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  2. Annotation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annotation

    Annotated bibliographies add commentary on the relevance or quality of each source, in addition to the usual bibliographic information that merely identifies the source. Students use Annotation not only for academic purposes, but interpreting their own thoughts, feelings, and emotions. [3] Sites such as Scalar and Omeka are sites that students use.

  3. Text annotation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_annotation

    Text annotations can serve a variety of functions for both private and public reading and communication practices. In their article "From the Margins to the Center: The Future of Annotation," scholars Joanna Wolfe and Christine Neuwirth identify four primary functions that text annotations commonly serve in the modern era, including: (1)"facilitat[ing] reading and later writing tasks," which ...

  4. Annotated bibliography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annotated_bibliography

    An annotated bibliography is a bibliography that gives a summary of each of the entries. [1] The purpose of annotations is to provide the reader with a summary and an evaluation of each source. Each summary should be a concise exposition of the source's central idea(s) and give the reader a general idea of the source's content.

  5. Annotated edition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annotated_edition

    An annotated edition is a literary work where marginal comments have been added to explain, interpret, or illuminate words, phrases, themes, or other elements of the text. The annotated edition is often something pursued by historical or literary scholars, as a secular parallel to exegesis annotations of the Bible .

  6. Text corpus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_corpus

    An example of annotating a corpus is part-of-speech tagging, or POS-tagging, in which information about each word's part of speech (verb, noun, adjective, etc.) is added to the corpus in the form of tags. Another example is indicating the lemma (base) form of each word.

  7. Treebank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treebank

    A notable example of deep semantic annotation is the Groningen Meaning Bank, developed at the University of Groningen and annotated using Discourse Representation Theory. An example of a shallow semantic treebank is PropBank , which provides annotation of verbal propositions and their arguments, without attempting to represent every word in the ...

  8. Web annotation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_annotation

    target (the element being annotated, e.g., a web document or a part of it), body (the content of the annotation, e.g., a string value), and; annotation (the element that serves to relate body and target of an annotation) Fig. 1. Basic view on the Web Annotation data model. The body can be a literal value or structured content (a URI).

  9. Template:Annotated image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Annotated_image

    For example, nl:Sjabloon:Zijbalk mariene extincties, the Dutch version of Template:Annotated image/Extinction, is widely used. Examples Template:Annotated image/Extinction