You will write a wikipedia-like article on some linguistic topic (not a CL or NLP topic).
Milestones
You need to give me (see the course's main page for dates):
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your selected topic for approval.
If two or more people suggest the same topic, the first one wins.
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Half a page summary (can be bullets) with at least 5 reliable sources
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Article: a draft version - I will provide feedback
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the final version
Keep in mind that it might take a week (or more if I get a lot of articles at once) before you get our feedback.
If for some reason you cannot meet a deadline, talk to me. But talk to me before the deadline, not after you miss it.
Otherwise you loose points.
The wiki login page is here.
You cannot register yourself, I will email you user name and password.
Format and Content
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The article should be approximately 2000 words long (excluding references). Please, do not pad your text with meaningless words just to increase your word-count.
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The article should be written as if for English wikipedia. If it already exists, pretend it does not. You must follow the formatting, referencing, style etc. guidelines of English Wikipedia (See this Tutorial for a brief introduction).
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Important: This is not an NLP/CL class.. Do not write only about the computational aspects of the problem. You might add a short section about it if appropriate, but the core of the article should be linguistic.
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Important: This is not a history class.. Therefore, discuss interesting linguistic problems and approaches to their solution, not that A created system X in year Z. Instead, discuss the problem system X aimed to solve, the way it approached it, and compare it with other approaches to the same problem.
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Use examples in your explanation. In-line examples should be in italics, non-English examples need glosses in single quotes. For example:
The Czech noun domek `small house' ends with k.
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Terms that are not directly relevant for your topic should be "explained" by linking them to English wikipedia.
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Try to use correct and clear English, but I will not grade your grammar and spelling. Although using English is recommended, you
can write the articles in Czech. You must use a spell-checker in either language: spelling below incorrectly as bellow
does not influence your grade, while spelling it as bbelow does (the former is a word and thus it is not caught by a spell-checker).
Ask a friend to read your article and to give you feedback (But you have to write it by yourself).
Sources
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You have to use at least 5 reliable sources. You can use Google Scholar, ACL Anthology, CiteSeer, databases
accessible via our library, and obviously traditional books in the library
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You should not cite more than one encyclopedic article.
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You can use the corresponding wikipedia article as an inspiration, but do not use it as a direct source.
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Your sources must be clearly referenced. if possible specify which page from the article/book you cite
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Focus on the result of papers and their contribution to the field, not technical details.
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The article is not a legal document, so avoid direct quotes as much as possible (unless the exact wording is important).
Each person has their style of writing; therefore an article
made up of direct quotes is extremely hard to read because it mixes so many different writing
styles. Use paraphrases or summaries instead.
So instead of:
Acording to Billard (1975), slave captains "document the lack of language mixing in the early slave trade."
Use something like this:
Acording to Billard (1975), there was relatively little language mixing during the transport of slaves to America.
Other
Other students will see your articles and my comments.
You may comment on other articles in their discussion tab, but please do not edit articles of others.
Make your own backup of all the information you enter into the wiki.
Sample linguistic topics
If a topic you would like to work on is already taken, talk to me, I can help you to find something similar.
Bilingualism
- Artificial languages
- How babies learn word segmentation
- Acquisition of irregular verbs
- Sign language Grammar
- Idioms and/or euphemisms
- Metathesis, agglutinative, reduplication morphology
- Clitics in general or in some language (Spanish)
- Development of Czech/Slavic/English/Old English/Germanic/Indo-European language(s)
- Romani (Gypsy) language (grammar, dialects and/or history)
- Long movement in Czech/English (Co jsi ríkala, ze Pavel si myslí, ze Honza udelal. - Co refers to what Honza udelal, not what she said)
- Any interesting phenomenon in any language
- Czech/Slovak/English dialects