OK, no worries. Found what I was looking for.

It is here: http://languagelog.ldc.upenn.edu/myl/PennTreebank1995.pdf

In case someone needs the same.


On Sat, Feb 8, 2014 at 12:13 AM, Carlos Scheidecker <[email protected]>wrote:

> Hello all,
>
> When you use the parser, you have some phrase objects tagged as the list
> bellow.
>
> Looking at the source code, you can identify those Phrase types by reading
> comments.
>
> I have put the "Phrase Type" list bellow together.
>
> I wonder if anyone would have a list of Phrase Types so that I can test a
> custom Parser?
>
> For instance on the following sentence "The old begger ran after the man
> who was wearing a black coat", the example of NP parse would be: "The old
> begger". Example of VP would be "ran after the man who was wearing a black
> coat".
>
> I am hoping to get examples of text of CONJP, ADJP, ADVP etc as per list
> bellow.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
> <name>ParseTagMappings</name>
>         <value>
>           <array>
>             <string>S,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.S</string>
>             <string>SBAR,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.SBAR</string>
>             <string>SBARQ,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.SBARQ</string>
>             <string>SINV,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.SINV</string>
>             <string>SQ,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.SQ</string>
>             <string>ADJP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.ADJP</string>
>             <string>ADVP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.ADVP</string>
>             <string>CONJP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.CONJP</string>
>             <string>FRAG,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.FRAG</string>
>             <string>INTJ,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.INTJ</string>
>             <string>LST,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.LST</string>
>             <string>NAC,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.NAC</string>
>             <string>NP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.NP</string>
>             <string>NX,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.NX</string>
>             <string>PP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.PP</string>
>             <string>PRN,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.PRNphrase</string>
>             <string>PRT,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.PRT</string>
>             <string>QP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.QP</string>
>             <string>RRC,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.RRC</string>
>             <string>UCP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.UCP</string>
>             <string>VP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.VP</string>
>             <string>WHADJP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.WHADJP</string>
>             <string>WHAVP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.WHAVP</string>
>             <string>WHNP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.WHNP</string>
>             <string>WHPP,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.WHPP</string>
>             <string>X,org.apache.uima.examples.opennlp.X</string>
>           </array>
>         </value>
> From org/apache/uima/examples/opennlp/ you have the following descriptions
>
> Phrases type:
>
> S -> Simple declarative clause, i.e. one that is not introduced by a
> (possible empty) subordinating
>      conjunction or a wh-word and that does not exhibit subject-verb
> inversion.
>
> SBAR -> Clause introduced by a (possibly empty) subordinating conjunction.
>
> SBARQ -> Direct question introduced by a wh-word or a wh-phrase.
>          Indirect questions and relative clauses should be bracketed as
> SBAR, not SBARQ.
>
> SINV -> Inverted declarative sentence, i.e. one in which the subject
> follows the tensed verb or modal.
>
> SQ -> Inverted yes/no question, or main clause of a wh-question, following
> the wh-phrase in SBARQ.
>
> ADJP -> Adjective Phrase.
>
> ADVP -> Adverb Phrase.
>
> CONJP -> Conjunction Phrase.
>
> FRAG -> Fragment.
>
> INTJ -> Interjection. Corresponds approximately to the part-of-speech tag
> UH.
>
> LST -> List marker. Includes surrounding punctuation.
>
> NAC -> Not a Constituent; used to show the scope of certain prenominal
> modifiers within an NP.
>
> NP -> Noun Phrase.
>
> NX -> Used within certain complex NPs to mark the head of the NP.
> Corresponds very roughly to N-bar
>
> PP -> Prepositional Phrase.
>
> PRN -> Parenthetical.
>
> PRT -> Particle. Category for words that should be tagged RP.
>
> QP -> Quantifier Phrase (i.e. complex measure/amount phrase); used within
> NP.
>
> RRC -> Reduced Relative Clause.
>
> UCP -> Unlike Coordinated Phrase.
>
> VP -> Verb Phrase.
>
> WHADJP -> Wh-adjective Phrase. Adjectival phrase containing a wh-adverb,
> as in how hot.
>
> WHAVP -> Wh-adverb Phrase. Introduces a clause with an NP gap. May be null
> (containing the 0 complementizer)
>          or lexical, containing a wh-adverb such as how or why.
>
> WHNP -> Wh-noun Phrase. Introduces a clause with an NP gap. May be null
> (containing the 0 complementizer)
>         or lexical, containing some wh-word, e.g. who, which book, whose
> daughter, none of which, or how
>         many leopards.
>
> WHPP -> Wh-prepositional Phrase. Prepositional phrase containing a wh-noun
> phrase
>         (such as of which or by whose authority) that either introduces a
> PP gap or is contained by a WHNP.
>
> X ->  Unknown, uncertain, or unbracketable. X is often used for bracketing
> typos and in bracketing
>       the...the-constructions.
>

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