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This page pertains to UD version 2.

UD Old East Slavic Ruthenian

Language: Old East Slavic (code: orv)
Family: Indo-European, Slavic

This treebank has been part of Universal Dependencies since the UD v2.11 release.

The following people have contributed to making this treebank part of UD: Olga Lyashevskaya, Dmitri Sitchinava, Maria Shvedova.

Repository: UD_Old_East_Slavic-Ruthenian
Search this treebank on-line: PML-TQ
Download all treebanks: UD 2.13

License: CC BY-SA 4.0

Genre: legal, nonfiction

Questions, comments? General annotation questions (either Old East Slavic-specific or cross-linguistic) can be raised in the main UD issue tracker. You can report bugs in this treebank in the treebank-specific issue tracker on Github. If you want to collaborate, please contact [olesar (æt) yandex • ru]. Development of the treebank happens outside the UD repository. If there are bugs, either the original data source or the conversion procedure must be fixed. Do not submit pull requests against the UD repository.

Annotation Source
Lemmas annotated manually
UPOS annotated manually, natively in UD style
XPOS not available
Features annotated manually, natively in UD style
Relations annotated manually, natively in UD style

Description

The Ruthenian UD treebank includes texts written in the territories of modern Belarus, Lithuania, Ukraine, and Poland in ca. 1300-1700. A sample of legal and nonfiction texts is drawn from the Ruthenian Corpus.

The Ruthenian UD treebank includes texts written in “prosta mova” (“ruska mova”, Old Belarusian, Old Ukrainian), a Western descendant of Old East Slavic spoken in the territories of modern Belarus, Lithuania, Ukraine, and Poland. A sample of legal and nonfiction texts written in ca. 1380-1650 is drawn from the Ruthenian Corpus, a historical language corpus resource currently being compiled by an independent research partnership.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to Maria Ermolova, Vladimir Shatin, and Natalia Iordani for comments and discussions on the earlier versions of morphological markup.

References

Statistics of UD Old East Slavic Ruthenian

POS Tags

ADJADPADVAUXCCONJDETINTJNOUNNUMPARTPRONPROPNPUNCTSCONJSYMVERBX

Features

AbbrAnalytAnimacyAspectCaseCliticDegreeForeignGenderMoodNameTypeNumberNumFormNumTypePersonPolarityPossPronTypeReflexTenseTypoVariantVerbFormVoice

Relations

aclacl:relcladvcladvmodamodapposauxaux:passcaseccccompcompoundconjcopcsubjdepdetdiscoursedislocatedexplfixedflatflat:foreignflat:namegoeswithiobjlistmarknmodnsubjnsubj:outernsubj:passnummodnummod:govobjoblobl:agentobl:tmodorphanparataxispunctreparandumrootvocativexcomp

Tokenization and Word Segmentation

Morphology

Tags

Nominal Features

Degree and Polarity

Verbal Features

Pronouns, Determiners, Quantifiers

Other Features

Syntax

Auxiliary Verbs and Copula

Core Arguments, Oblique Arguments and Adjuncts

Here we consider only relations between verbs (parent) and nouns or pronouns (child).

Verbs with Reflexive Core Objects

Relations Overview