Ontology - olia-top
- Abstract
- Top categories of the OLiA Reference Model 2010/01/19 created 2010/04/08 removed NPFunction (=> SyntacticRole) 2010/04/13 added MorphologicalProcess, MorphologicalFeature, DiscourseFeature, AnimacyFeature, ReferentTypeFeature, RegisterFeature, UsageAndFrequencyFeature 2010/04/14 validation, PossessiveFeature removed (see olia:hasOwnerNumber), moved olia:NarrativeType and olia:PolarityFeature here 2010/04/15 additions in accordance to the PTB Bracketing Guidelines: NullElement, SentenceTypeFeature (Santorini 1991, Bies et al. 1995) 2010/11/30 added TopologicalField in accordance to the TueDa-D/Z annotation guidelines (Telljohann et al. 2009) 2011/07/29 replace url by purl 2011/07/31 added ProximityFeature 2011/08/03 added SpecificityFeature 2011/08/04 SubordTypeFeature, CoordTypeFeature deprecated, added NumeralAgreementClass 2011/08/11 StrengthFeature recast as MorphologicalFeature rather than MorphosyntacticFeature 2011/08/15 EmphasisFeature added 2011/08/15 PhonologicalProcess added (for Elision and Apocope, formerly both classified as MorphologicalProcess) 2013/06/25 EvidentialityFeature, ClusivityFeature added (from ISOcat), intensity as new label to EmphasisFeature LexicalRelation for labels for relations holding between lexemes 2013/06/27 AgreementFeature (from ISOcat, as superclass of NominalAgreementClass, Person, Gender, Number; not as a relation between words) 2013/06/28 EvaluativeFeature (for ISOcat PreferredEvaluative and PejorativeEvaluative), ModalityFeature (Modality and Mood distinction revised) 2016/04/18 fixed minor validity warnings Christian Chiarcos, chiarcos@uni-potsdam.de
- Latest Version
- http://purl.org/olia/olia-top.owl#
Imports
- http://purl.org/olia/system.owl olia_system
Classes - Overview
Classes
AgreementFeature (agreement) | ||
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Abstract | Agreement: Formal relationship whereby a word (or a sub-part of a word) requires a corresponding form of another word (or sub-part of a word) (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-2188) PVAGR: agreement as shown (stem + affix) in inflected forms of a finite verb (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-4973) | |
SubClass Of | ||
Sub-Classes | ||
AnimacyFeature (animacy) | ||
Abstract | The characteristic of a word indicating that in a given discourse community, its referent is considered to be alive or to possess a quality of volition or consciousness. (ISO12620; http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1902) | |
SubClass Of | ||
AspectFeature (aspect) | ||
Abstract | Category associated to verbs and referring to the way the grammar marks the duration or type of temporal activity. (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1242) Aspect is a grammatical category associated with verbs that expresses a temporal view of the event or state expressed by the verb. (http://www.sil.org/linguistics/glossaryoflinguisticterms/WhatIsAspect.htm 17.11.06) The in Eagles optional attribute Aspect is needed for Greek and Slavonic verbs. It corresponds also to the Past Simple/Imperfect distinction of Romance languages. (http://www.ilc.cnr.it/EAGLES96/annotate/node18.html#oav1av 17.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
CaseFeature | ||
Abstract | Case is a grammatical category determined by the syntactic or semantic function of a noun or pronoun. The term case has traditionally been restricted to apply to only those languages which indicate certain functions by the inflection of nouns, pronouns, or noun phrase constituents, such as adjectives and numerals. (http://www.sil.org/linguistics/glossaryoflinguisticterms/WhatIsCase.htm 17.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
ClusivityFeature (clusivity) | ||
Abstract | The category that encodes "whether the addressee (addressees) are included in or excluded from the set of referents which also contains the speaker". | |
SubClass Of | ||
Constituent | ||
SubClass Of | ||
CoordTypeFeature | ||
Abstract | The CoordType attribute subclassifies coordinating conjunctions. (http://www.ilc.cnr.it/EAGLES96/annotate/node18.html#oav1av 17.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
CountabilityFeature | ||
Abstract | Represents the difference between countable and uncountable nouns, e.g., in English | |
SubClass Of | ||
DefinitenessFeature (definiteness) | ||
Abstract | In grammatical theory, definiteness is a feature of noun phrases, distinguishing between entities which are specific and identifiable in a given context (definite noun phrases) and entities which are not (indefinite noun phrases). (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Definiteness 02.05.07) Property about the possiblity to identify an entity. (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1926) An in Eagles additional language-specific attribute for nouns/ noun phrases is Definiteness. (http://www.ilc.cnr.it/EAGLES96/annotate/node19.html#oav2 16.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
DegreeFeature (degree) | ||
Abstract | Property concerning comparison. (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1419) The Eagles-recommended attribute Degree applies only to inflectional comparatives and superlatives. In some languages, e.g. Spanish, the number of such adjectives is very small. (http://www.ilc.cnr.it/EAGLES96/annotate/node17.html#recn) | |
SubClass Of | ||
DependencyRelation | ||
SubClass Of | ||
DiscourseEntity | ||
SubClass Of | ||
DiscourseFeature | ||
SubClass Of | ||
Sub-Classes | ||
DominanceRelation | ||
SubClass Of | ||
EvaluativeFeature | ||
Abstract | generalization over PreferredEvaluative and PejorativeEvaluative in ISOcat | |
SubClass Of | ||
EvidentialityFeature | ||
Abstract | Evidentiality denotes the basis that the speaker has for claiming that the event has occurred (or is going to take place). Appear to show a greater number of distinctions in the realis mood (especially in the past tense) than the irrealis mood. [Bhat 1999: 63-64, 70] | |
SubClass Of | ||
GenderFeature | ||
Abstract | The term gender refers to various forms of expressing biological or sociological gender by inflecting words. Nouns, pronouns, articles and the adjectives denote the gender of their referent. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_gender 17.11.06) Category based on (depending on languages) the natural distinction between sex and formal criteria. (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1297) | |
SubClass Of | ||
InflectionTypeFeature | ||
Abstract | InflectionType is in Eagles an optional attribute for adjectives. Weak and Strong are values for adjectival inflection in the Germanic languages German, Dutch and Danish. (http://www.ilc.cnr.it/EAGLES96/annotate/node18.html#oav1av 14.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
EmphasisFeature (intensity) | ||
Abstract | Applies to grammatical (morphosyntactic) markers of emphasis for languages where emphatic expressions are distinguished from non-emphatic forms. In Irish Gaelic, for example, the unmarked personal pronouns (e.g., s?, ? ?he, him?) is distinguished from the emphatic pronoun (e.g., seisean, eisean ?he, him?). Beyond pronouns, also nouns can be emphatically marked, e.g., by adding a clitic reflexive element to them. (Mulkern 2007). (Ann E. Mulkern. Knowing who?s important: Relative discourse salience and Irish pronominal forms. In Nancy A. Hedberg and Ron Zacharski, editors, The Grammar-Pragmatics Interface: Essays in honor of Jeanette K. Gundel, pages 113?142. John Benjamins, Amsterdam and Philadelphia, 2007.) | |
SubClass Of | ||
LexicalRelation | ||
SubClass Of | ||
LinguisticConcept | ||
Abstract | The OLiA ontology specifies linguistic concepts on a theoretical basis, as for concepts used in annotations, see system.owl. There is a great extent of overlap between LinguisticCategories/LinguisticFeatures and Categories/Features as defined in system.owl. | |
Sub-Classes | ||
ModalityFeature (mood) | ||
Abstract | Modality is a facet of illocutionary point or general intent of a speaker, or a speaker's degree of commitment to the expressed proposition's believability, obligatoriness, desirability or reality. (ISO12620; http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1427) The term ?mood? is used by some authors in the same sense as ?modality?, while others distinguish the two (...) using ?mood? to refer to the contrastive grammatical expressions of different modalities, and thus reserving ?modality? to refer to the meanings so expressed. >A grammatical category is related to a variety of factors affecting the nature of a predication, such as factors include factivity, certainty (evidentials), attitudes, speaker?s knowledge/beliefs/desires, agent?s ability/volitionality, etc.; a set of distinctive forms used to express modality (as verbal inflections or a set of auxiliarys, each signaling a modality). (http://www.uni-erfurt.de/sprachwissenschaft/proxy.php?port=8080&file=lido/servlet/Lido_Servlet Modus 14.05.07) | |
SubClass Of | ||
MorphologicalCategory | ||
SubClass Of | ||
MorphologicalFeature | ||
Abstract | Property attached to a given inflected form that usually permits to distinguish this form from the generic lemmatised form of the word. (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1425) | |
SubClass Of | ||
Sub-Classes | ||
MorphologicalProcess | ||
SubClass Of | ||
MorphosyntacticCategory (morphosyntactic category) | ||
Abstract | partOfSpeech: Term used to describe how a particular word is used in a sentence. (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1345) | |
SubClass Of | ||
MorphosyntacticFeature | ||
Abstract | Morphosyntactic and morphological features. | |
SubClass Of | ||
Sub-Classes | ||
NarrativeType | ||
SubClass Of | ||
NullElement | ||
Abstract | Modelled like tokens, Santorini (1991, ????4.2), Bies (1995, ????2.3, ????2.5) | |
SubClass Of | ||
NumberFeature | ||
Abstract | Grammatical category for the variation in form of nouns, pronouns, and any words agreeing with them, depending on how many persons or things are referred to. (www.wordreference.com/English/definition.asp?en=number 12; http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1298) A grammatical number is a morphological category characterized by the expression of quantity through inflection or agreement. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_number 17.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
NumeralAgreementClass | ||
Abstract | In most Slavic languages, Numerals and Quantifiers involve specific agreement patterns, e.g., in Russian: (a) SingularQuantifier (MTE v4: Numeral/Class="definite1"): requires noun in nominative singular, e.g., ???? ??? "one year" (b) PaucalQuantifier (MTE v4: Numeral/Class="definite234"): requires noun in genitive singular, e.g., ???/???/?????? ???? "two/three/four years" (c) PluralQuantifier (MTE v4: Numeral/Class="definite"):requires noun in genitive plural, e.g., ????/?????/???????/??????? ??? "five/many/how many/that many years" Bulgarian has done away with the distinction between 4 and 5, and generalised the 2-4 form to all numerals (and some other quantifiers), but the others generally keep it. Also Slovene has a living dual (both Sorbians likewise, but they haven't been MTEd). Some Czech feminine and neuter body parts have preserved dual forms, and if the noun is dual, so are its attributes (adjectives, pronouns). So 2 differs formally from 3-4. The corresponding agreement pattern is a DualQuantifier (MTE v4: Numeral/Class="definite2"). (Ivan A. Derzhanski & Christian Chiarcos, http://purl.org/olia/mte/multext-east.owl#NumeralAgreementClass) |
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SubClass Of | ||
olia_system:Feature | ||
Namespace | http://purl.org/olia/system.owl# | |
Sub-Classes | ||
OrthographicEntity | ||
SubClass Of | ||
PersonFeature | ||
Abstract | The grammatical person is deictic reference to the participant role of a referent, such as the speaker, the addressee, and others. Grammatical person typically defines a language's set of personal pronouns. It also frequently affects verbs, sometimes nouns, and possessive relationships as well. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_person 17.11.06) Indication of grammatical person (1st, 2nd, 3rd, etc.) associated with a given inflected form. (ISO12620; http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1328) | |
SubClass Of | ||
PhonologicalProcess | ||
SubClass Of | ||
PolarityFeature | ||
SubClass Of | ||
ProximityFeature (proximity) | ||
Abstract | In many Indo-European languages, proximity is a relevant feature of pronominal systems (e.g., Macedonian proximal vs. distal determiners, cf. English this vs. that). In several indigeneous languages of North America, proximity is represented by verbal agreement (then also known as obviation, e.g., Blackfoot third [proximal] and "fourth" [distal 3rd] person). As defined here, proximity is considered a morphosyntactic feature, because it applies to morphosyntactic *markers* of proximity. (Chiarcos) | |
SubClass Of | ||
ReduplicationTypeFeature (reduplication type) | ||
Abstract | type of reduplication (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-2240) | |
SubClass Of | ||
ReferentTypeFeature (referent type) | ||
Abstract | Type of concrete object or concept (the referent) that an expression represents (the reference). (DFKI; http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1376) | |
SubClass Of | ||
ReflexivityFeature | ||
Abstract | The optional attribute Reflexivity is applied to main verbs in French, German, Dutch, etc., and determines the selection of "avoir" or "?tre", etc., as auxiliary for the Perfect. (http://www.ilc.cnr.it/EAGLES96/annotate/node18.html#oav1c 15.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
RegisterFeature (register) | ||
Abstract | Classification indicating the relative level of language individually assigned to a lexeme or term or to a text type. (ISO12620; http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1988) | |
SubClass Of | ||
SemanticFeature | ||
SubClass Of | ||
Sub-Classes | ||
SemanticRole | ||
Abstract | In linguistics, a theta role or ?-role is the semantic role a noun phrase plays in a sentence. The term Thematic role denotes the same concept. As such it is a semantic rather than a syntactic feature, in contrast to such notions as the subject of a sentence or a prepositional object. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subject_(linguistics). Originally, semantic roles were referred to as "case roles", leading to an unfortunate name clash with grammatical case (e.g. in GOLD CaseValue) | |
SubClass Of | ||
SemanticUnit | ||
SubClass Of | ||
SentenceTypeFeature | ||
SubClass Of | ||
SeparabilityFeature | ||
Abstract | The optional Eagles attribute Separability is relevant for German compound verbs ("f?ngt ...an", "anfangen") and also to phrasal verbs in Danish and English. (http://www.ilc.cnr.it/EAGLES96/annotate/node18.html#oav1c 15.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
SpecificityFeature (specificity) | ||
Abstract | "By ?specific? and ?non-specific? I intend the difference between the two readings of English indefinites like (3): (3) I?m looking for a deer. In the specific reading there is a particular deer, say Bambi, that I am looking for. In the non-specific reading I will be happy to find any deer. Von Heusinger (2002) likes the test in English of inserting ?certain? after the ?a? to fix the specific reading. In either reading of (3) a deer is being introduced as a new discourse referent. This is opposed to ?definite? which requires a previous pragmatic instantiation as in ?I?m looking for the deer.? In English both the readings of (3) are indefinite. In Klallam, the specific demonstratives are neither definite nor indefinite." (Montler, Timothy. 2007. Klallam demonstratives. Papers ICSNL XLVII. The 42nd International Conference on Salish and Neighbouring Language, pp. 409-425. University of British Columbia Working Papers in Linguistics, Volume 20; on specific vs. nonspecific determiners in Klallam, a Salish language, http://montler.net/papers/KlallamDemons.pdf) | |
SubClass Of | ||
StrengthFeature | ||
SubClass Of | ||
SubordTypeFeature | ||
Abstract | The SubordType is in Eagles an additional language-specific attribute, applying to subordinating conjunctions only. (http://www.ilc.cnr.it/EAGLES96/annotate/node19.html#oav2u 17.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
SyntacticCategory | ||
SubClass Of | ||
Sub-Classes | ||
SyntacticConstruction | ||
Abstract | Syntactic constructions that involve multiple constituents, or that are independent of the concept of constituent, e.g., word order phenomena, non-canonical sentences , ... | |
SubClass Of | ||
SyntacticFeature | ||
SubClass Of | ||
Sub-Classes | ||
SyntacticFunction | ||
Abstract | Relation to be used when the syntactic function of a constituent is different from its morphosyntactic type, cf. FormFunctionDiscrepancy in the PTB bracketing guidelines, Bies et al. (1995, ?2.2.1) | |
SubClass Of | ||
SyntacticRelation | ||
SubClass Of | ||
Sub-Classes | ||
SyntacticRole | ||
Abstract | Traditionally, "grammatical relations" or "grammatical roles" are specifically those between the verb (clause) and its arguments/adjunct/complementizer. In modern corpus research, however, a broad variety of relations between nominal heads, their arguments, modifiers, etc. are distinguished and the scope of "Grammatical Relation" has extended here to cover these as well. (http://purl.org/linguistics/gold/syntacticRole) | |
SubClass Of | ||
TopologicalField | ||
SubClass Of | ||
UsageAndFrequencyFeature | ||
Abstract | Frequency: The relative commonness with which a term occurs. (ISO12620; http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1965) Dating: Indication specifying whether the usage is old or modern. (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1959) | |
SubClass Of | ||
ValencyFeature | ||
Abstract | Syntactic valency pertains to the number of syntactic arguments a verb requires. Semantic valency pertains to the number of arguments of a semantic predicate. If syntactic valency is greater than the semantic valency, an expletive pronoun may be used, cf. van Valin and LaPolla (1997) on the distinction between syntactic valency and semantic valency. | |
SubClass Of | ||
MoodFeature (verb form mood) | ||
Abstract | Modality is a facet of illocutionary point or general intent of a speaker, or a speaker's degree of commitment to the expressed proposition's believability, obligatoriness, desirability or reality. (ISO12620; http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1427) The term ?mood? is used by some authors in the same sense as ?modality?, while others distinguish the two (...) using ?mood? to refer to the contrastive grammatical expressions of different modalities, and thus reserving ?modality? to refer to the meanings so expressed. >A grammatical category is related to a variety of factors affecting the nature of a predication, such as factors include factivity, certainty (evidentials), attitudes, speaker?s knowledge/beliefs/desires, agent?s ability/volitionality, etc.; a set of distinctive forms used to express modality (as verbal inflections or a set of auxiliarys, each signaling a modality). (http://www.uni-erfurt.de/sprachwissenschaft/proxy.php?port=8080&file=lido/servlet/Lido_Servlet Modus 14.05.07) | |
SubClass Of | ||
TenseFeature (verb tense) | ||
Abstract | verb tense: property referring to the way the grammar marks (via affixes and/or suppletion) the time at which the action denoted by the verb took place. (http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-4964) Tense is a grammatical category, typically marked on the verb, that deictically refers to the time of the event or state denoted by the verb in relation to some other temporal reference point. (http://www.sil.org/linguistics/glossaryoflinguisticterms/WhatIsTense.htm 17.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
VoiceFeature | ||
Abstract | The voice of a verb describes the relationship between the action (or state) that the verb expresses and the participants identified by its arguments (subject, object, etc.). (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grammatical_voice 17.11.06) | |
SubClass Of | ||
Word (word) | ||
Abstract | Terminal nodes of syntactic annotations, termed "Word" here, are the same structural entities that are subject to morphosyntactic (Part of Speech) annotations. cf. http://www.isocat.org/datcat/DC-1415 "word": Linguistic unit composed of at least a part of speech and a lemma. | |
SubClass Of |