HamleDT 2.0 is a collection of 30 existing treebanks harmonized into a common annotation style, the Prague Dependencies, and further transformed into Stanford Dependencies, a treebank annotation style that became popular recently. We use the newest basic Universal Stanford Dependencies, without added language-specific subtypes.
HamleDT (HArmonized Multi-LanguagE Dependency Treebank) is a compilation of existing dependency treebanks (or dependency conversions of other treebanks), transformed so that they all conform to the same annotation style. This version uses Universal Dependencies as the common annotation style.
Update (November 1017): for a current collection of harmonized dependency treebanks, we recommend using the Universal Dependencies (UD). All of the corpora that are distributed in HamleDT in full are also part of the UD project; only some corpora from the Patch group (where HamleDT provides only the harmonizing scripts but not the full corpus data) are available in HamleDT but not in UD.
Containing 27 million running words the Hungarian Historical Corpus provides a valuable basis for research on the history of words of Hungarian between the second half of the 18th century and 2000.
NooJ is a linguistic development environment that includes large-coverage dictionaries and grammars, and parses corpora in real time. The large-coverage lexical resources (morphological and syntactic grammars) for Hungarian might be applied to texts in order to locate morphological, lexical and syntactic patterns and tag simple and compound words.