Dictionary Record
A Dictionary Record is a dictionary item that is a lexical record, a definitional record, and a syntactic role record for some vocabulary item.
- AKA: Dictionary Entry, Dictionary Word Record, Dictionary Word Description.
- Context:
- It must contain a Dictionary Entry Headword, e.g. “1alone …adj”, or “content … pred. adjective & noun3"
- It must contain a Dictionary Entry Definition, e.g. “... 5 A small enclosed receptable for money. Chiefly in piggy bank
S.V. PIGGY
nounM20
. 6 A reserve of something (e.g. blood, data) stored for future use; a place holding this.M20
. I. Asimov The time would come when unfretilised ova could be stored in banks at ..." - It must contain one or more Part of Speech Roles.
- It can (typically) be a member of a Dictionary Database.
- It can have an Etymology/Etymology Description/Etymological Word Record.
- It can have a Pronunciation/Pronunciation Description.
- …
- Example(s):
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/wolf
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/batter
- http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/during
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/the
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/chat
- http://de.wiktionary.org/wiki/Hund
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/real_time
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/John_Doe#ProperNoun
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Shorter_Oxford_English_Dictionary#Proper_noun
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/ambulate, Intransitive Verb.
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/ambulates, Third-person singular, Simple Present Indicative Form.
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/ambulated, Simple Past Tense a Past Participle.
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/ambulating, Present Participle.
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/ex-#Prefix
- http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/-s#Suffix_2
- Counter-Example(s):
- a Dictionary Entry, such as:
de•clen•sion \dɪˈklen.ʃən\, noun [MiddleEnglish declenson, modification of MiddleFrench declinaison, from Latin declination-, declinatio grammatical inflection, turning aside, from declinare to inflect, turn aside] (15c)
,
1 a: noun, adjective, or pronoun inflection especially in some prescribed order of the forms
1b : a class of nouns or adjectives having the same type of inflectional forms
2 : a falling of or away : deteriortion
3:descentslope
– declensional \-ˈklen.ʃənəl\, adj - a Glossary Item.
- a Thesaurus Word Record, such as http://thesaurus.reference.com/browse/wolf
- an Encyclopedia Record, such as http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reference
- a Definitional Search, such as http://www.google.com/search?q=define%3Awolf
- a Dictionary Entry, such as:
- See: Lexical Database Record, Encyclopedia Article, Thesaurus Record, Glossary Record, Word Sense Record.
References
2008
- (Masse et al., 2008) ⇒ Blondin Masse, A, G. Chicoisne, Y. Gargouri, Stevan Harnad, O. Picard, and O. Marcotte. (2008). “How Is Meaning Grounded in Dictionary Definitions?.” In: TextGraphs-3 Workshop, 22nd International Conference on Computational Linguistics (Coling 2008).
- QUOTE: At its most basic level, a 'dictionary is a set of associated pairs: a word and its definition, along with some disambiguating parameters. The word to be defined, [math]\displaystyle{ w }[/math], is called the definiendum (plural: definienda) while the finite nonempty set of words that defines w, d_w, is called the set of definientes of [math]\displaystyle{ w }[/math] (singular: definiens). [In the context of this mathematical analysis, we will use “word” to mean a finite string of uninterrupted letters having some associated meaning.]
Each dictionary entry accordingly consists of a definiendum [math]\displaystyle{ w }[/math] followed by its set of definientes d_w. A dictionary D then consists of a finite set of pairs (w, d_w) where [math]\displaystyle{ w }[/math] is a word and d_w = (w_1, w_2,..., w_n), where [math]\displaystyle{ n }[/math] >= 1, is its definition, satisfying the property that for all (w', d_w') in D and for all d in d_w, there exists (w'; d_w') in D such that d = w. A pair (w, d_w) is called an entry of D. In other words, a dictionary is a finite set of words, each of which is defined, and each of its defining words is likewise defined somewhere in the dictionary.
- QUOTE: At its most basic level, a 'dictionary is a set of associated pairs: a word and its definition, along with some disambiguating parameters. The word to be defined, [math]\displaystyle{ w }[/math], is called the definiendum (plural: definienda) while the finite nonempty set of words that defines w, d_w, is called the set of definientes of [math]\displaystyle{ w }[/math] (singular: definiens). [In the context of this mathematical analysis, we will use “word” to mean a finite string of uninterrupted letters having some associated meaning.]
2003
- (Sag et al., 2003) ⇒ Ivan A. Sag, Thomas Wasow, and Emily M. Bender. (2003). “Syntactic Theory: A Formal Introduction, 2nd edition." CSLI Publications.
- lexical entry Information about individual words [q.v.] that must be stipulated is put into the lexicon [q.v.] in the form of descriptions that we call lexical entries. They are ordered pairs, consisting of a phonological form (description) and partial feature structure description. Fully resolved lexical sequences [q.v.] consistent with lexical entries can serve as the INPUT values to lexical rules [q.v.].
- lexical rule Lexical rules are one of the mechanisms (along with the type type hierarchy [q.v.]) used to capture generalizations within the lexicon. Families of related words - such as the different inflectional forms of a verb - can be derived from a single lexical entry [q.v.] by means of lexical rules. We formalize lexical rules as a type of feature structure with features INPUT and OUTPUT. There are three sybtypes of lexical rules: derivational (relating lexemes [q.v.] to lexemes), inflectional (relation lexemes to words [q.v.]), and post-inflectional (relating words to words).
- lexicon The list of all words [q.v.] (or lexemes [q.v.]) of a language is called its 'lexicon'. The lexicon is the repository of all idiosyncratic information about particular words including syntactic, semantic, and phonological information. In some theories of grammar, the lexicon can also contain a great deal more systematic information organized by a type hierarchy [q.v.] and/or lexical rules.
2002
- (Fellbaum, 2002) ⇒ Christine Fellbaum. (2002). “On the Semantics of Troponymy.” In: The Semantics of Relationships: An Interdisciplinary. R. Green, C. Bean, and S. Myaeng (eds.). Dordrecht, Holland: Kluwer.
- The lexicon contains all those concepts to which speakers of a language attach a label (a word).
- If one examines the lexicalized concepts in relation to one another, it becomes clear that they differ in systematic ways that are characterizable in terms of similarities or contrasts. These consistent differentiations among concepts are what we call semantic relations.
- Relations are very real, though speakers may be unaware of them and may be unable to articulate them (as it the case with most metalinguistic knowledge). But there are situations when one must consciously confront semantic relations. Building a lexical resource presents such a situation.
- The structure of a lexical entry in a dictionary reflects the relatedness of words and concepts: The target word is usually defined in terms of related word and some differentiae.
- The super-/subordinate relation, or hyponymy (or hyperonymy or ISA) relation works well to characterize the meaning of nouns, as does meronymy, the part-whose relation.
- Defining meaning in terms of such relations reflects the paradigmatirc organization of the lexicon. Many dictionaries also supply syntagmatic relations between the target and other words by means of illustrative sentences. Syntagmatic relations constrain the contexts in which a word may be used and can be seen as a complementary way of representing speaker's lexical knowledge.
1998
- (Carter, 1998) ⇒ Ronald Carter. (1998). “Vocabulary: Applied Linguistic Perspectives; 2nd edition." Routledge.
- One theoretical notion which may help us to resolve some of the above problems is that of the lexeme. A lexeme is the abstract unit which underlies some of the variants we have observed in connection with 'words'. Thus BRING is the lexeme which underlies different grammatical variants: 'bring', 'brought', 'brings', 'bringing' which we can refer to as word-forms (note a lexeme is conventionally represented by upper-case letters and that quotation marks are used for its word-forms). Lexemes are the basic, contrasting units of vocabulary in a language. When we look up words in a dictionary we are looking up lexemes rather than words. That is, 'brought' and 'bringing' will be found under and entry for BRING. The lexeme BRING is an abstraction. It does not actually occur itself in texts. Instead, it realizes different word-forms. Thus, the word-form 'bring' is realized by the lexeme BRING; the lexeme GO realizes the word-form 'went'. In a diction each lexeme merits a separate entry or sub-entry.
- The term lexeme also embraces items which consist of more than one word-form. Into the category come lexical items such as multi-word verbs (to catch up on), phrasal verbs (to drop in) and idioms (kick the bucket). Here, KICK THE BUCKET is a lexeme and would appear a such in a single dictionary entry even though it is a three-word form. ...
- We can also see that the notion of lexeme helps us to represent the polysemy - or the existence of several meanings - in individual words: that, far (n.). “fair (adj. as in good, acceptable) and fair (adj. as in light in colour, expecially of hair), would have three different lexeme meanings for the same word-form. The same applies to the different meanings of lap … But there are numerous less clear-cut categories. For example, in the case of line (draw a line; rail line; clothes line) is the same surface form realized by one, two, or three separate underlying lexemes? And are the meanings of chair (professional appointment; seat) or paper (newspaper; academic lecture) or dressing (sauce; manure; bandages) specialization of the same basic lexeme or not.