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morphy(7WN) - phpMan

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MORPHY(7WN)                                  WordNet™                                 MORPHY(7WN)



NAME
       morphy - discussion of WordNet's morphological processing

DESCRIPTION
       Although  only  base forms of words are usually stored in WordNet, searches may be done on
       inflected forms.  A set of morphology functions, Morphy, is applied to the  search  string
       to generate a form that is present in WordNet.

       Morphology in WordNet uses two types of processes to try to convert the string passed into
       one that can be found in the WordNet database.  There are lists of  inflectional  endings,
       based  on  syntactic category, that can be detached from individual words in an attempt to
       find a form of the word that is in WordNet.  There are also exception list files, one  for
       each syntactic category, in which a search for an inflected form is done.  Morphy tries to
       use these two processes in an intelligent manner to translate the  string  passed  to  the
       base  form  found  in WordNet.  Morphy first checks for exceptions, then uses the rules of
       detachment.  The Morphy functions are not independent from WordNet. After each transforma‐
       tion, WordNet is searched for the resulting string in the syntactic category specified.

       The  Morphy  functions are passed a string and a syntactic category.  A string is either a
       single word or a collocation.  Since some words, such as axes can have more than one  base
       form  (axe and axis), Morphy works in the following manner.  The first time that Morphy is
       called with a specific string, it returns a base form.  For each subsequent call to Morphy
       made  with a NULL string argument, Morphy returns another base form.  Whenever Morphy can‐
       not perform a transformation, whether on the first call for a word  or  subsequent  calls,
       NULL is returned.  A transformation to a valid English string will return NULL if the base
       form of the string is not in WordNet.

       The morphological functions are found in the WordNet library.  See morph(3WN) for informa‐
       tion on using these functions.

   Rules of Detachment
       The following table shows the rules of detachment used by Morphy.  If a word ends with one
       of the suffixes, it is stripped from the word and the corresponding ending is added.  Then
       WordNet is searched for the resulting string.  No rules are applicable to adverbs.

                                              │        │
                                         POS  │ Suffix │ Ending
                                         ─────┼────────┼────────
                                         NOUN │ "s"    │ ""
                                         NOUN │ "ses"  │ "s"
                                         NOUN │ "xes"  │ "x"
                                         NOUN │ "zes"  │ "z"
                                         NOUN │ "ches" │ "ch"
                                         NOUN │ "shes" │ "sh"
                                         NOUN │ "men"  │ "man"
                                         NOUN │ "ies"  │ "y"
                                         VERB │ "s"    │ ""
                                         VERB │ "ies"  │ "y"
                                         VERB │ "es"   │ "e"
                                         VERB │ "es"   │ ""
                                         VERB │ "ed"   │ "e"
                                         VERB │ "ed"   │ ""
                                         VERB │ "ing"  │ "e"
                                         VERB │ "ing"  │ ""
                                         ADJ  │ "er"   │ ""
                                         ADJ  │ "est"  │ ""
                                         ADJ  │ "er"   │ "e"
                                         ADJ  │ "est"  │ "e"

   Exception Lists
       There is one exception list file for each syntactic category.  The exception lists contain
       the morphological transformations for strings that are not regular and therefore cannot be
       processed  in an algorithmic manner.  Each line of an exception list contains an inflected
       form of a word or collocation, followed by one or more base forms.  The list  is  kept  in
       alphabetical  order  and  a  binary  search  is  used  to  find words in these lists.  See
       wndb(5WN) for information on the format of the exception list files.

   Single Words
       In general, single words are relatively easy to process.  Morphy first looks for the  word
       in  the exception list.  If it is found the first base form is returned.  Subsequent calls
       with a NULL argument return additional base forms, if present.  A NULL  is  returned  when
       there are no more base forms of the word.

       If the word is not found in the exception list corresponding to the syntactic category, an
       algorithmic process using the rules of detachment looks  for  a  matching  suffix.   If  a
       matching  suffix  is  found, a corresponding ending is applied (sometimes this ending is a
       NULL string, so in effect the suffix is removed from the word), and WordNet  is  consulted
       to see if the resulting word is found in the desired part of speech.

   Collocations
       As  opposed  to single words, collocations can be quite difficult to transform into a base
       form that is present in WordNet.  In general, only base forms of words,  even  those  com‐
       prising  collocations,  are stored in WordNet, such as attorney general.  Transforming the
       collocation attorneys general is then simply a matter of finding the  base  forms  of  the
       individual words comprising the collocation.  This usually works for nouns, therefore non-
       conforming nouns, such as customs duty are presently entered in the noun exception list.

       Verb collocations that contain prepositions, such as ask for it, are more  difficult.   As
       with single words, the exception list is searched first.  If the collocation is not found,
       special code in Morphy determines whether a verb collocation includes a  preposition.   If
       it does, a function is called to try to find the base form in the following manner.  It is
       assumed that the first word in the collocation is a verb and that the last word is a noun.
       The  algorithm then builds a search string with the base forms of the verb and noun, leav‐
       ing the remainder of the collocation (usually just the preposition, but more words may  be
       involved)  in the middle.  For example, passed asking for it, the database search would be
       performed with ask for it, which is found in WordNet, and therefore returned from  Morphy.
       If  a  verb collocation does not contain a preposition, then the base form of each word in
       the collocation is found and WordNet is searched for the resulting string.

   Hyphenation
       Hyphenation also presents special difficulties when searching WordNet.  It is often a sub‐
       jective  decision as to whether a word is hyphenated, joined as one word, or is a colloca‐
       tion of several words, and which of the various forms are entered into WordNet.  When Mor‐
       phy  breaks a string into "words", it looks for both spaces and hyphens as delimiters.  It
       also looks for periods in strings and removes them if an exact  match  is  not  found.   A
       search  for  an  abbreviation like oct. return the synset for { October, Oct }.  Not every
       pattern of hyphenated and collocated string is searched for properly, so it may be  advan‐
       tageous  to  specify several search strings if the results of a search attempt seem incom‐
       plete.

   Special Processing for nouns ending with 'ful'
       Morphy contains code that searches for nouns ending with ful and performs a transformation
       on  the substring preceeding it.  It then appends 'ful' back onto the resulting string and
       returns it. For example, if passed the nouns boxesful, it will return boxful.

BUGS
       Since many noun collocations contains prepositions, such as line of products, an algorithm
       similar  to  that  used  for verbs should be written for nouns.  In the present scheme, if
       Morphy is passed lines of products, the search string becomes  line of product,  which  is
       not in WordNet

       Morphy  will  allow  non-words  to  be converted to words, if they follow one of the rules
       described above.  For example, it will happily convert plantes to plants.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES (UNIX)
       WNHOME              Base directory for WordNet.  Default is /usr/local/WordNet-3.0.

       WNSEARCHDIR         Directory in which the WordNet database has been  installed.   Default
                           is WNHOME/dict.

REGISTRY (WINDOWS)
       HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\WordNet\3.0\WNHome
                           Base directory for WordNet.  Default is C:\Program Files\WordNet\3.0.

FILES
       pos.exc             morphology exception lists

SEE ALSO
       wn(1WN), wnb(1WN), binsrch(3WN), morph(3WN), wndb(5WN), wninput(7WN).



WordNet 3.0                                  Dec 2006                                 MORPHY(7WN)


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