Treebank Statistics: UD_English-ParTUT: POS Tags: CCONJ
There are 13 CCONJ
lemmas (0%), 13 CCONJ
types (0%) and 1653 CCONJ
tokens (3%).
Out of 17 observed tags, the rank of CCONJ
is: 13 in number of lemmas, 14 in number of types and 11 in number of tokens.
The 10 most frequent CCONJ
lemmas: and, or, but, both, nor, neither, either, yet, as, et
The 10 most frequent CCONJ
types: and, or, but, both, nor, neither, either, yet, as, et
The 10 most frequent ambiguous lemmas: or (CCONJ 185, X 1), but (CCONJ 143, ADP 4, ADV 2), both (CCONJ 10, DET 8, ADJ 2, ADV 2, PRON 1), neither (CCONJ 5, DET 1), either (ADV 4, CCONJ 2), yet (ADV 9, CCONJ 2, SCONJ 1), as (ADP 255, SCONJ 61, ADV 36, CCONJ 1), namely (ADV 3, CCONJ 1), save (VERB 6, CCONJ 1)
The 10 most frequent ambiguous types: but (CCONJ 91, ADP 4, ADV 2), both (CCONJ 10, DET 8, ADV 2, ADJ 1, PRON 1), neither (CCONJ 4, DET 1), either (ADV 4, CCONJ 2), yet (ADV 8, CCONJ 2, SCONJ 1), as (ADP 236, SCONJ 44, ADV 36, CCONJ 1), namely (ADV 3, CCONJ 1), save (VERB 2, CCONJ 1)
- but
- CCONJ 91: ” This is a great scientific discovery “ , but it was so awful .
- ADP 4: There ‘s no mechanism in this game for them to go anywhere but into a bigger and bigger pile of indigestible Styrofoam peanuts .
- ADV 2: Londoners flocked there to see the first part of Henry IV , Leonard Digges recording , “ Let but Falstaff come , Hal , Poins , the rest … and you scarce shall have a room “ .
- both
- CCONJ 10: similarly , human beings may behave both as individual particles and as components of a larger wave .
- DET 8: it must have good relations with both sides .
- ADV 2: The second challenge is that of enlargement which will , of course , have a considerable impact , both in budgetary and geographical terms .
- ADJ 1: Ultimately , codependency leads to a loss of identity , serious frictions , and often a nasty breakup – unless one or both of the partners becomes more self-reliant and strikes out on his or her own .
- PRON 1: In the case of King Lear , however , while most modern editions do conflate them , the 1623 folio version is so different from the 1608 quarto , that the Oxford Shakespeare prints them both , arguing that they can not be conflated without confusion .
- neither
- CCONJ 4: Balzac sought to present his characters as real people , neither fully good nor fully evil , but fully human .
- DET 1: Except for the limited purpose of indicating to the public that the Work is licensed under the CCPL , neither party will use the trademark “ Creative Commons “ or any related trademark or logo of Creative Commons without the prior written consent of Creative Commons .
- either
- yet
- ADV 8: As long as this Agreement is not yet concluded , insofar as it applies provisionally .
- CCONJ 2: The writing is simple , yet the individuals ( especially the bourgeois title character ) are dynamic and complex .
- SCONJ 1: These countries ‘ global economic and financial significance has grown rapidly , yet they have relatively little representation at the Fund .
- as
- namely
- ADV 3: I should like to conclude by commenting on a third matter which is also of significance , namely an amendment tabled by Member of Parliament , Mr Ari Vatanen .
- CCONJ 1: Mr President , it is particularly pleasing for me to make my first speech in the European Parliament on what is regarded as the most important issue within that part of the United Kingdom that I represent in this Parliament , namely Wales .
- save
- VERB 2: I ‘m going to show you six , if I can , solutions for helping to save the world .
- CCONJ 1: Le Père Goriot ( Old Father Goriot , 1835 ) was his next success , in which Balzac transposes the story of King Lear to 1820 ‘s Paris in order to rage at a society bereft of all love save the love of money .
Morphology
The form / lemma ratio of CCONJ
is 1.000000 (the average of all parts of speech is 1.199305).
The 1st highest number of forms (1) was observed with the lemma “and”: and.
The 2nd highest number of forms (1) was observed with the lemma “as”: as.
The 3rd highest number of forms (1) was observed with the lemma “both”: both.
CCONJ
does not occur with any features.
Relations
CCONJ
nodes are attached to their parents using 4 different relations: cc (1645; 100% instances), root (5; 0% instances), conj (2; 0% instances), fixed (1; 0% instances)
Parents of CCONJ
nodes belong to 14 different parts of speech: NOUN (773; 47% instances), VERB (504; 30% instances), ADJ (185; 11% instances), PROPN (99; 6% instances), NUM (25; 2% instances), ADV (22; 1% instances), PRON (20; 1% instances), ADP (8; 0% instances), (5; 0% instances), AUX (4; 0% instances), CCONJ (2; 0% instances), PART (2; 0% instances), SYM (2; 0% instances), X (2; 0% instances)
1644 (99%) CCONJ
nodes are leaves.
4 (0%) CCONJ
nodes have one child.
5 (0%) CCONJ
nodes have two children.
The highest child degree of a CCONJ
node is 2.
Children of CCONJ
nodes are attached using 4 different relations: punct (7; 50% instances), conj (4; 29% instances), advcl (2; 14% instances), acl:relcl (1; 7% instances)
Children of CCONJ
nodes belong to 3 different parts of speech: PUNCT (7; 50% instances), VERB (5; 36% instances), CCONJ (2; 14% instances)