CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO LEMMATIZE
PRESENT
Present
I lemmatize
you lemmatize
he/she/it lemmatizes
we lemmatize
you lemmatize
they lemmatize
Present continuous
I am lemmatizing
you are lemmatizing
he/she/it is lemmatizing
we are lemmatizing
you are lemmatizing
they are lemmatizing
Present perfect
I have lemmatized
you have lemmatized
he/she/it has lemmatized
we have lemmatized
you have lemmatized
they have lemmatized
Present perfect continuous
I have been lemmatizing
you have been lemmatizing
he/she/it has been lemmatizing
we have been lemmatizing
you have been lemmatizing
they have been lemmatizing
Present tense is used to refer to circumstances that exist at the present time or over a period that includes the present time. The
present perfect refers to past events, although it can be considered to denote primarily the resulting present situation rather than the events themselves.
PAST
Past
I lemmatized
you lemmatized
he/she/it lemmatized
we lemmatized
you lemmatized
they lemmatized
Past continuous
I was lemmatizing
you were lemmatizing
he/she/it was lemmatizing
we were lemmatizing
you were lemmatizing
they were lemmatizing
Past perfect
I had lemmatized
you had lemmatized
he/she/it had lemmatized
we had lemmatized
you had lemmatized
they had lemmatized
Past perfect continuous
I had been lemmatizing
you had been lemmatizing
he/she/it had been lemmatizing
we had been lemmatizing
you had been lemmatizing
they had been lemmatizing
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will lemmatize
you will lemmatize
he/she/it will lemmatize
we will lemmatize
you will lemmatize
they will lemmatize
Future continuous
I will be lemmatizing
you will be lemmatizing
he/she/it will be lemmatizing
we will be lemmatizing
you will be lemmatizing
they will be lemmatizing
Future perfect
I will have lemmatized
you will have lemmatized
he/she/it will have lemmatized
we will have lemmatized
you will have lemmatized
they will have lemmatized
Future perfect continuous
I will have been lemmatizing
you will have been lemmatizing
he/she/it will have been lemmatizing
we will have been lemmatizing
you will have been lemmatizing
they will have been lemmatizing
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would lemmatize
you would lemmatize
he/she/it would lemmatize
we would lemmatize
you would lemmatize
they would lemmatize
Conditional continuous
I would be lemmatizing
you would be lemmatizing
he/she/it would be lemmatizing
we would be lemmatizing
you would be lemmatizing
they would be lemmatizing
Conditional perfect
I would have lemmatize
you would have lemmatize
he/she/it would have lemmatize
we would have lemmatize
you would have lemmatize
they would have lemmatize
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been lemmatizing
you would have been lemmatizing
he/she/it would have been lemmatizing
we would have been lemmatizing
you would have been lemmatizing
they would have been lemmatizing
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you lemmatize
we let´s lemmatize
you lemmatize
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
lemmatized
Present Participle
lemmatizing
Infinitive shows the action beyond temporal perspective. The
present participle or gerund shows the action during the session. The
past participle shows the action after completion.
10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «LEMMATIZE»
Discover the use of
lemmatize in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
lemmatize and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Chembers 21 Century Dictionary
lemmatize or lemmatise • verb (lemmatized, lemmatizirtg) to organize (words in a
text) so that all inflected and variant forms of the same word are grouped together
under one lemma or headword. © 1960s. lemming /'Icmirj/ >• noun 1 a small ...
2
Python Text Processing with NLTK 2.0 Cookbook
We willusethe WordNetLemmatizer to find lemmas: >>> from nltk.stem import
WordNetLemmatizer >>>lemmatizer = WordNetLemmatizer() >>> lemmatizer.
lemmatize('cooking') 'cooking' >>> lemmatizer.lemmatize('cooking', pos='v') 'cook'
...
3
Sanskrit Computational Linguistics: First and Second ...
It will fail to lemmatize forms which are not generated from the morphological
closure of the root entries of the digitalized lexicon. An easy analysis may
account for all irregular compounds which are explicitly listed in the lexicon.
Since these ...
Gérard Huet, Amba Kulkarni, Peter Scharf, 2009
4
Foundations of Computational Linguistics: Human-Computer ...
Then the analyzed morphemes are put together again by grammatical rules to
categorize and lemmatize the word form in question. The second option results in
the allomorph method, in which the input surface is matched to fully analyzed ...
5
ELexicography in the 21st Century : New Challenges, New ...
For the purpose of searching and ordering the signs, their phonological features
have been provided in the dictionary data, but this information is not shown
explicitly to the user. We lemmatize by the manual features of the sign's form and
do ...
Sylviane Granger, Magali Paquot, 2010
6
Tradition and Influence in Anglo-Saxon Literature: An ...
If we wanted to count all the forms of cyning as simply cyning, we would have to
lemmatize the texts, marking up the morphological variants found in the edition to
make them all conform to their lemmas (i.e., matching token to type).42 Such an ...
Michael D. C. Drout, 2013
7
Introducing Corpora in Translation Studies
Quite apart from the accuracy of automatic lemmatization, which often leaves
something to be desired, Kennedy points out (1998: 208—9) that it is not always
desirable to lemmatize. It would, for example, be important to differentiate
between a ...
8
The Bloomsbury Companion To Lexicography
So, to use a corpus list as a dictionary headword, we need to map inflected forms
to lemmas: we need to lemmatize. English is not a difficult language to lemmatize
as no lemma has more than eight inflectional variants (be, am, is, are, was, ...
9
The classical commentary [electronic resource]: histories, ...
Goldhill (1999) 416 The general issues raised by the question of how, and how
much, to lemmatize a commented text are similar to those raised by the question
of reading itself, both in ancient terms (in scripta continua, how do you divide a ...
Roy K. Gibson, Christina Shuttleworth Kraus, 2002
Some dictionaries lemmatize them "under the first meaningful element" (PONS-
Collins), some do not give the user any indication on where to look. Schemann (
Dicionario Idiomatico) and Cox (van Dale) lemmatize according to a certain ...
Franz Josef Hausmann, 1990