mark
: marker
In Irish the mark
label is used for infinitive markers and for subordinate conjunctions.
Note that subordinate conjunctions are attached to the head of the complement clause (not the matrix clause as is the case in the Irish Dependency Treebank).
Examples
subordinate conjunctions
Cé go ndeachaigh sé thar fóir leis an tuairim sin , is cinnte go raibh mórán scríobhneoirí Béarla den bharúil chéanna `Although he went overboard with that opinion , it was certain that many English writers had the same opinion’
Ba ar Mháirín a smaoiníodh sé nuair a d’ fheicfeadh sé iad `He would think of Máirín when he would see them’
infinitive marker
Caithfidh mé sin a fhoghlaim `I will have to learn that’
Treebank Statistics (UD_Irish)
This relation is universal.
There are 1 language-specific subtypes of mark
: mark:prt.
712 nodes (3%) are attached to their parents as mark
.
693 instances of mark
(97%) are right-to-left (child precedes parent).
Average distance between parent and child is 1.8314606741573.
The following 29 pairs of parts of speech are connected with mark
: NOUN-PART (285; 40% instances), VERB-SCONJ (192; 27% instances), NOUN-SCONJ (45; 6% instances), VERB-CONJ (45; 6% instances), NOUN-CONJ (41; 6% instances), VERB-ADP (13; 2% instances), ADJ-SCONJ (12; 2% instances), PRON-SCONJ (10; 1% instances), PRON-CONJ (9; 1% instances), ADJ-CONJ (8; 1% instances), NOUN-ADP (7; 1% instances), VERB-NOUN (7; 1% instances), ADP-SCONJ (6; 1% instances), ADP-CONJ (5; 1% instances), PROPN-CONJ (5; 1% instances), ADV-CONJ (3; 0% instances), VERB-PART (3; 0% instances), ADJ-NOUN (2; 0% instances), ADV-SCONJ (2; 0% instances), NOUN-NOUN (2; 0% instances), SCONJ-SCONJ (2; 0% instances), CONJ-PART (1; 0% instances), NUM-CONJ (1; 0% instances), PROPN-SCONJ (1; 0% instances), SCONJ-CONJ (1; 0% instances), VERB-ADV (1; 0% instances), VERB-PRON (1; 0% instances), VERB-PUNCT (1; 0% instances), X-CONJ (1; 0% instances).
mark in other languages: [bg] [cs] [de] [el] [en] [es] [eu] [fa] [fi] [fr] [ga] [he] [hu] [it] [ja] [ko] [sv] [u]