In this article, we introduce a new technique for constructing wide-coverage morphological lexica from large corpora and morphological knowledge, with an application to French. Basically, it relies on the idea that the existence of a hypothetical lemma can be guessed if several different words found in the corpus are best interpreted as morphological variants of this lemma. We first validated our technique by extracting verbs and adjectives on a general French corpus of 25 million words. Compared with other lexical resources available for French, our results are very satisfying, since we cover many words, often derived words, that are not always present in other lexica. Application of our algorithm to the acquisition of domain-specific adje...
International audienceIn this paper we describe our work on the development of a large-scale morphol...
proceedings of the 6th Décembrettes.International audienceThe paper presents a linguistic and comput...
Knowledge of morphologically derived words, as pro-vided for medical English by the UMLS Specialist ...
In this article, we introduce a new technique for constructing wide-coverage morphological lexica fr...
In this paper, we propose a semi-automatic methodology for acquiring a French SIMPLE lexicon based o...
International audienceThis paper presents a number of recent studies in French morphology which make...
Morphological knowledge, especially derivation and com-pounding, is extremely useful both for natura...
In a morphological lexicon, each entry combines a lemma with a specific inflection class, often de...
Colloque : Generative Approaches to the Lexicon, ParisInternational audienceThis paper describes an ...
International audienceWe present two approaches to automatically acquire morphologically related wor...
Medical words exhibit a rich and productive morphol-ogy. Beyond simple inflection, derivation and co...
10 pagesThe paper presents a linguistic and computational model aiming at making the morphological s...
In this paper, we introduce the Lefff, a freely available, accurate and large-coverage morphological...
This paper describes an original approach which aims at building a reference semantic lexicon for Fr...
Fiammetta Namer : Morphologic productivity, representativity and base complexity: the MoQuête system...
International audienceIn this paper we describe our work on the development of a large-scale morphol...
proceedings of the 6th Décembrettes.International audienceThe paper presents a linguistic and comput...
Knowledge of morphologically derived words, as pro-vided for medical English by the UMLS Specialist ...
In this article, we introduce a new technique for constructing wide-coverage morphological lexica fr...
In this paper, we propose a semi-automatic methodology for acquiring a French SIMPLE lexicon based o...
International audienceThis paper presents a number of recent studies in French morphology which make...
Morphological knowledge, especially derivation and com-pounding, is extremely useful both for natura...
In a morphological lexicon, each entry combines a lemma with a specific inflection class, often de...
Colloque : Generative Approaches to the Lexicon, ParisInternational audienceThis paper describes an ...
International audienceWe present two approaches to automatically acquire morphologically related wor...
Medical words exhibit a rich and productive morphol-ogy. Beyond simple inflection, derivation and co...
10 pagesThe paper presents a linguistic and computational model aiming at making the morphological s...
In this paper, we introduce the Lefff, a freely available, accurate and large-coverage morphological...
This paper describes an original approach which aims at building a reference semantic lexicon for Fr...
Fiammetta Namer : Morphologic productivity, representativity and base complexity: the MoQuête system...
International audienceIn this paper we describe our work on the development of a large-scale morphol...
proceedings of the 6th Décembrettes.International audienceThe paper presents a linguistic and comput...
Knowledge of morphologically derived words, as pro-vided for medical English by the UMLS Specialist ...