Hi Ester,
This might be a relevant resource for you:
http://www1.icsi.berkeley.edu/~demelo/etymwn/
Bob
On Fri, Apr 22, 2016 at 7:32 AM, Ester Pantaleo <esterpantaleo(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hello,
I am writing to get some feedback/suggestion on an IGE grant proposal I
submitted to Wikimedia that might be of interest to the research community.
I am working on an interactive visualization tool for etymological
relationships and I produced a demo of my interactive visualization etytree:
http://www.epantaleo.com/2015/12/01/etymology-tree/
The aim of the application is to visualize - in one graph - the etymology of
all words deriving from the same ancestor. Users can expand/collapse the
tree to visualize what they are interested in. The textual part attached to
the graph can be easily translated in any language and the app would become
a multilingual resource. My idea is to use dbnary's extraction-framework
(for Wiktionary) and develop a (possibly) smart pre-processing strategy to
translate Wiktionary textual etymology into a graph database of etymological
relationships.
The database of etymological relationships will be available for the
community and can be used as a resource to study the history of languages,
how pronunciation evolved through time, and eventually how semantics evolved
through time.
The link to the grant proposal is
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Grants:IEG/A_graphical_and_interactive_etym…
Feedback from the community is important to receive a grant from the
Wikimedia foundation so please leave a feedback there if you are interested
in the project.
Thanks a lot!
Ester Pantaleo
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