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WordNet
WordNet also provides the polysemy count of a word: the number of synsets that contain the word. ... The GCIDE project produces a dictionary by combining a public domain Webster's Dictionary from 1913 with some WordNet definitions and material provided by volunteers. -
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List of sports idioms
WordNet refers to it specifically in terms of boxing. OED cites a meaning as a knockout punch to 1929, figurative use to 1944, but does not ascribe it to the sport of boxing directly. ... A boxer who takes the full count accepts defeat. -
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LabelMe
Using WordNet Since the text labels for objects provided in LabelMe come from user input, there is a lot of variation in the labels used (as described above). -
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Computational creativity
Images in this vein include cityscapes and forests, which are generated by a process of constraint satisfaction from some basic scenarios provided by the user (e.g., these scenarios allow the system to infer that objects closer to the viewing plane should be larger and more color-saturated, while those further away should be less saturated and appear smaller). ... ↑ Veale, Tony (2006), Tracking the Lexical Zeitgeist with Wikipedia and WordNet, Proceedings of ECAI’2006, the 17th European Conference on Artificial Intelligence -
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Ancient history
During the Han Dynasty and Wei Dynasty, Chinese travelers to Kyūshū recorded its inhabitants and claimed that they were the descendants of the Grand Count (Tàibó) of the Wu. ... ↑ WordNet Search - 3.0, "History" -
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PageRank
In other words, the PageRank conferred by an outbound link L( ) is equal to the document's own PageRank score divided by the normalized number of outbound links (it is assumed that links to specific URLs only count once per document). ... "PageRanking WordNet synsets: An Application to Opinion-Related Properties" (PDF). -
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Myth and ritual
He believes in a certain established order of nature on which he can surely count, and which he can manipulate for his own ends." ... | In an academic context, the word "myth" simply means a traditional story, whether true or false. (—OED, Princeton Wordnet) Unless otherwise noted, the words "mythology" and "myth" are here used for sacred and traditional narratives, with no implication that any belief so embodied is itself either true or false. |
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