Image annotation tool is a web application that allows users to mark zones of interest in an image. These zones are then converted to TEI P5 code snippet that can be used in your document to connect the image and the text. This tool was developed to help students and teachers at the Faculty of Arts, Charles University to mark and annotate images of manuscripts.
The contribution includes the data frame and the R script (Markdown file) belonging to the paper "Who Benefits from an Imperative? Assessment of Directives on a Benefit-Scale" submitted to the journal Pragmatics on September 2024.
The book [1] contains spelling rules classified into ten categories, each category containing many rules. This XML file presents our implemented rules classified with six category tags, as is the case in the book. We implemented 24 rules since the remaining rules require diacritical and morphological analysis that are outside the scope of our present work.
References:
[1] Dr.Fahmy Al-Najjar, 'Spelling rules in ten easy lessons', Al Kawthar Library,2008. Available: https://www.alukah.net/library/0/53498/%D9%82%D9%88%D8%A7%D8%B9%D8%AF-%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%A5%D9%85%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%A1-%D9%81%D9%8A-%D8%B9%D8%B4%D8%B1%D8%A9-%D8%AF%D8%B1%D9%88%D8%B3-%D8%B3%D9%87%D9%84%D8%A9-pdf/
This corpus consists of full transcriptions of both Democratic and Republican 2016 presidential candidate debates, with a special focus on the idiolects of Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump against the background of the speeches of other candidates for the post of president of the United States.
The transcriptions are sourced from the American Presidency Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara. Any use of the material requires a prior and explicit written permission by the project administrator (contact policy@ucsb.edu). This corpus material is now being shared with their kindly permission.
Indonesian text corpus from web. Crawling done by SpiderLing in 2017. Filtering by JusText and Onion (see http://corpus.tools/ for details). Tagged and lemmatized by MorphInd (http://septinalarasati.com/morphind/).
Environmental impact assessment (EIA) is the formal process used to predict the environmental consequences of a plan. We present a rule-based extraction system to mine Czech EIA documents. The extraction rules work with a set of documents enriched with morphological information and manually created vocabularies of terms supposed to be extracted from the documents, e.g. basic information about the project (address, ID company, ...), data on the impacts and outcomes (waste substances, endangered species, ...), a final opinion. The documents Notice of Intent contains the section BI2 with the information on the scope (capacity) of the plan.
The segment captures the reverential act of depositing the remains of forty-two Italian legionnaires who were executed for deserting from the Austrian army to join the Italian legions in the summer of 1918. The coffins with their bodies were temporarily placed at the military cemetery in Milovice and later unearthed and transported to Prague, where a day-long funeral ceremony was held on 24 April 1921. The camera focuses on military troops lined up on Old Town Square and Italian and Czechoslovak officers. The ceremony is witnessed by Minister of National Defence Otakar Husák and the General Inspector of the Czechoslovak Army, the poet Josef Svatopluk Machar. Shots of speeches given by Josef Rotnágl, a member of the Revolutionary National Assembly, and General Otakar Husák, who delivers a message from the President of Czechoslovakia (silent). This is followed by speeches given by the Senator of the National Assembly, Václav Klofáč, Deputy of the National Assembly František Udržal, and the President of the Italian-Czechoslovak League, Prince Pietro Lanza di Scalea, whose speech is interpreted by diplomat Jan Šeba. Shot of the commander of the funeral procession, General Karel Voženílek, on horseback. General Otakar Husák and Josef Svatopluk Machar receive Italian military honours. After the solemn ceremony on Old Town Square, the coffins with the remains of the executed legionnaires were taken to the military burial ground at Olšany Cemetery.
Segment of the Český zvukový týdeník Aktualita (Czech Aktualita Sound Newsreel) 1939 No. 20 captures the solemn event of the interment of the remains of poet Karel Hynek Mácha at Vyšehrad Cemetery in Prague on 7 May 1939. Mourners walk past the coffin with the poet´s remains in the Pantheon of the National Museum. The large funeral procession starts on Wenceslaus Square and continues along National Street, Masaryk Embankment and narrow alleys to Vyšehrad. The streets are lined with crowds of people. The film footage is accompanied by the recitation of the fourth canto of the poem May delivered by Václav Vydra Jr., an actor of the National Theatre. This is followed by images from the solemn ceremony in the Slavín Tomb at Vyšehrad Cemetery. The coffin with the poet´s remains is lowered into the grave. Rudolf Medek bids farewell to Mácha on the behalf of Czech writers. Actor Eduard Kohout recites 7 May 1939, a poem by Josef Hora. People walk past the grave, placing flowers on it, some crossing themselves. The mourners include composer Vítězslav Novák, painter Max Švabinský, Minister of Education and National Enlightenment Jan Kapras and the Mayor of Prague Otakar Klapka.