PronType: pronominal type
In English, this feature applies to pronouns, determiners and pronominal adverbs.
Prs: personal or possessive personal pronoun or determiner
See also the Poss feature that distinguishes normal personal
pronouns from possessives. Note that Prs also includes reflexive
personal/possessive pronouns.
The following pronouns have this feature:
- I, you, he, she, it, we, they, my, your, his, her, its, our, their, mine, yours, hers, ours, theirs, me, him, us, them, myself, yourself, himself, herself, itself, ourselves, youselves, theirselves
Art: article
Article is a special case of determiner that bears the feature of definiteness.
In English, the following three determiners have this feature:
- a, an, the
Int: interrogative pronoun, determiner or adverb
Note that the possessive interrogative determiner (whose) can be distinguished by the Poss feature.
In English, all words with the PTB tag WDT, WP, WP$ or WRB have this feature unless
they mark the beginning of a relative clause.
Examples:
- Which one should I get?
- Who was elected president?
- Whose car is this?
- How old is he?
Rel: relative pronoun or determiner
All pronouns and determiners that mark the beginning of a relative clause have this feature.
Examples:
- The book that I read
- The book which she bought
- The book whose author was arrested
Dem: demonstrative determiner or adverb
The following determiners and adverbs have this feature:
- this, that, those, these, here, there
Note that that only has this feature when it is being used as a demonstrative determiner. If it is used to mark the beginning of a clausal complement or a relative clause it does not have this feature.
Treebank Statistics (UD_English)
This feature is universal.
It occurs with 5 different values: Art, Dem, Int, Prs, Rel.
41363 tokens (16%) have a non-empty value of PronType.
129 types (1%) occur at least once with a non-empty value of PronType.
53 lemmas (0%) occur at least once with a non-empty value of PronType.
The feature is used with 3 part-of-speech tags: en-pos/PRON (20569; 8% instances), en-pos/DET (18952; 7% instances), en-pos/ADV (1842; 1% instances).
PRON
20569 en-pos/PRON tokens (97% of all PRON tokens) have a non-empty value of PronType.
The most frequent other feature values with which PRON and PronType co-occurred: Poss=EMPTY (16915; 82%), Gender=EMPTY (15754; 77%), Number=Sing (11904; 58%), Case=Nom (11774; 57%).
PRON tokens may have the following values of PronType:
Art(1; 0% of non-emptyPronType): TheDem(964; 5% of non-emptyPronType): this, that, those, theseInt(621; 3% of non-emptyPronType): what, who, whom, whatever, whose, who’s, Wtf, ever, waht, whoeverPrs(18621; 91% of non-emptyPronType): i, you, it, they, my, we, he, your, me, theirRel(362; 2% of non-emptyPronType): who, whom, what, whoseEMPTY(659): there, one, mine, you, ‘s, it’s, u, Yo, the, s
| Paradigm what | Int | Rel |
|---|---|---|
| what | what |
DET
18952 en-pos/DET tokens (90% of all DET tokens) have a non-empty value of PronType.
The most frequent other feature values with which DET and PronType co-occurred: Definite=Def (11016; 58%).
DET tokens may have the following values of PronType:
Art(16362; 86% of non-emptyPronType): the, a, anDem(1453; 8% of non-emptyPronType): this, that, these, thoseInt(213; 1% of non-emptyPronType): which, what, whateverRel(924; 5% of non-emptyPronType): that, which, what, whhichEMPTY(2172): all, some, any, no, another, every, each, both, such, quite
| Paradigm that | Rel | Dem |
|---|---|---|
| _ | that | that |
| Number=Sing | that |
ADV
1842 en-pos/ADV tokens (14% of all ADV tokens) have a non-empty value of PronType.
ADV tokens may have the following values of PronType:
Dem(775; 42% of non-emptyPronType): there, then, here, thatInt(957; 52% of non-emptyPronType): when, how, why, where, whenever, ever, wherever, however, were, yRel(110; 6% of non-emptyPronType): where, that, when, why, how, were, whereinEMPTY(11200): so, just, very, also, now, even, only, as, back, well
| Paradigm when | Int | Rel |
|---|---|---|
| when | when |
Relations with Agreement in PronType
The 10 most frequent relations where parent and child node agree in PronType:
PRON –[conj]–> PRON (27; 93%),
PRON –[nmod:npmod]–> PRON (3; 100%),
ADV –[conj]–> PRON (3; 100%),
PRON –[parataxis]–> PRON (1; 100%),
PRON –[remnant]–> PRON (1; 100%).
PronType in other languages: [bg] [cs] [de] [el] [en] [es] [eu] [fa] [fi] [fr] [ga] [he] [hu] [it] [ja] [ko] [sv] [u]