Thesauri

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17 pages found in Thesauri:
American Society of Indexers - Thesauri Online
Annotated directory.
http://www.asindexing.org/site/thesonet.shtml
Germ
Searchable WordNet and Roget's Thesaurus with meaning trees.
http://www.germ.cz/
HASSET
Provides direct term search followed by hierarchical and other types of browsing. Based on a UNESCO thesaurus.
http://www.data-archive.ac.uk/search/hassetSearch.asp
Historical Thesaurus of English
Contains the vocabulary of English from the earliest written records to the present, with known recorded dates of usage, taken from the Oxford English Dictionary.
http://www2.arts.gla.ac.uk/SESLL/EngLang/thesaur/homepage.htm
INGRID Library Thesaurus
Allows direct term search with results hyperlinked to broader and narrower search terms. Available in English and Estonian.
http://ingrid.utlib.ee/thesaurus.html
Lexical Freenet
Search for relationships between words and concepts that might never have occurred to you before.
http://www.lexfn.com/
Phrases Thesaurus
A resource for writers. Enter a single word and it will return a list of phrases and sayings that are related to the word in some way. In English.
http://www.phrasefinder.co.uk
Roget's II: The New Thesaurus
3rd edition. Contains over 260,000 synonyms and cross-references. Features succinct word definitions and hyperlinked category index.
http://education.yahoo.com/reference/thesaurus/
Roget's Thesauri
Includes "Roget's International Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases" and Houghton-Mifflin's "Roget's II: The New Thesaurus," third edition.
http://www.bartleby.com/thesauri/
Roget's Thesaurus - As distributed by Project Gutenberg
E-text of Roget's Thesaurus No. Two, which is derived from the version of Roget's Thesaurus published in 1911.
http://asadz.com/thesaurus/
Sybrina's Phrase Thesaurus
A creative phrase tool for creative writers of any genre including college students, people just learning English, people wanting to improve their communication skills, artistic professionals and others.
http://www.sybrina.com
Thesaurus
Synonyms and antonyms from AOL's Research & Learn channel.
http://reference.aol.com/thesaurus
Thesaurus.com
Online version of Roget's II: The New Thesaurus, 3rd edition.
http://thesaurus.reference.com/
Thinkmap Visual Thesaurus
Interactive dictionary and thesaurus using a visual display for data navigation.
http://www.visualthesaurus.com/
WordNet - a Lexical Database for English
An on-line lexical reference system whose design is inspired by current psycholinguistic theories of human lexical memory. English nouns, verbs, adjectives and adverbs are organized into synonym sets, each representing one underlying lexical concept. Different relations link the synonym sets. From the Cognitive Science Laboratory, Princeton University
http://wordnet.princeton.edu/
Wordsmyth Educational Dictionary-Thesaurus
Integrated English dictionary and thesaurus.
http://www.wordsmyth.net/
WWWebster Thesaurus
Merriam-Webster Thesaurus
http://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thesauri Thesaurus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thesaurus

  (Redirected from Thesauri)

A thesaurus is a book that contains synonyms and sometimes antonyms, in contrast to a dictionary, which contains definitions and pronunciations.

The first example of this genre, Roget's Thesaurus, was compiled in 1805 by Peter Roget, and published in 1852. Entries in Roget's Thesaurus are listed conceptually rather than alphabetically.

Although including synonyms, a thesaurus should not be taken as a complete list of all the synonyms for a particular word. The entries are also designed for drawing distinctions between similar words and assisting in choosing exactly the right word. Unlike a dictionary, a thesaurus entry does not define words.

In information technology, a thesaurus represents a database or list of semantically orthogonal topical search keys. In the field of Artificial Intelligence, a thesaurus may sometimes be referred to as an ontology.

Thesaurus databases, created by international standards, are generally arranged hierarchically by themes and topics. Such a thesaurus places each term in context, allowing a user to distinguish between "bureau" the office and "bureau" the furniture. A thesaurus of this type is often used as the basis of an index for online material. The Art and Architecture Thesaurus, for example, is used to index the national databases of museums, Artifacts Canada, held by the Canadian Heritage Information Network (CHIN).

Contents

[edit] Etymology

The word "thesaurus" is derived from 16th-century New Latin, in turn from Latin thesaurus, from ancient Greek θησαυρός thesauros, meaning "storehouse" or "treasury" (and thus the medieval rank of thesaurer was a synonym for treasurer). This meaning has been largely supplanted by Roget's usage of the term.

[edit] Definition

A formal definition of a thesaurus designed for indexing and information retrieval is:

  • a list of every important term (single-word or multi-word) in a given domain of knowledge; and
  • a set of related terms for each term in the list.

As such, it is a list of subject headings and cross-references used in the filing and retrieval of documents.

A miniature standard English thesaurus combined with a dictionary

Terms are the basic semantic units for conveying concepts. They are usually single-word nouns, since nouns are the most concrete part of speech. Verbs can be converted to nouns – "cleans" to "cleaning", "reads" to "reading", and so on. Adjectives and adverbs, however, seldom convey any meaning useful for indexing. When a term is ambiguous, a “scope note” can be added to ensure consistency, and give direction on how to interpret the term. Not every term needs a scope note, but their presence is of considerable help in using a thesaurus correctly and reaching a correct understanding of the given field of knowledge.

"Term relationships" are links between terms. These relationships can be divided into three types: past, present or future. Past relationships are used to indicate terms which are narrower and broader in scope. A "Broader Term" (BT) or hyperonym is a more general term, e.g. “Apparatus” is a generalization of “Computers”. Reciprocally, a Narrower Term (NT) or hyponym is a more specific term, e.g. “Digital Computer” is a specialization of “Computer”. BT and NT are reciprocals; a broader term necessarily implies at least one other term which is narrower. BT and NT are used to indicate class relationships, as well as part-whole relationships (meronyms and holonyms).

The present relationship is used primarily to connect synonyms and near-synonyms. Use (USE) and Used For (UF) indicators are used when an authorized term is to be used for another, unauthorized, term; for example, the entry for the authorized term "Frequency" could have the indicator "UF Pitch". Reciprocally, the entry for the unauthorized term "Pitch" would have the indicator "USE Frequency". Used For (UF) terms are often called "entry points", "lead-in terms", or "non-preferred terms", pointing to the authorized term (also referred to as the Preferred Term or Descriptor) that has been chosen to stand for the concept. As such, their presence in text can be use by automated indexing software to suggest the Preferred Term being used as an Indexing Term.

Future relationships are used to connect two related terms whose relationship is neither past nor present. This relationship is described by the indicator "Related Term" (RT). The way the term "Brokeback" is related to the term "Brendan Laye" is an example in the future relationships category. Associative relationships should be applied with caution, since excessive use of RTs will reduce specificity in searches. Consider the following: if the typical user is searching with term "A", would they also want resources tagged with term "B"? If the answer is no, then an associative relationship should not be established.

[edit] Examples

An important thesaurus project of recent years is the Historical Thesaurus of English (HTE), currently in progress at the University of Glasgow. The HTE, which started in 1964, will be a complete database of all the words in the second edition of the Oxford English Dictionary, arranged by semantic field and date. In this way, the HTE arranges the whole vocabulary of English from the earliest written records (in Anglo-Saxon) to the present alongside types and dates of use. As a historical thesaurus, it will be the first for any of the world's languages. The HTE project has already produced the Thesaurus of Old English[1], which is derived from the whole HTE database.[2]

[edit] Specialized

[edit] Standards

The ANSI/NISO Z39.19 Standard of 2005 defines guidelines and conventions for the format, construction, testing, maintenance, and management of monolingual controlled vocabularies including lists, synonym rings, taxonomies, and thesauruses.[3]

For multilingual vocabularies, the ISO 5964 Guidelines for the establishment and development of multilingual thesauruses can be applied.

[edit] See also

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