We address the problem of automatically processing collocations—a subclass of multi-word expressions characterized by a high degree of morphosyntactic flexibility—in the context of two major applications, namely, syntactic parsing and machine translation. We show that parsing and collocation identification are processes that are interrelated and that benefit from each other, inasmuch as syntactic information is crucial for acquiring collocations from corpora and, vice versa, collocational information can be used to improve parsing performance. Similarly, we focus on the interrelation between collocations and machine translation, highlighting the use of translation information for multilingual collocation identification, as well as the use of co...
This paper describes a system of terminological extraction capable of handling multi-word expression...
Identifying multiword expressions (MWEs) in a sentence in order to ensure their proper processing in...
The hypothesis that "everything we say may be in some degree idiomatic" and that "[...] there are af...
We address the problem of automatically processing collocations—a subclass of multi-word expressions...
Although multiword expressions (MWEs) have received an increasing amount of attention in the NLP com...
Identifying collocations in a sentence, in order to ensure their proper processing in subsequent app...
The paper describes an attempt at investigating some collocational properties of translated language...
This paper reports on the development of a collocation extraction system that is designed within a c...
An impressive amount of work was devoted over the past few decades to collocation extraction. The st...
This paper describes a system of termino-logical extraction capable of handling multi-word expressio...
The advent of the computer era, which enabled the development of large text corpora and of sophistic...
This paper reports on the development of a collocation extraction system that is designed within a c...
UID/LIN/03213/2013 SFRH/BD/85737/2012As a linguistic phenomenon, collocations have been the subject ...
Collocations (typical word associations like "to meet a condition", "to believe firmly", "highly con...
In spite of the success of phraseology across a range of linguistic disciplines such as corpus lingu...
This paper describes a system of terminological extraction capable of handling multi-word expression...
Identifying multiword expressions (MWEs) in a sentence in order to ensure their proper processing in...
The hypothesis that "everything we say may be in some degree idiomatic" and that "[...] there are af...
We address the problem of automatically processing collocations—a subclass of multi-word expressions...
Although multiword expressions (MWEs) have received an increasing amount of attention in the NLP com...
Identifying collocations in a sentence, in order to ensure their proper processing in subsequent app...
The paper describes an attempt at investigating some collocational properties of translated language...
This paper reports on the development of a collocation extraction system that is designed within a c...
An impressive amount of work was devoted over the past few decades to collocation extraction. The st...
This paper describes a system of termino-logical extraction capable of handling multi-word expressio...
The advent of the computer era, which enabled the development of large text corpora and of sophistic...
This paper reports on the development of a collocation extraction system that is designed within a c...
UID/LIN/03213/2013 SFRH/BD/85737/2012As a linguistic phenomenon, collocations have been the subject ...
Collocations (typical word associations like "to meet a condition", "to believe firmly", "highly con...
In spite of the success of phraseology across a range of linguistic disciplines such as corpus lingu...
This paper describes a system of terminological extraction capable of handling multi-word expression...
Identifying multiword expressions (MWEs) in a sentence in order to ensure their proper processing in...
The hypothesis that "everything we say may be in some degree idiomatic" and that "[...] there are af...