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WNGLOSS(7WN) |
WordNet™ |
WNGLOSS(7WN) |
wngloss - glossary of terms used in WordNet system
The WordNet Reference Manual consists of Unix-style manual pages divided
into sections as follows:
Section |
Description |
1 |
WordNet User Commands |
3 |
WordNet Library Functions |
5 |
WordNet File Formats |
7 |
Miscellaneous Information about WordNet |
The WordNet system consists of lexicographer files, code to convert these files
into a database, and search routines and interfaces that display information
from the database. The lexicographer files organize nouns, verbs, adjectives
and adverbs into groups of synonyms, and describe relations between synonym
groups. grind(1WN) converts the lexicographer files into a database
that encodes the relations between the synonym groups. The different
interfaces to the WordNet database utilize a common library of search routines
to display these relations. Note that the lexicographer files and
grind(1WN) program are not generally distributed.
Information in WordNet is organized around logical groupings called synsets.
Each synset consists of a list of synonymous words or collocations (eg.
"fountain pen", "take in"), and pointers
that describe the relations between this synset and other synsets. A word or
collocation may appear in more than one synset, and in more than one part of
speech. The words in a synset are grouped such that they are interchangeable
in some context.
Two kinds of relations are represented by pointers: lexical and
semantic. Lexical relations hold between semantically related word forms;
semantic relations hold between word meanings. These relations include (but
are not limited to) hypernymy/hyponymy (superordinate/subordinate),
antonymy, entailment, and meronymy/holonymy.
Nouns and verbs are organized into hierarchies based on the
hypernymy/hyponymy relation between synsets. Additional pointers are be used
to indicate other relations.
Adjectives are arranged in clusters containing head synsets and
satellite synsets. Each cluster is organized around antonymous pairs (and
occasionally antonymous triplets). The antonymous pairs (or triplets) are
indicated in the head synsets of a cluster. Most head synsets have one or
more satellite synsets, each of which represents a concept that is similar
in meaning to the concept represented by the head synset. One way to think
of the adjective cluster organization is to visualize a wheel, with a head
synset as the hub and satellite synsets as the spokes. Two or more wheels
are logically connected via antonymy, which can be thought of as an axle
between the wheels.
Pertainyms are relational adjectives and do not follow the
structure just described. Pertainyms do not have antonyms; the synset for a
pertainym most often contains only one word or collocation and a lexical
pointer to the noun that the adjective is "pertaining to".
Participial adjectives have lexical pointers to the verbs that they are
derived from.
Adverbs are often derived from adjectives, and sometimes have
antonyms; therefore the synset for an adverb usually contains a lexical
pointer to the adjective from which it is derived.
See wndb(5WN) for a detailed description of the database
files and how the data are represented.
Many terms used in the WordNet Reference Manual are unique to the WordNet
system. Other general terms have specific meanings when used in the WordNet
documentation. Definitions for many of these terms are given to help with the
interpretation and understanding of the reference manual, and in the use of
the WordNet system.
In following definitions word is used in place of word
or collocation.
- adjective cluster
- A group of adjective synsets that are organized around antonymous pairs or
triplets. An adjective cluster contains two or more head
synsets which represent antonymous concepts. Each head synset has
one or more satellite synsets.
- attribute
- A noun for which adjectives express values. The noun weight is an
attribute, for which the adjectives light and heavy express
values.
- base form
- The base form of a word or collocation is the form to which inflections
are added.
- basic synset
- Syntactically, same as synset. Term is used in wninput(5WN)
to help explain differences in entering synsets in lexicographer
files.
- collocation
- A collocation in WordNet is a string of two or more words, connected by
spaces or hyphens. Examples are: man-eating shark,
blue-collar, depend on, line of products. In the
database files spaces are represented as underscore (_)
characters.
- coordinate
- Coordinate terms are nouns or verbs that have the same
hypernym.
- cross-cluster pointer
- A semantic pointer from one adjective cluster to another.
- derivationally related forms
- Terms in different syntactic categories that have the same root form and
are semantically related.
- direct antonyms
- A pair of words between which there is an associative bond resulting from
their frequent co-occurrence. In adjective clusters, direct
antonyms appears only in head synsets.
- domain
- A topical classification to which a synset has been linked with a
CATEGORY, REGION or USAGE pointer.
- domain term
- A synset belonging to a topical class. A domain term is further identified
as being a CATEGORY_TERM, REGION_TERM or USAGE_TERM.
- entailment
- A verb X entails Y if X cannot be done unless
Y is, or has been, done.
- exception list
- Morphological transformations for words that are not regular and therefore
cannot be processed in an algorithmic manner.
- group
- Verb senses that similar in meaning and have been manually grouped
together.
- gloss
- Each synset contains gloss consisting of a definition and
optionally example sentences.
- head synset
- Synset in an adjective cluster containing at least one word that
has a direct antonym.
- holonym
- The name of the whole of which the meronym names a part. Y is a
holonym of X if X is a part of Y.
- hypernym
- The generic term used to designate a whole class of specific instances.
Y is a hypernym of X if X is a (kind of)
Y.
- hyponym
- The specific term used to designate a member of a class. X is a
hyponym of Y if X is a (kind of) Y.
- indirect antonym
- An adjective in a satellite synset that does not have a direct
antonym has an indirect antonyms via the direct antonym of the
head synset.
- instance
- A proper noun that refers to a particular, unique referent (as
distinguished from nouns that refer to classes). This is a specific form
of hyponym.
- lemma
- Lower case ASCII text of word as found in the WordNet database index
files. Usually the base form for a word or collocation.
- lexical pointer
- A lexical pointer indicates a relation between words in synsets (word
forms).
- lexicographer file
- Files containing the raw data for WordNet synsets, edited by
lexicographers, that are input to the grind program to generate a
WordNet database.
- lexicographer id (lex id)
- A decimal integer that, when appended onto lemma, uniquely
identifies a sense within a lexicographer file.
- monosemous
- Having only one sense in a syntactic category.
- meronym
- The name of a constituent part of, the substance of, or a member of
something. X is a meronym of Y if X is a part of
Y.
- part of speech
- WordNet defines "part of speech" as either noun, verb,
adjective, or adverb. Same as syntactic category.
- participial adjective
- An adjective that is derived from a verb.
- pertainym
- A relational adjective. Adjectives that are pertainyms are usually defined
by such phrases as "of or pertaining to" and do not have
antonyms. A pertainym can point to a noun or another pertainym.
- polysemous
- Having more than one sense in a syntactic category.
- polysemy count
- Number of senses of a word in a syntactic category, in WordNet.
- postnominal
- A postnominal adjective occurs only immediately following the noun that it
modifies.
- predicative
- An adjective that can be used only in predicate positions. If X is
a predicate adjective, it can only be used in such phrases as "it is
X" and never prenominally.
- prenominal
- An adjective that can occur only before the noun that it modifies: it
cannot be used predicatively.
- satellite synset
- Synset in an adjective cluster representing a concept that is
similar in meaning to the concept represented by its head
synset.
- semantic concordance
- A textual corpus (e.g. the Brown Corpus) and a lexicon (e.g. WordNet) so
combined that every substantive word in the text is linked to its
appropriate sense in the lexicon via a semantic tag.
- semantic tag
- A pointer from a word in a text file to a specific sense of that word in
the WordNet database. A semantic tag in a semantic concordance is
represented by a sense key.
- semantic pointer
- A semantic pointer indicates a relation between synsets (concepts).
- sense
- A meaning of a word in WordNet. Each sense of a word is in a different
synset.
- sense key
- Information necessary to find a sense in the WordNet database. A sense key
combines a lemma field and codes for the synset type, lexicographer
id, lexicographer file number, and information about a satellite's head
synset, if required. See senseidx(5WN) for a description of the
format of a sense key.
- subordinate
- Same as hyponym.
- superordinate
- Same as hypernym.
- synset
- A synonym set; a set of words that are interchangeable in some context
without changing the truth value of the preposition in which they are
embedded.
- troponym
- A verb expressing a specific manner elaboration of another verb. X
is a troponym of Y if to X is to Y in some
manner.
- unique beginner
- A noun synset with no superordinate.
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