Dhivehi/Universal Dependencies
Evaluation
model | corpus | UAS | LAS | # of forms | # of sentences |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
div.nomorph.udpipe | div.annotated.ud.conllu | 56.55% | 39.29% | 168 | 27 |
div.nomorph.udpipe | div.annotated2.ud.conllu | 54.02% | 34.48% | 87 | 12 |
div.withmorph.udpipe | div.annotated.ud.conllu | 56.55% | 39.29% | 168 | 27 |
div.withmorph.udpipe | div.annotated2.ud.conllu | 54.02% | 34.48% | 87 | 12 |
It seems odd that the results would be the same with and without morph. Are you sure this is right? —Jwashin1 (talk) 14:50, 5 June 2019 (EDT)
Dependency Relations
nsubj
Subject of the sentence. It can either be the subject of a verb or an adjective. (Adjectives could be the predicate of a sentence.)
- Examples:
"<އެކުދިން>" "ކުދިން" n hum pl def dir @nsubj #1->5 "އެ" det dem deg3 @det #2->1 "<ބިސްތައް>" "ބިސްތައް" n nhum pl def dir @obj #3->5 "<ވަޅުލައިފިއެވެ>" "އެވެ" mod @discourse #4->5 "ވަޅުލައިފި" v tv act perf p3 @root #5->0 "<.>" "." sent @punct #6->5
"<އޭގެ>" "އޭގެ" prn pers p3 sg pos @nmod:poss #1->2 "<ނޭފަތް>" "ނޭފަތް" n nhum sg def dir @nsubj #2->5 "<ވަރަށް>" "ވަރަށް" adv @advmod #3->5 "<ދިގެވެ>" "އެވެ" mod @discourse #4->5 "ދިގު" adj @root #5->0 "<.>" "." sent @punct #6->5
obj
Object of the sentence. It's usually used as the object of a verb.
- Examples:
"<އަހަރެންގެ>" "އަހަރެންގެ" prn pers p1 sg std gen @nsubj #1->4 "<ދެބޭބެއިން>" "ބޭބެއިން" n hum pl def dir @obj #2->4 "ދެ" num @nummod #3->2 "<ތިބޭ>" "ތިބޭ" v tv act pres p3 @root #4->0 "<.>" "." sent @punct #5->4
"<އަހަރެން>" "އަހަރެން" prn pers p1 sg std dir @obj #1->3 "<އެކަނި>" "އެކަނި" adj @amod #2->1 "<ދުކޮހް>" "ދުކޮހް" v tv act pres p3 imp @root #3->0 "<ލާ>" "ލާ" mod @discourse #4->3 "<!>" "!" sent @punct #5->3
nmod:poss
Possessive noun modifier of the sentence. It's usually a genetive case noun modifying another another noun.
- Examples:
"<ތަރައްގީ>" "ތަރައްގީ" n nhum sg def dir @nsubj #1->4 "<އަކީ>" "އަކީ" mod @cop #2->4 "<އާއިލާގެ>" "އާއިލާ" n nhum sg def gen @nmod:poss #3->4 "<އާމްދަނީ>" "އާމްދަނީ" n nhum sg def dir @root #4->0 "<އިތުރުވުން>" "އިތުރުވުން" v iv act pres p3 @amod #5->4 "<.>" "." sent @punct #6->5
"<މިފަދަ>" "މިފަދަ" det dem deg1 @det #1->2 "<އިސްލާޙެއް>" "އިސްލާޙް" n nhum sg ind dir @nsubj #2->4 "<ވާނީ>" "ވާނީ" v tv act fut pot @cop #3->4 "<ޒަމާނީ>" "ޒަމާނީ" adj @root #4->0 "<ޑިމޮކްރެސީގެ>" "ޑިމޮކްރެސީ" n nhum sg def gen @nmod:poss #5->6 "<ރޫޙާއި>" "ރޫޙާއި" n nhum sg def soc @obj #6->4 "<ޚިލާފު>" "ޚިލާފު" post @advmod #7->8 "<އިސްލާޙެއް>" "އިސްލާޙް" n nhum sg ind dir @nmod #8->6 "<.>" "." sent @punct #9->4
discourse
Discourse Marker of a sentence. It's usually used to mark the modal words in a sentence. For example, it is very common in Dhivehi to have a sentence ending particle that doesn't mean anything. The discourse relation is used to mark that particle.
- Examples:
"<އަލި>" "އަލި" np @nsubj #1->7 "<ލަނޑުޖަހާނެ>" "ލަނޑުޖަހާނެ" v tv act fut p3 @advcl #2->7 "<ވަރަށް>" "ވަރަށް" adv @advmod #3->4 "<ބައިވަރު>" "ބައިވަރު" det @det #4->5 "<ފުރުޞަތު>" "ފުރުޞަތު" n nhum sg def dir @obj #5->7 "<ލިބުނެވެ>" "އެވެ" mod @discourse #6->7 "ލިބުން" v tv act past p3 @root #7->0 "<.>" "." sent @punct #8->7
"<މަދްރަސާ>" "މަދްރަސާ" n nhum sg def dir @nsubj #1->6 "<ގެއަށްވުރެ>" "ވުރެ" post @advmod #2->3 "ގެ" n nhum sg def dat @obj #3->6 "<މާ>" "މާ" adv @advmod #4->6 "<ބޮޑެވެ>" "އެވެ" mod @discourse #5->6 "ބޮޑު" adj @root #6->0 "<.>" "." sent @punct #7->6
amod
Adjective modifier of the sentence. It's usually used to mark the adjective that modifies a noun.
- Examples:
"<ކުރަން>" "ކުރަ" v tv act pres p1 @fixed #1->2 "<ޖެހޭ>" "ޖެހޭ" v tv act pprs @root #2->0 "<ހޭދަ>" "ހޭދަ" adj @amod #3->4 "<އިތުރުވުން>" "އިތުރުވުން" n nhum sg def dir @obj #4->2 "<.>" "." sent @punct #5->2
"<މާދަމާ>" "މާދަމާ" adv @advmod #1->5 "<އަލީ>" "އަލީ" np @nsubj #2->5 "<ފާހަނަ>" "ފާހަނަ" n nhum sg def dir @obj #3->5 "<ސާފު>" "ސާފު" adj @amod #4->5 "<ކުރާނެ>" "ކުރަ" v tv act fut p3 @root #5->0 "<.>" "." sent @punct #6->5