Lexical data browser help
To return to the lexical data,
click your browser's Back button.
Concepts
Some of this basic information is adapted from
David F. Coward and Charles E. Grimes,
Making Dictionaries
(Waxhaw, NC: Summer Institute of Linguistics, 1995).
- The language whose vocabulary is being explored
is called the vernacular.
- The data is organized as a
bilingual dictionary.
It provides translation equivalents
with reference to a second language:
usually a researcher's language
(e.g. English, French, German).
- An index of glosses
in a national language (e.g. French, Portuguese, Spanish)
is sometimes provided.
In some cases, the entire set of lexical data is presented
from the point of view of a national audience.
The primary audience is determined by the language
in which the vernacular is described:
either a researcher's language or
a national language.
In some cases, the entire set of lexical data
is presented from the point of view of both audiences.
The dictionary provides a systematic exploration
of the vocabulary of the vernacular language,
including, among other things, meaning, range, and usage.
Because this information is expressed in a second language,
it is a bilingual dictionary.
The dictionary is displayed in the frames
at the left.
When you click a link to a vernacular word,
the browser jumps to (i.e. displays)
its dictionary entry.
You can use an index to find particular vernacular words and
to find groups of words that have something in common.
Lexical data can be indexed in many ways, for example:
You can select one index (at a time)
to be displayed in the frames
at the right.
When you click a link to a vernacular word,
the browser jumps to (i.e. displays)
its dictionary entry.
Indexes are organized in two ways:
- By letters of the alphabet.
For example, in a gloss index (also known as a "finderlist")
the data for each letter is contained in a separate web page.
- By indexing categories.
For example, the data for each part of speech
(e.g. adj, n, v) is contained in a separate web page.
Within each category, words are in alphabetic order.
Please note that index has three different senses
in this lexical data browser:
- an index to lexical data (i.e. the sense defined here,
sometimes called a "reversed" index)
- Help index
- the file name of the main web page in a folder (on a web server)
- The vernacular language is displayed
in bold font style.
(Exceptions: search boxes
and letters of the alphabet
in upper frames.)
- The primary audience's language
is displayed in regular font style.
- The national language is displayed in regular font style.
(Exception: in the dictionary when it isn't the primary audience;
then it is displayed in italic font style.)
- Hypertext links are usually underlined
and displayed in a different color (their exact formatting
depends on options in your browser).
- Part of speech is displayed in italic font style.
- Labels (including lexical relations)
are displayed in a sans-serif font.
Example of a dictionary entry:
- lexeme
-
ps.
definition of lexeme.
Example of its use.
Translation of example (for the primary audience).
Example of an index entry:
Frames in the browser
The lexical data browser is divided into four frames.
- The dictionary is at the left.
- An index is at the right.
- The lower frames display data.
- The upper frames contain options
for navigating through the data.
- Use the upper-left frame
to search for words in the dictionary and
to change the letter
of the alphabet.
- The lower-left frame
displays the dictionary entries
for one letter of the alphabet at a time.
When you jump to a word
by clicking a link in the data,
the dictionary entry
for that word is displayed in this frame.
- Use the upper-right frame
to select the kind of index and
to search for words in it.
Some kinds of indexes (e.g. gloss) let you
change the letter
of the alphabet,
other kinds (e.g. part of speech) let you
select the indexing category
(e.g. adj, n, v) instead.
- The lower-right frame
displays the index entries
for one letter of the alphabet or
for one indexing category at a time.
Hypertext links are usually underlined
and displayed in a different color
(their exact formatting
depends on options in your browser).
- Most links are cross-references to the dictionary.
When you click a link to a vernacular word,
either in the dictionary or
in an index,
the browser jumps to (i.e. displays)
its dictionary entry
(in the lower-left frame).
- Letters of the alphabet are special links.
When you click a letter (in the upper frame),
the browser displays all the entries that begin with it (in the lower frame).
Lexical relations (also known as lexical functions)
allow systematic exploration of the meaning of a lexeme
within its culturally associated relationships.
Researchers can use them to map the networks of meaning
of a culture as expressed through the language.
Some familiar lexical relations are
general and specific,
part and whole.
Please note that synonym and antonym are both relations,
but they aren't inverses of one another, as the other two pairs are.
In the dictionary,
lexical relations are cross-references
that link a lexeme to words and phrases
with which a native speaker associates it.
The lexeme is called the head.
The relations in which it participates are
formatted as labels.
The lexemes with which it correlates are called values.
For example:
- huma
-
n.
house.
Part:
subu
'door'.
- subu
-
n.
door.
Whole:
huma
'house'.
If there are lexical relations in the data,
there will be three indexes:
head, relation, and value.
For example, an index by the heads of lexical relations:
Procedures
Each upper frame contains a search box
(labeled with the name of a language).
Click in it.
Begin to type a word.
As you type, the data in the lower frame scrolls.
Please note that the browser doesn't notify you
if the word isn't found in the data.
See also: Find
Click in the search box and
type the letter of the alphabet that you want to see.
In the dictionary and
in some of the indexes (e.g. gloss),
the lower frame displays
one letter of the alphabet at a time
(i.e. the data for each letter is contained in a separate web page).
In this case, the upper frame contains
links to each letter
that can occur at the beginning of words.
Click the letter of the alphabet that you want to see.
Hypertext links.
Cross-references in the dictionary, from index to dictionary.
When you click a link to a vernacular word,
the browser "jumps" to its dictionary entry
(i.e. displays the entry in the lower-left
frame).
Tip: To return to dictionary entries that had been displayed earlier,
click your browser's Back button.
Limitation: The browser doesn't notify you
if a link isn't connected to a word in the dictionary.
In the drop-down list box
in the upper-right frame,
select the kind of index to be displayed
in the lower-right frame.
The default is a gloss index (i.e. a "finderlist").
Some kinds of indexes
(e.g. part of speech)
are organized primarily by categories (e.g. adj, n, v).
Instead of letters of the alphabet,
these indexes have another drop-down list
under the Index list
in the upper-right frame.
In the second list,
select the indexing category to be displayed
in the lower-right frame.
Browser
Use version 4 (or later) of either
Netscape Navigator or
Microsoft Internet Explorer.
These browsers implement features
that the lexical data browser requires:
cascading style sheets,
downloadable fonts,
frames, and JavaScript.
Browser options (preferences)
[Navigator]
Edit, Preferences
Category: Advanced
Enable JavaScript
Enable style sheets
To return to the lexical data,
click your browser's Back button.
To find a word anywhere it occurs on a page,
first click in the frame,
then use your browser's Find operation:
Edit, Find (on this page) [Internet Explorer]
Edit, Find in Page [Navigator]
See also: Search for words,
Change the letter of the alphabet
To print this Help information or a page of lexical data,
first click in the frame,
then use your browser's Print operation:
File, Print [Internet Explorer]
File, Print Frame [Navigator]
Alphabet, change the letter of the
Audiences
Back
Browser:
Back,
Find,
frames,
options,
Print,
versions
Dictionary
Finderlist (gloss index)
Find words (see also Search)
Formatting of entries
Frames in the browser
Gloss index
Head of a lexical relation
How to read an entry
Hypertext links in the data
Index
Jump to a word in the dictionary
Languages
Letter of the alphabet, change the
Lexical relations
Links in the data
National audience and
language
Options, browser
Part of speech index
Preferences, browser
Print
Researcher's language
Search for words (see also Find)
Value of a lexical relation
Vernacular language
Web browser:
Back,
Find,
frames,
options,
Print,
versions
To return to the lexical data,
click your browser's Back button.
Copyright © 1998-1999 Summer Institute of Linguistics, Inc.