Morphosyntactic variation in medieval Celtic languages : corpus-based approaches

Bibliographic Information

Morphosyntactic variation in medieval Celtic languages : corpus-based approaches

edited by Elliott Lash, Fangzhe Qiu, David Stifter

(Trends in linguistics, . Studies and monographs ; v. 346)

De Gruyter Mouton, c2020

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"The book is published open access"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. [339]-363) and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book showcases the state of the art in the corpus-based linguistics of medieval Celtic languages. Its chapters detail theoretical advances in analysing variation/change in the Celtic languages and computational tools necessary to process/analyse the data. Many contributions situate the Celtic material in the broader field of corpus-based diachronic linguistics. The application of computational methods to Celtic languages is in its infancy and this book is a first in medieval Celtic Studies, which has mainly concentrated on philological endeavours such as editorial and literary work. The Celtic languages represent a new frontier in the development of NLP tools because they pose special challenges, like complicated inflectional morphology with non-straightforward mappings between lemmata and attested forms, irregular orthography, and consonant mutations. With so much data available in non-electronic form and ongoing efforts to convert these data to computer-readable format, there is much room for the developing/testing of new tools. This books provides an overview of this process at a crucial time in the development of the field and aims to the data accessible to computational linguists with an interest in diachronic change.

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