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Part of speech tagging for Arabic
Natural Language Engineering, 2011AbstractThis paper presents an investigation of part of speech (POS) tagging for Arabic as it occurs naturally, i.e. unvocalized text (without diacritics). We also do not assume any prior tokenization, although this was used previously as a basis for POS tagging. Arabic is a morphologically complex language, i.e.
SANDRA KÜBLER, EMAD MOHAMED
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Part of speech tagging for Polish
Poznan Studies in Contemporary Linguistics, 2019Abstract In this paper we discuss the current state of the art in part-of-speech tagging for Polish. We introduce the problem of POS tagging and point out the key issues in tagging inflected languages, which make this task more difficult in the case of Polish than e.g. English.
Katarzyna Krasnowska-Kieraś +1 more
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Corpus based part-of-speech tagging
International Journal of Speech Technology, 2016In natural language processing, a crucial subsystem in a wide range of applications is a part-of-speech (POS) tagger, which labels (or classifies) unannotated words of natural language with POS labels corresponding to categories such as noun, verb or adjective.
Chengyao Lv +3 more
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Software-specific part-of-speech tagging
Proceedings of the 31st Annual ACM Symposium on Applied Computing, 2016Part-of-speech (POS) tagging performance degrades on out-of-domain data due to the lack of domain knowledge. Software engineering knowledge, embodied in textual documentations, bug reports and online forum discussions, is expressed in natural language, but is full of domain terms, software entities and software-specific informal languages.
Deheng Ye +3 more
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Unsupervised Part-of-Speech Tagging
2011In this chapter, homogeneity with respect to syntactic word classes (partsof- speech, POS) is aimed at. The method presented in this section is called unsupervised POS-tagging, as its application results in corpus annotation in a comparable way to what POS-taggers provide.
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Part-of-Speech Tagging Using Rules
2014We saw that looking up a word in a lexicon or carrying out a morphological analysis on a word can leave it with an ambiguous part of speech. The word chair, which can be assigned two tags, noun or verb, is an example of ambiguity. It is a noun in the phrase a chair, and a verb in to chair a session.
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Part-of-speech tagging of building codes empowered by deep learning and transformational rules
Advanced Engineering Informatics, 2021Jiansong Zhang
exaly
Part-of-Speech Tagging with Rule-Based Data Preprocessing and Transformer
Electronics (Switzerland), 2022Hongwei Li
exaly

