Title: Kuu-uurija t
1- "Kuu-uurija töö-öö jää-äärel"
- "The moon explorer's worknight on the edge of the
ice".
2Databases
- Session 2, April 24th, 2009
3Examples of typological databases
- Databases of special projects, e.g. Northwest
Iranian Project - Atlas of Pidgin and Creole Language Structures
(APiCS) - The World Atlas of Language Structures - WALS
4ONLINE TYPOLOGICAL DATABASES
- The Universals Archive ( what you can get out of
databases) - http//typo.uni-konstanz.de/archive/intro/
- Das grammatische Raritätenkabinett ( what you
rarely find in databases) - http//typo.uni-konstanz.de/rara/intro/
- The World Atlas of Language Structures Online
- http//wals.info/index
- Language Typology Resource Center
- http//www.lotschool.nl/Research/ltrc/
- The Typological Database System Project
- http//languagelink.let.uu.nl/tds/index.html
- http//www.hum.uva.nl/TDS/
5- Language Typology Database (Caen)
- http//www.unicaen.fr/typo_langues/index.php?malan
ggb - Autotyp (Leipzig Berkeley)
- http//www.uni-leipzig.de/autotyp/
- Pavia Typological Database
- http//www-1.unipv.it/paviatyp/
- UPSID UCLA Phonological Segment Inventory
Database (by Ian Maddieson and Kristin Precoda) - http//www.linguistics.ucla.edu/faciliti/sales/sof
tware.htm - http//www.langmaker.com/upsidlanguages.htm
- http//web.phonetik.uni-frankfurt.de/upsid
(Henning Reetz'sUPSID interface) - StressTyp (Leiden)
- http//stresstyp.leidenuniv.nl/
6- XTone Cross-Linguistic Tonal Database (Berkeley)
- http//xtone.linguistics.berkeley.edu/index.php
- Metathesis Database (Ohio State)
- http//www.ling.ohio-state.edu/ehume/metathesis/
- The World Color Survey (Berkeley)
- http//www.icsi.berkeley.edu/wcs/
- The Surrey Morphology Group Databases
- http//www.smg.surrey.ac.uk/
- Graz Database on Reduplication
- http//reduplication.uni-graz.at/redup/
7- Matthew Dryer's Typological Database
- http//linguistics.buffalo.edu/people/faculty/drye
r/dryer/database - Plank, TYPOLOGY Reading List 64
- Intensifiers and Reflexives (FU Berlin)
- http//noam2.anglistik.fu-berlin.de/gast/tdir/
- Reciprocals (FU Berlin Utrecht)
- http//languagelink.let.uu.nl/burs/
- Focus Quantifiers (FU Berlin Antwerp)
- http//noam2.anglistik.fu-berlin.de/gast/fq/
- Numbers from 1 to 10 in over 5000 Languages
- http//www.zompist.com/numbers.shtml
8What is WALS?
- The World Atlas of Language Structures Online.
Ed. by Martin Haspelmath, Matthew S. Dryer, David
Gil Bernard Comrie. Munich Max Planck Digital
Library. Available online at http//wals.info/.
9WALS
- The World Atlas of Language Structures (2005)
contains 142 maps of the distribution of
phonological, grammatical and lexical phenomena
in the languages in the world
10The goal of WALS Online
- The goal of WALS is making information on the
structural diversity of the worlds languages
available to a large audience
11WALS Online. Characteristics
- WALS Online is a website consisting of five main
parts. The first part, Features, functions as an
index to the 142 maps and chapters of the
original edition. - The second part, Languages, provides multiple
interfaces to the languages that comprise the
WALS dataset. Languages are indexed by name, by
language family, and by country.
12WALS Online. Characteristics
- The third major part of WALS Online is a database
of all 5728 references for extracting the feature
values for the individual languages. - The fourth part of WALS Online is simply an index
of all the authors that coded features and wrote
the chapter texts, with links to the features.
13WALS Online. Characteristics
- The fifth part of the site is called Newsblog.
The link leads to messages in the category News
on a weblog that at the same time functions as a
place where comments pertaining to individual
Features/Chapters can be left. To that end, every
feature page includes a link discuss which
leads to a post on the blog.
14For the users of WALS Online
- For usability and extensibility, there are the
following facilities - a downloadable KML file (containing the
placemarks and feature values) is provided for
each page that includes a map. - the same data is also available in XML format.
- Every chapter contains a cite link
- Every chapter contains a link to a downloadable
PDF version
15Further issues
- The reference database is fully searchable, and
every single citation can also be exported to
various formats. - For further data on the database, for its current
challenges, how it can be used, and the question
of genealogical data, see - http//email.eva.mpg.de/cysouw/pdf/cysouwGRAZ.pdf
- http//email.eva.mpg.de/cysouw/pdf/cysouwCHALLENG
ES.pdf - http//email.eva.mpg.de/cysouw/pdf/cysouwKOENIG.p
df
16http//wals.info
- You will see the webpage of the WALS as I show it
to you - On that page, you click and scroll further on
your own!
17Typology bibliography for reference
- Comrie, Bernard, Language universals and
linguistic typology syntax and morphology.
Blackwell, Oxford, 1981. - Croft, William. Typology and universals, second
edition. (Cambridge Textbooks in Linguistics.)
Cambridge Cambridge University Press, 2003. - Dahl, Östen. The growth and maintenance of
linguistic complexity. Studies in Language
Companion Series. Amsterdam/Philadelphia John
Benjamins, 2004. - Dahl, Östen. Tense and aspect systems. New York
Basil Blackwell, 1985. - Martin Haspelmath, Matthew S. Dryer, David Gil,
Bernard Comrie (Eds.). The World Atlas of
Language Structures. Oxford Oxford University
Press, 1995. - Heine, Bernd and Kuteva, Tania. Language contact
and grammatical change (Cambridge Approaches to
Language Contact). Cambridge Cambridge
University Press, 2005. - For an additional list of readings, see the
following website - http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_typology
18On the Uralic languages
- Daniel Abondolo (ed.). 1988. The Uralic
languages (Routledge Language Family
Descriptions). London New York Routledge.
(choose one chapter/language, ca. 25 pp.)
19Internet links by Bernhard Wälchli
- Links to linguistic typology and some other
(maybe) useful links - ALT Association for Linguistic Typology
- http//www.lancs.ac.uk/fss/organisations/alt/
- (membership directory, grammar watch)
- Many typologists have some of their publications
on-line on their homepages. Some examples - Matthew Dryer http//linguistics.buffalo.edu/peopl
e/faculty/dryer/dryer/dryer.htm - Martin Haspelmath http//email.eva.mpg.de/haspelmt
/ - Östen Dahl http//www.ling.su.se/staff/oesten/inde
x.htm - Maria Koptjevskaja Tamm http//www.ling.su.se/staf
f/tamm/ - Michael Cysouw http//email.eva.mpg.de/cysouw/
- Balthasar Bickel http//www.uni-leipzig.de/bickel/
research/papers/index.html - Stephen Levinson http//www.mpi.nl/Members/Stephen
Levinson/Publications - Nick Enfield http//www.mpi.nl/Members/NickEnfield
/Publications
20continued
- The Leipzig Glossing Rules http//www.eva.mpg.de/l
ingua/files/morpheme.html - The Universals Archive http//ling.uni-konstanz.de
591/Universals/introduction.html - Das Grammatische Raritätenkabinett
http//ling.uni-konstanz.de591/universals/introra
ra.html - Surrey Morphology Group homepage
http//www.surrey.ac.uk/LIS/SMG/ - (Under Construction) Linguipedia
- http//lingweb.eva.mpg.de/confer/wiki/index.php/Ma
in_Page - Questionnaires http//lingweb.eva.mpg.de/fieldtool
s/tools.htmquestionnaires - The Ethnologue (An encyclopedic reference work
cataloging all of the worlds 6,912 known - living languages)
- http//www.ethnologue.com/
- The Rosetta Project Building an Archive of ALL
documented human languages - http//www.rosettaproject.org/archive/
- Dictionaries http//www.yourdictionary.com/languag
es.html - Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics in
Nijmegen (with hopefully more of their stuff on- - line in the future)
- http//www.mpi.nl/
- Library Hyper-Catalogue (Germany and some other
countries) - http//www.ubka.uni-karlsruhe.de/kvk.html
- Book reviews http//linguistlist.org/pubs/reviews
/browse-by-pub1.html
21Best short description on Estonian
- http//how-to-learn-any-language.com/forum/forum_p
osts.asp?TID12437getlast
22About the tree by Michael Cysouw
- Based on the data of the WALS in April 2009
- Using the program SplitsTree -- a popular program
for inferring phylogenetic trees or, more
generally, phylogenetic networks from various
types of data such as a sequence alignment, a
distance matrix or a set of trees. According to
its developers, SplitsTree uses published methods
such as split decomposition neighbor-net,
consensus network, super networks methods or
methods for computing hybridization or simple
recombination networks. - Source http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SplitsTree
- A phylogenetic tree or evolutionary tree is a
tree showing the evolutionary relationships among
various biological species or other entities that
are believed to have a common ancestor. In a
phylogenetic tree, each node with descendants
represents the most recent common ancestor of the
descendants, and the edge lengths in some trees
correspond to time estimates. Each node is called
a taxonomic unit. Internal nodes are generally
called hypothetical taxonomic units (HTUs) as
they cannot be directly observed. - Source http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phylogenetic_t
ree
23- Rokonszenv (NyTI)
- http//fu.nytud.hu/
- http//fu.nytud.hu/nyk.htm
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26http//www.eki.ee/murded/fonoteek/
- http//www.eki.ee/murded/fonoteek/index.php?leht3
haldusLiivi
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29http//kaino.kotus.fi/cgi-bin/julk1/termit.cgi
30www.keeletehnoloogia.ee
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33http//www.cl.ut.ee/korpused/kasutajaliides/
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35http//eelex.eki.ee/shslogin.htm
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37http//www.keeleveeb.ee/
38Filosoft freeware
- http//www.filosoft.ee/
-
- contains several useful language tools for
Estonian
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40http//www.eki.ee/
- Many electronic dictionaries, language resources
can be found at the website of the Institute of
the Estonian Language www.eki.ee - Online reference grammar of Estonian
- http//www.eki.ee/books/ekk07/
41EKI resources
- Some exampleshttp//www.eki.ee/dict/http//www.
eki.ee/corpus/http//www.eki.ee/knab/http//www.
eki.ee/termin/Linguistic software
http//www.eki.ee/tarkvara/Help in language
http//www.eki.ee/keeleabi/The corpus of
emotional speech http//urve.eki.ee5000/Open
for public dictionaries of EELexThe official
spelling and meanings, newer version
http//www.eki.ee/dict/qs2006/ The same
dictionary, complex queries http//www.eki.ee/dic
t/QS2006.tegemisel/full.htmlIn autumn 2009, the
Monolingual dictionary will be made public. - The basis for Estonian-X dictionaries, public
version http//exsa.eki.ee/
42Keelevara
- Most electronic dictionaries can be found at
- http//www.keelevara.ee/
- http//www.keelevara.ee/login/
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51Instructions for using the parser(Házi feladat)
- 1.Download the parser (author of this parser
Kaili Müürisep) from the following website
www.ut.ee/kaili/nptool/Oktoober.zip - 2. Having unpacked the parser, you need to start
the program by clicking on the icon that is
indicated with blue highlight on the follolwing
slide. - 3. Copy the text you need to analyze in the upper
window and see the solution in the lower one.
Dont panic, it looks more complicated than it
is!
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53Missugused on eestlased?
- LA
-
- Missugused
- mis_suguned //_P_ inter rel pl nom cap //
CLB _at_SUBJ _at_PRD - on
- ole0 //_V_ main indic pres ps3 pl ps af
FinV Intr // _at_FMV - eestlased
- eestlaned //_S_ com pl nom // _at_SUBJ _at_PRD
- ?
- ? //_Z_ Int //
- LL
-
54Other linguistic corpora
- http//www.murre.ut.ee/vakkur/Gooti/pildid.htm
- http//www.murre.ut.ee/vakkur/Korpused/korpused.ht
m - http//www.murre.ut.ee/vakkur/Gooti/Originaal/Kiri
.jpg.htm
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57Homework
- Go through the WALS maps we discussed in the
previous session and the maps number 49, 65, 68,
77, 95, 112, 121, 122 - See what they contain and lack about Estonian and
your language and DOCUMENT your findings in
writing. - Look at the websites and answer the questions on
my slides of the first session.
58Summary
- This talk introduced the World Atlas of
Linguistic Structures - And briefly mentioned other linguistic databases,
typological or not - Focused a bit more on Estonian language resources
that are available on the internet