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  2. Part of speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Part_of_speech

    English words are not generally marked as belonging to one part of speech or another; this contrasts with many other European languages, which use inflection more extensively, meaning that a given word form can often be identified as belonging to a particular part of speech and having certain additional grammatical properties.

  3. Grammatical gender - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_gender

    The parts of speech affected by gender agreement, the circumstances in which it occurs, ... The natural gender of a noun, pronoun or noun phrase is a gender to which ...

  4. Part-of-speech tagging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Part-of-speech_tagging

    Part-of-speech tagging is harder than just having a list of words and their parts of speech, because some words can represent more than one part of speech at different times, and because some parts of speech are complex. This is not rare—in natural languages (as opposed to many artificial languages), a large percentage of word-forms are ...

  5. Brown Corpus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_Corpus

    This ground-breaking new dictionary, which first appeared in 1969, was the first dictionary to be compiled using corpus linguistics for word frequency and other information. The initial Brown Corpus had only the words themselves, plus a location identifier for each. Over the following several years part-of-speech tags were applied.

  6. English grammar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_grammar

    English parts of speech are based on Latin and Greek parts of speech. [40] Some English grammar rules were adopted from Latin, for example John Dryden is thought to have created the rule no sentences can end in a preposition because Latin cannot end sentences in prepositions.

  7. Outline of natural language processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Outline_of_natural...

    Part-of-speech tagging – given a sentence, determines the part of speech for each word. Many words, especially common ones, can serve as multiple parts of speech . For example, "book" can be a noun ("the book on the table") or verb ("to book a flight"); "set" can be a noun , verb or adjective ; and "out" can be any of at least five different ...

  8. Lemmatization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lemmatization

    In many languages, words appear in several inflected forms. For example, in English, the verb 'to walk' may appear as 'walk', 'walked', 'walks' or 'walking'. The base form, 'walk', that one might look up in a dictionary, is called the lemma for the word. The association of the base form with a part of speech is often called a lexeme of the word.

  9. Gender in English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_in_English

    Many words in modern English refer specifically to people or animals of a particular sex. [28] An example of an English word that has retained gender-specific spellings is the noun-form of blond/blonde, with the former being masculine and the latter being feminine. This distinction is retained primarily in British English.