home edit page issue tracker

This page pertains to UD version 2.

Treebank Statistics: UD_Pesh-ChibErgIS: Features: Clusivity

This feature is language-specific. It occurs with 2 different values: Ex, In.

93 tokens (4%) have a non-empty value of Clusivity. 65 types (8%) occur at least once with a non-empty value of Clusivity. 37 lemmas (8%) occur at least once with a non-empty value of Clusivity. The feature is used with 5 part-of-speech tags: VERB (55; 2% instances), NOUN (19; 1% instances), AUX (11; 0% instances), PRON (7; 0% instances), PART (1; 0% instances).

VERB

55 VERB tokens (10% of all VERB tokens) have a non-empty value of Clusivity.

The most frequent other feature values with which VERB and Clusivity co-occurred: Voice=EMPTY (46; 84%).

VERB tokens may have the following values of Clusivity:

Paradigm kaExIn
kabarwakapari, kaparwa

NOUN

19 NOUN tokens (5% of all NOUN tokens) have a non-empty value of Clusivity.

NOUN tokens may have the following values of Clusivity:

Paradigm yãhExIn
ũtayãhapatayãha, patayãhha

Clusivity seems to be lexical feature of NOUN. 91% lemmas (10) occur only with one value of Clusivity.

AUX

11 AUX tokens (15% of all AUX tokens) have a non-empty value of Clusivity.

AUX tokens may have the following values of Clusivity:

PRON

7 PRON tokens (2% of all PRON tokens) have a non-empty value of Clusivity.

PRON tokens may have the following values of Clusivity:

PART

1 PART tokens (0% of all PART tokens) have a non-empty value of Clusivity.

PART tokens may have the following values of Clusivity:

Relations with Agreement in Clusivity

The 10 most frequent relations where parent and child node agree in Clusivity: VERB –[conj]–> VERB (7; 70%), VERB –[aux]–> AUX (2; 100%), VERB –[nsubj]–> PRON (2; 100%), NOUN –[appos]–> NOUN (1; 100%), NOUN –[reparandum]–> NOUN (1; 100%), PART –[reparandum]–> NOUN (1; 100%), VERB –[conj]–> AUX (1; 100%), VERB –[dep:conj]–> VERB (1; 100%).