Second report on an ongoing LUA project

 

The compilation of an electronic Sepedi reference package within the framework of Fuzzy SF

 

LUA recipient: Mr. Gilles-Maurice de Schryver

 

 

 

This is the second report on the above-mentioned LUA project. On the whole, the project is still on track and even gaining momentum. Expressed in blunt figures, the lexicographers now defined the frequent senses of well over 5,000 lemma signs and provided corpus-based examples for each of these. Furthermore, English translation equivalents were written for roughly 30,000 Sepedi lemma signs. The corpus itself was not substantially enlarged, yet a thorough study was undertaken on how to approach the morphological analysis of the data in the corpus. Following a workshop on Computational Morphological Analysis in Pretoria, and a Xerox Finite-State Programming course in Grenoble, both by Ken Beesley (Principal Scientist at XRCE), I decided to try my hand at a prototype morphological analyser for Sepedi. The resulting Finite-State Transducer was presented and well received at the 7th International Conference of Afrilex (Grahamstown, South Africa, 8-10 July 2002).

         As Lexilogik, the company who designed the Onoma Lexical Workbench, was disbanded, we began the construction of our own local dictionary compilation system. It is our aim to create a generic package that could be useable by all South African National Lexicography Units, as well as beyond. At the time of writing we are close to a beta version.

         A publication / release of the lexicographic data is expected in the near future, and this in various media. Traditional hardcopies are planned, as well as CD-ROMs, an adaptive version accessible on the University of Pretoria intranet, and a (basic) pop-up electronic dictionary available over the Internet.

         The Laurence Urdang Award has been acknowledged in written documents, and the recipient expresses his sincere gratitude to the Sponsor, Laurence Urdang, and the LUA Selection Panel.

 

Gilles-Maurice de Schryver

Department of African Languages and Cultures,

Ghent University, Belgium

 

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