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2. Deep Universal Dependencies 2.4
- Creator:
- Zeman, Daniel and Droganova, Kira
- Publisher:
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics (UFAL)
- Type:
- text and corpus
- Subject:
- semantic dependency and universal dependencies
- Language:
- Afrikaans, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Akkadian, Amharic, Arabic, Belarusian, Breton, Bulgarian, Russia Buriat, Catalan, Czech, Church Slavic, Mandarin Chinese, Coptic, Welsh, Danish, German, Modern Greek (1453-), English, Estonian, Basque, Faroese, Finnish, French, Irish, Gothic, Ancient Greek (to 1453), Mbyá Guaraní, Hebrew, Hindi, Croatian, Upper Sorbian, Hungarian, Armenian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Northern Kurdish, Korean, Komi-Zyrian, Karelian, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Literary Chinese, Marathi, Erzya, Dutch, Norwegian, Old Russian, Nigerian Pidgin, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Sanskrit, Slovak, Slovenian, Northern Sami, Spanish, Serbian, Swedish, Tamil, Tagalog, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Vietnamese, Warlpiri, Wolof, Yoruba, and Galician
- Description:
- Deep Universal Dependencies is a collection of treebanks derived semi-automatically from Universal Dependencies (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-2988). It contains additional deep-syntactic and semantic annotations. Version of Deep UD corresponds to the version of UD it is based on. Note however that some UD treebanks have been omitted from Deep UD.
- Rights:
- Licence Universal Dependencies v2.4, https://lindat.mff.cuni.cz/repository/xmlui/page/licence-UD-2.4, and PUB
3. Deep Universal Dependencies 2.5
- Creator:
- Zeman, Daniel and Droganova, Kira
- Publisher:
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics (UFAL)
- Type:
- text and corpus
- Subject:
- semantic dependency and universal dependencies
- Language:
- Afrikaans, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Akkadian, Amharic, Arabic, Belarusian, Breton, Bulgarian, Russia Buriat, Catalan, Czech, Church Slavic, Mandarin Chinese, Coptic, Welsh, Danish, German, Modern Greek (1453-), English, Estonian, Basque, Faroese, Finnish, French, Irish, Gothic, Ancient Greek (to 1453), Mbyá Guaraní, Hebrew, Hindi, Croatian, Upper Sorbian, Hungarian, Armenian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Northern Kurdish, Korean, Komi-Zyrian, Karelian, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Literary Chinese, Marathi, Erzya, Dutch, Norwegian, Old Russian, Nigerian Pidgin, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Sanskrit, Slovak, Slovenian, Northern Sami, Spanish, Serbian, Swedish, Tamil, Tagalog, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Vietnamese, Warlpiri, Wolof, Yoruba, Galician, Bhojpuri, Komi-Permyak, Livvi, Moksha, Scottish Gaelic, and Skolt Sami
- Description:
- Deep Universal Dependencies is a collection of treebanks derived semi-automatically from Universal Dependencies (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-3105). It contains additional deep-syntactic and semantic annotations. Version of Deep UD corresponds to the version of UD it is based on. Note however that some UD treebanks have been omitted from Deep UD.
- Rights:
- Licence Universal Dependencies v2.5, https://lindat.mff.cuni.cz/repository/xmlui/page/licence-UD-2.5, and PUB
4. Deep Universal Dependencies 2.6
- Creator:
- Zeman, Daniel and Droganova, Kira
- Publisher:
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics (UFAL)
- Type:
- text and corpus
- Subject:
- semantic dependency and universal dependencies
- Language:
- Afrikaans, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Akkadian, Amharic, Arabic, Belarusian, Breton, Bulgarian, Russia Buriat, Catalan, Czech, Church Slavic, Mandarin Chinese, Coptic, Welsh, Danish, German, Modern Greek (1453-), English, Estonian, Basque, Faroese, Finnish, French, Irish, Gothic, Ancient Greek (to 1453), Mbyá Guaraní, Hebrew, Hindi, Croatian, Upper Sorbian, Hungarian, Armenian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Northern Kurdish, Korean, Komi-Zyrian, Karelian, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Literary Chinese, Marathi, Erzya, Dutch, Norwegian, Old Russian, Nigerian Pidgin, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Sanskrit, Slovak, Slovenian, Northern Sami, Spanish, Serbian, Swedish, Tamil, Tagalog, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Vietnamese, Warlpiri, Wolof, Yoruba, Galician, Bhojpuri, Komi-Permyak, Livvi, Moksha, Scottish Gaelic, Skolt Sami, Icelandic, Albanian, and Persian
- Description:
- Deep Universal Dependencies is a collection of treebanks derived semi-automatically from Universal Dependencies (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-3226). It contains additional deep-syntactic and semantic annotations. Version of Deep UD corresponds to the version of UD it is based on. Note however that some UD treebanks have been omitted from Deep UD.
- Rights:
- Licence Universal Dependencies v2.6, https://lindat.mff.cuni.cz/repository/xmlui/page/license-ud-2.6, and PUB
5. Deep Universal Dependencies 2.7
- Creator:
- Zeman, Daniel and Droganova, Kira
- Publisher:
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics (UFAL)
- Type:
- text and corpus
- Subject:
- semantic dependency and universal dependencies
- Language:
- Afrikaans, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Akkadian, Amharic, Arabic, Belarusian, Breton, Bulgarian, Russia Buriat, Catalan, Czech, Church Slavic, Mandarin Chinese, Coptic, Welsh, Danish, German, Modern Greek (1453-), English, Estonian, Basque, Faroese, Finnish, French, Irish, Gothic, Ancient Greek (to 1453), Mbyá Guaraní, Hebrew, Hindi, Croatian, Upper Sorbian, Hungarian, Armenian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Northern Kurdish, Korean, Komi-Zyrian, Karelian, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Literary Chinese, Marathi, Erzya, Dutch, Norwegian, Old Russian, Nigerian Pidgin, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Sanskrit, Slovak, Slovenian, Northern Sami, Spanish, Serbian, Swedish, Tamil, Tagalog, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Vietnamese, Warlpiri, Wolof, Yoruba, Galician, Bhojpuri, Komi-Permyak, Livvi, Moksha, Scottish Gaelic, Skolt Sami, Icelandic, Albanian, Persian, Akuntsu, Apurinã, Khunsari, Manx, Mundurukú, Nayini, Soi, South Levantine Arabic, and Tupinambá
- Description:
- Deep Universal Dependencies is a collection of treebanks derived semi-automatically from Universal Dependencies (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-3424). It contains additional deep-syntactic and semantic annotations. Version of Deep UD corresponds to the version of UD it is based on. Note however that some UD treebanks have been omitted from Deep UD.
- Rights:
- Licence Universal Dependencies v2.7, https://lindat.mff.cuni.cz/repository/xmlui/page/license-ud-2.7, and PUB
6. Deep Universal Dependencies 2.8
- Creator:
- Zeman, Daniel and Droganova, Kira
- Publisher:
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics (UFAL)
- Type:
- text and corpus
- Subject:
- semantic dependency and universal dependencies
- Language:
- Afrikaans, Assyrian Neo-Aramaic, Akkadian, Amharic, Arabic, Belarusian, Breton, Bulgarian, Russia Buriat, Catalan, Czech, Church Slavic, Mandarin Chinese, Coptic, Welsh, Danish, German, Modern Greek (1453-), English, Estonian, Basque, Faroese, Finnish, French, Irish, Gothic, Ancient Greek (to 1453), Mbyá Guaraní, Hebrew, Hindi, Croatian, Upper Sorbian, Hungarian, Armenian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Kazakh, Northern Kurdish, Korean, Komi-Zyrian, Karelian, Latin, Latvian, Lithuanian, Literary Chinese, Marathi, Erzya, Dutch, Norwegian, Old Russian, Nigerian Pidgin, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Sanskrit, Slovak, Slovenian, Northern Sami, Spanish, Serbian, Swedish, Tamil, Tagalog, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Vietnamese, Warlpiri, Wolof, Yoruba, Galician, Bhojpuri, Komi-Permyak, Livvi, Moksha, Scottish Gaelic, Skolt Sami, Icelandic, Albanian, Persian, Akuntsu, Apurinã, Khunsari, Manx, Mundurukú, Nayini, Soi, South Levantine Arabic, Tupinambá, Beja, Western Frisian, Urubú-Kaapor, Kangri, K'iche', Low German, Makuráp, Western Armenian, and Central Siberian Yupik
- Description:
- Deep Universal Dependencies is a collection of treebanks derived semi-automatically from Universal Dependencies (http://hdl.handle.net/11234/1-3687). It contains additional deep-syntactic and semantic annotations. Version of Deep UD corresponds to the version of UD it is based on. Note however that some UD treebanks have been omitted from Deep UD.
- Rights:
- Licence Universal Dependencies v2.8, https://lindat.mff.cuni.cz/repository/xmlui/page/license-ud-2.8, and PUB
7. HinDialect 1.1: 26 Hindi-related languages and dialects of the Indic Continuum in North India
- Creator:
- Bafna, Niyati, Žabokrtský, Zdeněk, España-Bonet, Cristina, van Genabith, Josef, Kumar, Lalit "Samyak Lalit", Suman, Sharda, and Shivay, Rahul
- Publisher:
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics (UFAL) and Kavita Kosh Project
- Type:
- text and corpus
- Subject:
- dialect continuum, dialect variation, Indic, Indo-Aryan, Indian, and Hindi
- Language:
- Hindi, Marathi, Magahi, Awadhi, Bhojpuri, Braj, Haryanvi, Rajasthani, Korku, Garhwali, Chhattisgarhi, Bhili, Sanskrit, Angika, Bundeli, Kumaoni, Bhadrawahi, Bengali, Gujarati, Panjabi, Nimadi, Kanauji, Malvi, and Uncoded languages
- Description:
- HinDialect: 26 Hindi-related languages and dialects of the Indic Continuum in North India Languages This is a collection of folksongs for 26 languages that form a dialect continuum in North India and nearby regions. Namely Angika, Awadhi, Baiga, Bengali, Bhadrawahi, Bhili, Bhojpuri, Braj, Bundeli, Chhattisgarhi, Garhwali, Gujarati, Haryanvi, Himachali, Hindi, Kanauji, Khadi Boli, Korku, Kumaoni, Magahi, Malvi, Marathi, Nimadi, Panjabi, Rajasthani, Sanskrit. This data is originally collected by the Kavita Kosh Project at http://www.kavitakosh.org/ . Here are the main characteristics of the languages in this collection: - They are all Indic languages except for Korku. - The majority of them are closely related to the standard Hindi dialect genealogically (such as Hariyanvi and Bhojpuri), although the collection also contains languages such as Bengali and Gujarati which are more distant relatives. - They are all primarily spoken in (North) India (Bengali is also spoken in Bangladesh) - All except Sanksrit are alive languages Data Categorising them by pre-existing available NLP resources, we have: * Band 1 languages : Hindi, Panjabi, Gujarati, Bengali, Nepali. These languages already have other large standard datasets available. Kavita Kosh may have very little data for these languages. * Band 2 languages: Bhojpuri, Magahi, Awadhi, Braj. These languages have growing interest and some datasets of a relatively small size as compared to Band 1 language resources. * Band 3 languages: All other languages in the collection are previously zero-resource languages. These are the languages for which this dataset is the most relevant. Script This dataset is entirely in Devanagari. Content in the case of languages not written in Devanagari (such as Bengali and Gujarati) has been transliterated by the Kavita Kosh Project. Format The dataset contains a single text file containing folksongs per language. Folksongs are separated from each other by an empty line. The first line of a new piece is the title of the folksong, and line separation within folksongs is preserved.
- Rights:
- Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0), http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/, and PUB
8. HinDialect: 26 Hindi-related languages and dialects of the Indic Continuum in North India
- Creator:
- Bafna, Niyati, Žabokrtský, Zdeněk, España-Bonet, Cristina, van Genabith, Josef, Kumar, Lalit "Samyak Lalit", Suman, Sharda, and Shivay, Rahul
- Publisher:
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics (UFAL) and Kavita Kosh Project
- Type:
- text and corpus
- Subject:
- dialect continuum, dialect variation, Indic, Indo-Aryan, Indian, and Hindi
- Language:
- Hindi, Marathi, Magahi, Awadhi, Bhojpuri, Braj, Haryanvi, Rajasthani, Korku, Garhwali, Chhattisgarhi, Bhili, Sanskrit, Angika, Bundeli, Kumaoni, Bhadrawahi, Bengali, Gujarati, Panjabi, Nimadi, Kanauji, Malvi, and Uncoded languages
- Description:
- HinDialect: 26 Hindi-related languages and dialects of the Indic Continuum in North India Languages This is a collection of folksongs for 26 languages that form a dialect continuum in North India and nearby regions. Namely Angika, Awadhi, Baiga, Bengali, Bhadrawahi, Bhili, Bhojpuri, Braj, Bundeli, Chhattisgarhi, Garhwali, Gujarati, Haryanvi, Himachali, Hindi, Kanauji, Khadi Boli, Korku, Kumaoni, Magahi, Malvi, Marathi, Nimadi, Panjabi, Rajasthani, Sanskrit. This data is originally collected by the Kavita Kosh Project at http://www.kavitakosh.org/ . Here are the main characteristics of the languages in this collection: - They are all Indic languages except for Korku. - The majority of them are closely related to the standard Hindi dialect genealogically (such as Hariyanvi and Bhojpuri), although the collection also contains languages such as Bengali and Gujarati which are more distant relatives. - All except Nepali are primarily spoken in (North) India - All except Sanksrit are alive languages Data Categorising them by pre-existing available NLP resources, we have: * Band 1 languages : Hindi, Marathi, Punjabi, Sindhi, Gujarati, Bengali, Nepali. These languages already have other large datasets available. Since Kavita Kosh focusses largely on Hindi-related languages, we may have very little data for these other languages in this particular dataset. * Band 2 languages: Bhojpuri, Magahi, Awadhi, Brajbhasha. These languages have growing interest and some datasets of a relatively small size as compared to Band 1 language resources. * Band 3 languages: All other languages in the collection are previously zero-resource languages. These are the languages for which this dataset is the most relevant. Script This dataset is entirely in Devanagari. Content in the case of languages not written in Devanagari (such as Bengali and Gujarati) has been transliterated by the Kavita Kosh Project. Format The data is segregated by language, and contains each folksong in a different JSON file.
- Rights:
- Creative Commons - Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0), http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/, and PUB
9. Plaintext Wikipedia dump 2018
- Creator:
- Rosa, Rudolf
- Publisher:
- Charles University, Faculty of Mathematics and Physics, Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics (UFAL)
- Type:
- text and corpus
- Subject:
- Wikipedia, text corpora, and monolingual corpus
- Language:
- Abkhazian, Achinese, Adyghe, Afrikaans, Akan, Tosk Albanian, Amharic, Old English (ca. 450-1100), Arabic, Official Aramaic (700-300 BCE), Aragonese, Egyptian Arabic, Assamese, Asturian, Atikamekw, Avaric, Aymara, South Azerbaijani, Azerbaijani, Bashkir, Bambara, Bavarian, Central Bikol, Belarusian, Bengali, Bislama, Banjar, Tibetan, Bosnian, Bishnupriya, Breton, Buginese, Bulgarian, Russia Buriat, Catalan, Min Dong Chinese, Cebuano, Czech, Chamorro, Chechen, Cherokee, Church Slavic, Chuvash, Cheyenne, Central Kurdish, Cornish, Corsican, Cree, Crimean Tatar, Kashubian, Welsh, Danish, German, Dinka, Dimli (individual language), Dhivehi, Lower Sorbian, Dzongkha, Modern Greek (1453-), English, Esperanto, Estonian, Basque, Ewe, Extremaduran, Faroese, Persian, Fijian, Finnish, French, Arpitan, Northern Frisian, Western Frisian, Fulah, Friulian, Gagauz, Gan Chinese, Scottish Gaelic, Irish, Galician, Gilaki, Manx, Goan Konkani, Gothic, Guarani, Gujarati, Hakka Chinese, Haitian, Hausa, Hawaiian, Serbo-Croatian, Hebrew, Herero, Fiji Hindi, Hindi, Hiri Motu, Croatian, Upper Sorbian, Hungarian, Armenian, Igbo, Ido, Inuktitut, Interlingue, Iloko, Interlingua (International Auxiliary Language Association), Indonesian, Inupiaq, Icelandic, Italian, Jamaican Creole English, Javanese, Lojban, Japanese, Kara-Kalpak, Kabyle, Kalaallisut, Kannada, Kashmiri, Georgian, Kanuri, Kazakh, Kabardian, Kabiyè, Khmer, Kikuyu, Kinyarwanda, Kirghiz, Komi-Permyak, Komi, Kongo, Korean, Karachay-Balkar, Kölsch, Kurdish, Ladino, Lao, Latin, Latvian, Lak, Lezghian, Ligurian, Limburgan, Lingala, Lithuanian, Lombard, Northern Luri, Latgalian, Luxembourgish, Ganda, Literary Chinese, Marshallese, Maithili, Malayalam, Marathi, Moksha, Eastern Mari, Minangkabau, Macedonian, Malagasy, Maltese, Mongolian, Maori, Western Mari, Malay (macrolanguage), Creek, Mirandese, Burmese, Erzya, Mazanderani, Min Nan Chinese, Neapolitan, Nauru, Navajo, Ndonga, Low German, Nepali (macrolanguage), Newari, Dutch, Norwegian Nynorsk, Norwegian, Novial, Pedi, Nyanja, Occitan (post 1500), Livvi, Oriya (macrolanguage), Oromo, Ossetian, Pangasinan, Pampanga, Panjabi, Papiamento, Picard, Pennsylvania German, Pfaelzisch, Pitcairn-Norfolk, Pali, Piemontese, Western Panjabi, Pontic, Polish, Portuguese, Pushto, Quechua, Vlax Romani, Romansh, Romanian, Rusyn, Rundi, Macedo-Romanian, Russian, Sango, Yakut, Sanskrit, Sicilian, Scots, Samogitian, Sinhala, Slovak, Slovenian, Northern Sami, Samoan, Shona, Sindhi, Somali, Southern Sotho, Spanish, Albanian, Sardinian, Sranan Tongo, Serbian, Swati, Saterfriesisch, Sundanese, Swahili (macrolanguage), Swedish, Silesian, Tahitian, Tamil, Tatar, Tulu, Telugu, Tama (Colombia), Tetum, Tajik, Tagalog, Thai, Tigrinya, Tonga (Tonga Islands), Tok Pisin, Tswana, Tsonga, Turkmen, Tumbuka, Turkish, Twi, Tuvinian, Udmurt, Uighur, Ukrainian, Urdu, Uzbek, Venetian, Venda, Veps, Vietnamese, Vlaams, Volapük, Võro, Waray (Philippines), Walloon, Wolof, Wu Chinese, Kalmyk, Xhosa, Mingrelian, Yiddish, Yoruba, Yue Chinese, Zeeuws, Zhuang, Chinese, Zulu, and Dotyali
- Description:
- Wikipedia plain text data obtained from Wikipedia dumps with WikiExtractor in February 2018. The data come from all Wikipedias for which dumps could be downloaded at [https://dumps.wikimedia.org/]. This amounts to 297 Wikipedias, usually corresponding to individual languages and identified by their ISO codes. Several special Wikipedias are included, most notably "simple" (Simple English Wikipedia) and "incubator" (tiny hatching Wikipedias in various languages). For a list of all the Wikipedias, see [https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/List_of_Wikipedias]. The script which can be used to get new version of the data is included, but note that Wikipedia limits the download speed for downloading a lot of the dumps, so it takes a few days to download all of them (but one or a few can be downloaded fast). Also, the format of the dumps changes time to time, so the script will probably eventually stop working one day. The WikiExtractor tool [http://medialab.di.unipi.it/wiki/Wikipedia_Extractor] used to extract text from the Wikipedia dumps is not mine, I only modified it slightly to produce plaintext outputs [https://github.com/ptakopysk/wikiextractor].
- Rights:
- Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0), http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/, and PUB
10. Sanskrit Heritage Site
- Type:
- toolService
- Language:
- Sanskrit
- Description:
- Hypertext encyclopedia of Indian Culture, arranged according to Sanskrit entries. The site "also gives access to automated lexical and grammatical resources for Sanskrit".
- Rights:
- Not specified
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