2014
DOI: 10.4312/slo2.0.2014.2.94-113
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Nenavaden par: pogostost besede v korpusu in pri uporabniških poizvedbah

Abstract: rispevek se osredotoča na preučitev razmerja med dnevniki iskanj uporabnikov po spletnem slovarju in korpusno pogostostjo besed. Študijo so spodbudila razmišljanja, ki so se porajala pri rednem slovarskem delu in jih lahko strnemo v vprašanje: kako ohranjati na korpusu temelječ slovar aktualen? Bi morala biti naslednja beseda, ki jo uvrstimo v slovar, tista, ki sledi zadnji uslovarjeni besedi na frekvenčnem seznamu besed iz korpusa? Ali bi morala biti to beseda, ki jo uporabniki najpogosteje neuspešno iščejo v… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…The dictionary in question is a big general one with more than hundred thousand lemmata and the conclusion may therefore not be representative for dictionaries with a more reduced lemma stock as the ones to which Kilgarriff (2013) refers. However, research into logfiles by other scholars confirms another of Bergenholtz and Norddahl's (2012) conclusions, namely that there is a certain, and therefore lexicographical relevant, discrepancy between the most frequent words in a corpus and the words most frequently looked up in dictionaries; see De Schryver et al 2006and Trap-Jensen et al (2014). This last conclusion implies that it would be better to start a lexicographical project with a reduced lemma stock with lemmata selected from logfiles instead of a corpus, and then use the method recommended by Bergenholtz and Johnsen (2005) and De Schryver (2013), among others, to supplement the lemma list with additional lemmata that appear in the logfiles once the dictionary has been published online.…”
Section: Empirical Basismentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The dictionary in question is a big general one with more than hundred thousand lemmata and the conclusion may therefore not be representative for dictionaries with a more reduced lemma stock as the ones to which Kilgarriff (2013) refers. However, research into logfiles by other scholars confirms another of Bergenholtz and Norddahl's (2012) conclusions, namely that there is a certain, and therefore lexicographical relevant, discrepancy between the most frequent words in a corpus and the words most frequently looked up in dictionaries; see De Schryver et al 2006and Trap-Jensen et al (2014). This last conclusion implies that it would be better to start a lexicographical project with a reduced lemma stock with lemmata selected from logfiles instead of a corpus, and then use the method recommended by Bergenholtz and Johnsen (2005) and De Schryver (2013), among others, to supplement the lemma list with additional lemmata that appear in the logfiles once the dictionary has been published online.…”
Section: Empirical Basismentioning
confidence: 93%