Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matsuzaki, Kosuke, Taniguchi, Masaya, Inui, Kentaro, Sakaguchi, Keisuke
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.14411
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866914689153236992
author Matsuzaki, Kosuke
Taniguchi, Masaya
Inui, Kentaro
Sakaguchi, Keisuke
author_facet Matsuzaki, Kosuke
Taniguchi, Masaya
Inui, Kentaro
Sakaguchi, Keisuke
contents We introduce a Japanese Morphology dataset, J-UniMorph, developed based on the UniMorph feature schema. This dataset addresses the unique and rich verb forms characteristic of the language's agglutinative nature. J-UniMorph distinguishes itself from the existing Japanese subset of UniMorph, which is automatically extracted from Wiktionary. On average, the Wiktionary Edition features around 12 inflected forms for each word and is primarily dominated by denominal verbs (i.e., [noun] +suru (do-PRS)). Morphologically, this form is equivalent to the verb suru (do). In contrast, J-UniMorph explores a much broader and more frequently used range of verb forms, offering 118 inflected forms for each word on average. It includes honorifics, a range of politeness levels, and other linguistic nuances, emphasizing the distinctive characteristics of the Japanese language. This paper presents detailed statistics and characteristics of J-UniMorph, comparing it with the Wiktionary Edition. We release J-UniMorph and its interactive visualizer publicly available, aiming to support cross-linguistic research and various applications.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2402_14411
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle J-UniMorph: Japanese Morphological Annotation through the Universal Feature Schema
Matsuzaki, Kosuke
Taniguchi, Masaya
Inui, Kentaro
Sakaguchi, Keisuke
Computation and Language
We introduce a Japanese Morphology dataset, J-UniMorph, developed based on the UniMorph feature schema. This dataset addresses the unique and rich verb forms characteristic of the language's agglutinative nature. J-UniMorph distinguishes itself from the existing Japanese subset of UniMorph, which is automatically extracted from Wiktionary. On average, the Wiktionary Edition features around 12 inflected forms for each word and is primarily dominated by denominal verbs (i.e., [noun] +suru (do-PRS)). Morphologically, this form is equivalent to the verb suru (do). In contrast, J-UniMorph explores a much broader and more frequently used range of verb forms, offering 118 inflected forms for each word on average. It includes honorifics, a range of politeness levels, and other linguistic nuances, emphasizing the distinctive characteristics of the Japanese language. This paper presents detailed statistics and characteristics of J-UniMorph, comparing it with the Wiktionary Edition. We release J-UniMorph and its interactive visualizer publicly available, aiming to support cross-linguistic research and various applications.
title J-UniMorph: Japanese Morphological Annotation through the Universal Feature Schema
topic Computation and Language
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.14411