Comprehensive Arabic LEMmas is a lexicon covering a large list of Arabic lemmas and their corresponding inflected word forms (stems) with details (POS + Root). Each lexical entry represents a lemma followed by all its possible stems and each stem is enriched by its morphological features especially the root and the POS.
It is composed of 164,845 lemmas representing 7,200,918 stems, detailed as follow:
757 Arabic particles
2,464,631 verbal stems
4,735,587 nominal stems
The lexicon is provided as an LMF conformant XML-based file in UTF8 encoding, which represents about 1,22 Gb of data.
Citation:
– Namly Driss, Karim Bouzoubaa, Abdelhamid El Jihad, and Si Lhoussain Aouragh. “Improving Arabic Lemmatization Through a Lemmas Database and a Machine-Learning Technique.” In Recent Advances in NLP: The Case of Arabic Language, pp. 81-100. Springer, Cham, 2020.
CoNLL 2017 and 2018 shared tasks:
Multilingual Parsing from Raw Text to Universal Dependencies
This package contains the test data in the form in which they ware presented
to the participating systems: raw text files and files preprocessed by UDPipe.
The metadata.json files contain lists of files to process and to output;
README files in the respective folders describe the syntax of metadata.json.
For full training, development and gold standard test data, see
Universal Dependencies 2.0 (CoNLL 2017)
Universal Dependencies 2.2 (CoNLL 2018)
See the download links at http://universaldependencies.org/.
For more information on the shared tasks, see
http://universaldependencies.org/conll17/
http://universaldependencies.org/conll18/
Contents:
conll17-ud-test-2017-05-09 ... CoNLL 2017 test data
conll18-ud-test-2018-05-06 ... CoNLL 2018 test data
conll18-ud-test-2018-05-06-for-conll17 ... CoNLL 2018 test data with metadata
and filenames modified so that it is digestible by the 2017 systems.
An XML-based file containing the electronic version of al logha al arabia al moassira (Contemporary Arabic) dictionary. An Arabic monolingual dictionary accomplished by Ahmed Mukhtar Abdul Hamid Omar (deceased: 1424) with the help of a working group
This resource is a corpus containing 34k Moroccan Colloquial Arabic sentences collected from different sources. The sentences are written in Arabic letters. This resource can be useful in some NLP applications such as Language Identification.
We present DaMuEL, a large Multilingual Dataset for Entity Linking containing data in 53 languages. DaMuEL consists of two components: a knowledge base that contains language-agnostic information about entities, including their claims from Wikidata and named entity types (PER, ORG, LOC, EVENT, BRAND, WORK_OF_ART, MANUFACTURED); and Wikipedia texts with entity mentions linked to the knowledge base, along with language-specific text from Wikidata such as labels, aliases, and descriptions, stored separately for each language. The Wikidata QID is used as a persistent, language-agnostic identifier, enabling the combination of the knowledge base with language-specific texts and information for each entity. Wikipedia documents deliberately annotate only a single mention for every entity present; we further automatically detect all mentions of named entities linked from each document. The dataset contains 27.9M named entities in the knowledge base and 12.3G tokens from Wikipedia texts. The dataset is published under the CC BY-SA licence.
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.
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.