Is there anywhere I can download a current version of Ronald Moe's "List of Semantic Domains", as used for the Dictionary Development Process?
I'm hoping there is a pdf version, that would be suitable for browsing through and thinking about.
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Ian,
I’m not sure if you’re wanting the list of semantic domain names or the list of semantic domain templates. Either is available on the RapidWords.net website, by clicking on these links, respectively: list of domains or questionnaire. This website is dedicated to the first step in Ron Moe’s Dictionary Development Process, the collection of the words which constitute the corpus of data on which the subsequent steps focus. The files available for download at the locations I’ve provided links to are in English and in Microsoft Word format. If you prefer them in PDF, contact me directly and I’ll convert what you want for you. If you want them in a different language, look through the list of what’s available on the Resources page of the website.
Best wishes,
Kevin
Kevin Warfel
Associate Dictionary and Lexicography Services Coordinator
a.k.a. Dictionary Development Coordinator
SIL International
Current technology makes it possible to provide those translating into just about any language with both a dictionary and a thesaurus in the target language, the standard tools of the trade for professional translators, so why are mother-tongue translators in minority languages still expected to do their work without these tools? Ask me about Rapid Word Collection after reading about it at rapidwords.net.
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Hi Ian,
As caretaker of the RapidWords.net website, I’d like to clarify a detail that has been often misunderstood. The figure of 15,000 that is given on the home page is what one can expect to collect in terms of “raw” words. Based on the experiences we’ve had to date, some words will be collected in multiple domains, especially when a word has multiple senses (and will therefore be counted multiple times in the total tally), some phrases will be phrases that don’t belong in a dictionary (often because the individuals doing the word collection did not clearly understand what is desirable and what is not), some words may be the product of an imaginative individual determined to find words for a semantic domain that is largely irrelevant to the language community, and so on. So 15,000 “raw” words, when “refined,” yield how many entries (actually senses)? I would love to know the answer to that question for a number of languages that have used the Rapid Words approach, but the “refining” process takes much longer than the data-gathering, so I don’t have information from the languages where I’ve personally helped guide the word-collection process. I did hear from one person recently, though, that 13,000-14,000 raw items produced an end result of some 7000 words and 3000 phrases. However, some of those were still not items worthy of inclusion in a dictionary.
So while I think it is fair to believe that your database will grow as a result of using the Rapid Words approach, I think it’s unlikely that you’ll find as many as 10,000 legitimate words and phrases that you didn’t have before you started the process. One important thing to realize is that most people judge the extent of their lexical data by the number of lexical *entries* they have, but counting the number of items collected when using the semantic domains questionnaire corresponds more closely to taking a census of the *senses*. If you have 5000 entries at present, you might have 6000 or 7000 senses in your current database. This is the number you should really be comparing to the 15,000 on the RapidWords website, in addition to taking into account the fact that the 15,000 are “raw” items, and the ones in your existing database are probably quite “refined.”
I hope that this will help set more realistic expectations of the results that you are likely to experience after using the semantic domains questionnaire, so that you won’t be disappointed in the end.
Blessings,
Kevin
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Is there anywhere I can download a current version of Ronald Moe's "List of Semantic Domains", as used for the Dictionary Development Process?
I'm hoping there is a pdf version, that would be suitable for browsing through and thinking about.
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Hi Ian,
As caretaker of the RapidWords.net website, I’d like to clarify a detail that has been often misunderstood. The figure of 15,000 that is given on the home page is what one can expect to collect in terms of “raw” words. Based on the experiences we’ve had to date, some words will be collected in multiple domains, especially when a word has multiple senses (and will therefore be counted multiple times in the total tally),
some phrases will be phrases that don’t belong in a dictionary (often because the individuals doing the word collection did not clearly understand what is desirable and what is not), some words may be the product of an imaginative individual determined to find words for a semantic domain that is largely irrelevant to the language community, and so on.
So 15,000 “raw” words, when “refined,” yield how many entries (actually senses)? I would love to know the answer to that question for a number of languages that have used the Rapid Words approach, but the “refining” process takes much longer than the data-gathering, so I don’t have information from the languages where I’ve personally helped guide the word-collection process. I did hear from one person recently, though, that 13,000-14,000 raw items produced an end result of some 7000 words and 3000 phrases. However, some of those were still not items worthy of inclusion in a dictionary.
So while I think it is fair to believe that your database will grow as a result of using the Rapid Words approach, I think it’s unlikely that you’ll find as many as 10,000 legitimate words and phrases that you didn’t have before you started the process. One important thing to realize is that most people judge the extent of their lexical data by the number of lexical *entries* they have, but counting the number of items collected when using the semantic domains questionnaire corresponds more closely to taking a census of the *senses*. If you have 5000 entries at present, you might have 6000 or 7000 senses in your current database. This is the number you should really be comparing to the 15,000 on the RapidWords website, in addition to taking into account the fact that the 15,000 are “raw” items, and the ones in your existing database are probably quite “refined.”
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/flex-list/402232518401b670806cc09189f3de56%40mail.gmail.com.
If I’m not mistaken, two of the things that Ron included in the materials he made available to those who sought to implement his Dictionary Development Process were (1) the need to address the question of “citation form,” and (2) the need to train the participants to recognize the difference between multi-word expressions that are of interest in the publication of a dictionary and those that are not (e.g., “hit the ball” vs. “hit the hay” or “The White House” vs. “the white house”). In any case, I highlight these two points in the approach that I use when leading a Rapid Word Collection workshop. To the degree to which I succeed in helping the participants understand these two concepts, the variation between “potato,” “potatoes,” “thepotato,” etc. is eliminated, as is the proliferation of phrases that have no place in a dictionary. Success on these fronts translates into a significant reduction in the need to edit the database after the word collection is completed. (Don’t misunderstand me: There will still be a significant amount of editing to be done, but the quantity will be greatly reduced if all words are entered in their citation form and if uninteresting phrases are not included.)
Kevin
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