The code-switching corpus consists of 5x30-minute conversations between four speakers (i.e. a total of 20 speakers). The speakers are bilingual speakers of Papiamento (a creole langauge spoken in the Dutch Antilles) and Dutch. In the course of their free conversations, they engage in code-switching, that is, they use both languages within the same utterance in systematic ways. The corpus is fully transcribed and glossed, coded for language and word class, in ELAN.
The Corpus NGT is a collection of data from deaf signers using Sign Language of the Netherlands (NGT). The data consist of recordings with multiple synchronised video cameras, accompanied by gloss and translation annotations.
The Prague family of annotated corpora has a new member, the Czech Academic Corpus version 2.0 (CAC 2.0). CAC 2.0 consists of 650,000 words from various 1970s and 1980s newspapers, magazines and radio and television broadcast transcripts manually annotated for morphology and syntax.
The presented Czech Named Entity Corpus 1.0 is the first publicly available corpus providing a large body of manually annotated named entities in Czech sentences, including a fine-grained classification. and 1ET101120503 (Integrace jazykových zdrojů za účelem extrakce informací z přirozených textů)