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  2. Word list - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_list

    Word frequency is known to have various effects (Brysbaert et al. 2011; Rudell 1993). Memorization is positively affected by higher word frequency, likely because the learner is subject to more exposures (Laufer 1997). Lexical access is positively influenced by high word frequency, a phenomenon called word frequency effect (Segui et al.).

  3. Google Books Ngram Viewer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Books_Ngram_Viewer

    The program can search for a word or a phrase, including misspellings or gibberish. [5] The n-grams are matched with the text within the selected corpus, and if found in 40 or more books, are then displayed as a graph. [6] The Google Books Ngram Viewer supports searches for parts of speech and wildcards. [6] It is routinely used in research. [7 ...

  4. General Service List - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Service_List

    BNL profiler is a revised word list for students learning English which overcomes the problems of treating the GSL and AWL as separate and distinct constructs. Other web-based vocabulary profilers include: OGTE (Online Graded Text Editor) provided free by Charles Browne and Rob Waring. The tool allows teachers and authors to analyze and edit ...

  5. Brown Corpus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brown_Corpus

    This corpus first set the bar for the scientific study of the frequency and distribution of word categories in everyday language use. Compiled by Henry Kučera and W. Nelson Francis at Brown University , in Rhode Island , it is a general language corpus containing 500 samples of English, totaling roughly one million words, compiled from works ...

  6. Zipf's law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipf's_law

    A log-log plot of word frequency in the English Wikipedia (27 November 2006). 'Most popular words are "the", "of" and "and", as expected. Zipf's law corresponds to the middle linear portion of the curve, roughly following the green ( ⁠ 1 / x ⁠ ) line, while the early part is closer to the magenta ( ⁠ 1 / √ x ⁠ ) line while the later ...

  7. Bag-of-words model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bag-of-words_model

    It disregards word order (and thus most of syntax or grammar) but captures multiplicity. The bag-of-words model is commonly used in methods of document classification where, for example, the (frequency of) occurrence of each word is used as a feature for training a classifier. [1] It has also been used for computer vision. [2]

  8. Most common words in English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Most_common_words_in_English

    Frequency analysis, the study of the frequency of letters or groups of letters; Letter frequencies; Oxford English Corpus; Swadesh list, a compilation of basic concepts for the purpose of historical-comparative linguistics; Zipf's law, a theory stating that the frequency of any word is inversely proportional to its rank in a frequency table

  9. tf–idf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tf–idf

    The inverse document frequency is a measure of how much information the word provides, i.e., how common or rare it is across all documents. It is the logarithmically scaled inverse fraction of the documents that contain the word (obtained by dividing the total number of documents by the number of documents containing the term, and then taking ...