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How to create a frequency list?
Revision as of 17:10, 3 December 2022 by Yug (talk | contribs) (→Space-separated Words frequency (+sorted):)
Words lists sorted by frequency are a very good way to cover one language methodically. After reading this page you will be able to find or create your own frequency list, clean and split it into easy-to-handle files.
Reminder : to start a recording session you need |
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Reusing open license frequency lists
Hermite Dave's lists
Hermite Dave created 61 frequency lists from OpenSubtitle data, covering most major languages under CC license. This data requires minor clean up, example with Korean (ko
) :
mkdir -p ./clean # create a folder google-chrome github.com/hermitdave/FrequencyWords/tree/master/content/2018 # open in web-browse to browse available languages iso=ko # defined your target language curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/hermitdave/FrequencyWords/master/content/2018/${iso}/${iso}_50k.txt | sort -k 2,2 -n -r | cut -d' ' -f1 | sed -E 's/^/# /g' > ./clean/${iso}-all.txt # download, sort by 2nd column numerical value descendant, cut by space then keep first field, add # to make a list, print all to file. split -d -l 5000 --additional-suffix=".txt" ./clean/${iso}-all.txt ./clean/${iso}-words-by-frequency- # split in files of 5000 items
On LinguaLibre.org, create your lists as List:{Iso3}/words-by-frequency-00001-to-5000
, etc. Ex. List:Pol/words-by-frequency-00001-to-02000
.
After creating the list on LinguaLibre, add the following to its talkpage:
==== Source ==== {{Hermite Dave}}
UNILEX's lists
UNILEX is an Unicode Consortium project which curates 999 languages. As many frequency lists are available under GNU-like license. This data requires minor clean up, example with Igbo (ig
) :
mkdir -p ./clean # create a folder google-chrome github.com/lingua-libre/unilex/tree/master/data/frequency # open in web-browse to browse available languages iso=ig # defined your target language curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/lingua-libre/unilex/master/data/frequency/${iso}.txt | tail -n +5 | sort -k 2,2 -n -r | cut -d$'\t' -f1 | sed -E 's/^/# /g' > ./clean/${iso}-all.txt # download, remove first 5 lines, sort by 2nd column numerical value descendant, cut and keep first field, add # to make a list, print all to file. split -d -l 5000 --additional-suffix=".txt" ./clean/${iso}-all.txt ./clean/${iso}-words-by-frequency- # split in files of 5000 items
On LinguaLibre.org, create your lists as List:{Iso3}/words-by-frequency-00001-to-5000
, etc. Ex. List:Pol/words-by-frequency-00001-to-02000
.
After creating the list on LinguaLibre, add the following to its talkpage:
==== Source ==== {{UNILEX License}}
Subtlex's lists
The Subtlex movement, a group of academic frequency list studies based on open subtitles, also provides about 10 of the highest quality frequency lists. Items are better cleaned up, etc. These resources are published under various licenses. Their usage on LinguaLibre must be on a case by case basis.
Corpus
Requirements for relevant corpus :
- Size: 2M+ words.
- Type: raw text.
- Language: monolingual or close to be.
Download a corpus
You can download available corpuses in your language or collect your own corpus via some datamining. Corpura are easily available for about 60 languages. Corpuses for rare language are likely missing, you will likely have to do some data mining.
Some research centers are curating the web to provide large corpura to linguists and netizens alike.
- Corpus Crawler is an open-source crawler for building corpora in 1000+ languages (easy to add more, send pull requests); https://github.com/googlei18n/corpuscrawler
- P. Lison and J. Tiedemann (2016), "OpenSubtitles2016: Extracting Large Parallel Corpora from Movie and TV Subtitles", http://stp.lingfil.uu.se/~joerg/paper/opensubs2016.pdf . In Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation (LREC 2016)
- "The corpora is made freely available to the research community on the OPUS website" − Lison and Tiedemann (2016).
- http://opus.nlpl.eu/OpenSubtitles2018.php
Wiki(p)edia dumps
One possibility is to harvest Wikipedia's contents. See:
From corpus to frequency data `{occurences} {item}`
Main tools will be grep
to grab the text strings, awk
to count them, sort
to sort and rank them.
Characters frequency (+sorted)
$ grep -o '\S' longtext.txt | awk '{a[$1]++}END{for(k in a)print a[k],k}' | sort -n -r -t' ' -k1,1 > sorted-letters.txt
Space-separated Words frequency (+sorted):
$ grep -o '\w*' longtext.txt | awk '{a[$1]++}END{for(k in a)print a[k],k}' | sort -n -r -t' ' -k1,1 > sorted-words.txt # or $ cat longtext.txt | awk '{a[$1]++}END{for(k in a)print a[k],k}' RS=" |\n" | sort -n -r -t' ' -k1,1 > sorted-words.txt
Loop on all .txt, recursively within folders
find -iname '*.txt' -exec cat {} \; | grep -o '\w*' | awk '{a[$1]++}END{for(k in a)print a[k],k}' | sort -n -r -t' ' -k1,1 > sorted-words.txt
Output
39626 aš 35938 ir 33361 tai 28520 tu'21th 26213 kad'toto ...
Cleaning up frequency lists
Most sources provide wordlists with {number_of_apparitions}{separator}{item}
or its mirror {item}{separator}{number_of_apparitions}
, already sorted from most frequent to less ones. We what to keep the field {item}
and drop the {separator}
and {number_of_apparitions}
.
Input data we have | Output data we want |
---|---|
$ cat frequency-list.txt 39626 aš 35938 ir 33361 tai 28520 tu'21th 26213 kad'toto ... |
$ cat words-list.txt # aš # ir # tai # tu'21th # kad'toto # ... |
Command | |
cut frequency-list.txt -d$' ' -f2 | sed -E 's/^/# /g' > words-list.txt # load file line by line, cut by space then keep field 2, replace start of line by # on all lines, print in file. |
This final result is what you want for LinguaLibre Help:Create your own lists.
Additional helpers
Sort command
See man sort
for details.
-n:
numeric sort-r:
reverse (descending)-t:
changes field separator to ' ' character-k:
as-k:1,1
, sort key starts on field 1 and ends on field 1
Counting lines of a file
wc -l filename.txt # -l : lines
See sample of a file
head -n 50 filename.txt # -n : number of line
Splitting a very long file
split -d -l 2000 --additional-suffix=".txt" YUE-words-by-frequency.txt YUE-words-by-frequency-
Words-lists files generally are be over 10k lines long, thus not convenient to run recording sessions. Given 1000 recordings per hour via LinguaLibre and 3 hours sessions being quite good and intense, we recommend sub-files of :
- 1000 lines, so you use 1, 2 or 3 files per session
- 3000 lines, so you use 1 file per session and kill it off like a warrior ... if your speaker and yourself survives.
See How to split a large text file into smaller files with equal number of lines in terminal?
Convert encoding
iconv -f "GB18030" -t "UTF-8" SUBTLEX-CH-WF.csv -o $iso2-words.txt
Create frequency list from en:Dragon
- See also 101 Wikidata/Wikipedia API via JS
curl 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/api.php?action=query&titles=Dragon&prop=extracts&explaintext&redirects&converttitles&callback=?&format=xml' | tr '\040' '\012' | sort | uniq -c | sort -k 1,1 -n -r > output.txt
How to compare lists ?
- [Section status: Draft, to continue.] (example).
comm - compare two sorted files line by line