Semantically significant patterns in dictionary definitions

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Abstract

Natural language processing systems need large lexicons containing explicit information about lexical-semantlc relationships, selection restrictions, and verb categories. Because the labor involved in constructing such lexicons by hand is overwhelming, we have been trying to construct lexical entries automatically from information available in the machine-readable version of Webst@r's ~@ve~h Col!eglate Dictionary. This work is rich in implicit information; the problem is to make it explicit. This paper describes methods for finding taxonomy and set-membership relationships, recognizing nouns that ordinarily represent human beings, and identifying active and stative verbs and adjectives.

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APA

Markowitz, J., Ahlswede, T., & Evens, M. (1986). Semantically significant patterns in dictionary definitions. In Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics (Vol. 1986-July, pp. 112–119). Association for Computational Linguistics (ACL). https://doi.org/10.3115/981131.981149

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