the following main language processing tools: tokeniser, sentence splitter, POS tagger, coreference resolver and named entity recogniser.
The named entity recogniser identifies and categorizes entity names (such as persons, organizations, and location names), temporal expressions (dates and times), and certain types of numerical expressions (monetary values and percentages).
GATE-ANNIE returns the fully annotated document in GATE XML format. The file saved by the client contains ANNIE's output in the default AnnotationSet and
the input document's HTML or XML mark-up in the "Original markups" AnnotationSet.
H. Cunningham, D. Maynard, K. Bontcheva, and V. Tablan. 2002. GATE: A Framework and Graphical Development Environment for Robust NLP Tools and Applications. In Proceedings of the 40th Anniversary Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL-02).
ANNIE-RDF developed by the GATE group at the University of Sheffield (http;//www.gate.ac.uk; Cunningham et al., 2002) is an Information Extraction (IE) web service for English. It consists of the following main language processing tools: tokeniser, sentence splitter, POS tagger, coreference resolver and named entity recogniser.
The named entity recogniser identifies and categorizes entity names (such as persons, organizations, and location names), temporal expressions (dates and times), and certain types of numerical expressions (monetary values and percentages).
The text spans and annotations are exported into an RDF-XML ontology, in which the recognized named entities are instances according to the PROTON ontology (http://proton.semanticweb.org/).
H. Cunningham, D. Maynard, K. Bontcheva, and V. Tablan. 2002. GATE: A Framework and Graphical Development Environment for Robust NLP Tools and Applications. In Proceedings of the 40th Anniversary Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL-02).
Grammar Error Correction Corpus for Czech (GECCC) consists of 83 058 sentences and covers four diverse domains, including essays written by native students, informal website texts, essays written by Romani ethnic minority children and teenagers and essays written by nonnative speakers. All domains are professionally annotated for GEC errors in a unified manner, and errors were automatically categorized with a Czech-specific version of ERRANT released at https://github.com/ufal/errant_czech
The dataset was introduced in the paper Czech Grammar Error Correction with a Large and Diverse Corpus that was accepted to TACL. Until published in TACL, see the arXiv version: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2201.05590.pdf