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#ngramviewer — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #ngramviewer, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Apparently there was a real problem in the #UK in the late 1960s that gave rise to an epidemic of twisted knickers. Three decades later, it spread to the #US as well.

    Fortunately, the situation seems to be on a gradual decline. But it just goes to show that you never know the hidden problems with which some people must cope.

    Source: #Google #NgramViewer
    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

  2. Apparently there was a real problem in the #UK in the late 1960s that gave rise to an epidemic of twisted knickers. Three decades later, it spread to the #US as well.

    Fortunately, the situation seems to be on a gradual decline. But it just goes to show that you never know the hidden problems with which some people must cope.

    Source: #Google #NgramViewer
    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

  3. Apparently there was a real problem in the #UK in the late 1960s that gave rise to an epidemic of twisted knickers. Three decades later, it spread to the #US as well.

    Fortunately, the situation seems to be on a gradual decline. But it just goes to show that you never know the hidden problems with which some people must cope.

    Source: #Google #NgramViewer
    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

  4. Apparently there was a real problem in the #UK in the late 1960s that gave rise to an epidemic of twisted knickers. Three decades later, it spread to the #US as well.

    Fortunately, the situation seems to be on a gradual decline. But it just goes to show that you never know the hidden problems with which some people must cope.

    Source: #Google #NgramViewer
    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

  5. Apparently there was a real problem in the #UK in the late 1960s that gave rise to an epidemic of twisted knickers. Three decades later, it spread to the #US as well.

    Fortunately, the situation seems to be on a gradual decline. But it just goes to show that you never know the hidden problems with which some people must cope.

    Source: #Google #NgramViewer
    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

  6. "Man kann dieses Korpus leider wirklich nicht nutzen" @fotis_jannidis #DHd2023 mit systematisch-sauberer Analyse des #google #NgramViewer. Was Raunen war, ist nun insb. für die Zeit nach 2000 auf den Punkt gebracht. Ohne Metadaten war rekonstruierende quantitative Analyse nötig. Stark vertreten:
    1/ GRIN-Verlag
    2/ literarisches Self-publishing
    3/ Retrodigitalisierung der Verlage
    Das Korpus also weder repräsentativ f. "Bücher" noch f. "deutsche Sprache." Für zeitliches Mapping unbrauchbar.

  7. "Man kann dieses Korpus leider wirklich nicht nutzen" @fotis_jannidis legt eine systematisch-saubere Analyse des #google #NgramViewer vor. Was Raunen war, ist nun insb. für die Zeit nach 2000 auf den Punkt gebracht. Ohnr Metadaten war rekonstruierende quantitative Analyse nötig. Stark vertreten:
    1/ GRIN-Verlag
    2/ literarisches Self-publishing
    3/ Retrodigitalisierung der Verlage
    Das Korpus also weder repräsentativ f. "Bücher" noch f. "deutsche Sprache." Für zeitliches Mapping unbrauchbar.

  8. "Man kann dieses Korpus leider wirklich nicht nutzen" @fotis_jannidis #DHd2023 mit systematisch-sauberer Analyse des #google #NgramViewer. Was Raunen war, ist nun insb. für die Zeit nach 2000 auf den Punkt gebracht. Ohne Metadaten war rekonstruierende quantitative Analyse nötig. Stark vertreten:
    1/ GRIN-Verlag
    2/ literarisches Self-publishing
    3/ Retrodigitalisierung der Verlage
    Das Korpus also weder repräsentativ f. "Bücher" noch f. "deutsche Sprache." Für zeitliches Mapping unbrauchbar.

  9. "Man kann dieses Korpus leider wirklich nicht nutzen" @fotis_jannidis #DHd2023 mit systematisch-sauberer Analyse des #google #NgramViewer. Was Raunen war, ist nun insb. für die Zeit nach 2000 auf den Punkt gebracht. Ohne Metadaten war rekonstruierende quantitative Analyse nötig. Stark vertreten:
    1/ GRIN-Verlag
    2/ literarisches Self-publishing
    3/ Retrodigitalisierung der Verlage
    Das Korpus also weder repräsentativ f. "Bücher" noch f. "deutsche Sprache." Für zeitliches Mapping unbrauchbar.

  10. "Man kann dieses Korpus leider wirklich nicht nutzen" @fotis_jannidis legt eine systematisch-saubere Analyse des #google #NgramViewer vor. Was Raunen war, ist nun insb. für die Zeit nach 2000 auf den Punkt gebracht. Ohnr Metadaten war rekonstruierende quantitative Analyse nötig. Stark vertreten:
    1/ GRIN-Verlag
    2/ literarisches Self-publishing
    3/ Retrodigitalisierung der Verlage
    Das Korpus also weder repräsentativ f. "Bücher" noch f. "deutsche Sprache." Für zeitliches Mapping unbrauchbar.

  11. Pondering the Big Questions:

    When did "meet-cute" become A Thing?

    Ngram Viewer says ... mostly post-2010:

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    It seems recent to me.

    (Both "meet cute" and "meet-cute" plotted. I suspect the unhyphenated version will have numerous false positives as in "meet cute (girl(s)|guy(s))".)

    #ngrams #NgramViewer

  12. Pondering the Big Questions:

    When did "meet-cute" become A Thing?

    Ngram Viewer says ... mostly post-2010:

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    It seems recent to me.

    (Both "meet cute" and "meet-cute" plotted. I suspect the unhyphenated version will have numerous false positives as in "meet cute (girl(s)|guy(s))".)

    #ngrams #NgramViewer

  13. Pondering the Big Questions:

    When did "meet-cute" become A Thing?

    Ngram Viewer says ... mostly post-2010:

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    It seems recent to me.

    (Both "meet cute" and "meet-cute" plotted. I suspect the unhyphenated version will have numerous false positives as in "meet cute (girl(s)|guy(s))".)

    #ngrams #NgramViewer

  14. Pondering the Big Questions:

    When did "meet-cute" become A Thing?

    Ngram Viewer says ... mostly post-2010:

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    It seems recent to me.

    (Both "meet cute" and "meet-cute" plotted. I suspect the unhyphenated version will have numerous false positives as in "meet cute (girl(s)|guy(s))".)

    #ngrams #NgramViewer

  15. Pondering the Big Questions:

    When did "meet-cute" become A Thing?

    Ngram Viewer says ... mostly post-2010:

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    It seems recent to me.

    (Both "meet cute" and "meet-cute" plotted. I suspect the unhyphenated version will have numerous false positives as in "meet cute (girl(s)|guy(s))".)

    #ngrams #NgramViewer

  16. On the changing of language usage patterns over time, homelessness is an interesting case.

    I'd discovered some time back, that term broke into usage suddenly in 1980. It wasn't entirely unknown before, but the concept often appeared as a compound verb, "made homeless", rather than as a noun, "homeless (man|woman|person)", and almost always as an immediate consequence of some disaster, such as a structural fire, hurricane, flood, or earthquake. Earlier terms that had been used to describe long-term lack of reliable housing include vagrant, itinerant, and the like (I'd need to look these up again).

    Part of this seems to be due to changes in how housing was approached in the US, and especially the elimination of alternatives to single-family dwellings (e.g., rooming houses, residence hotels) in many areas. But some also seems to be a linguistic, social, and political change in usage.

    Ngram: "homelessness": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    Ngram: "homeless, vagrant, itinerant": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    The message is that ngrams and the Google corpus are useful but also require interpretation.

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #homelessness

  17. On the changing of language usage patterns over time, homelessness is an interesting case.

    I'd discovered some time back, that term broke into usage suddenly in 1980. It wasn't entirely unknown before, but the concept often appeared as a compound verb, "made homeless", rather than as a noun, "homeless (man|woman|person)", and almost always as an immediate consequence of some disaster, such as a structural fire, hurricane, flood, or earthquake. Earlier terms that had been used to describe long-term lack of reliable housing include vagrant, itinerant, and the like (I'd need to look these up again).

    Part of this seems to be due to changes in how housing was approached in the US, and especially the elimination of alternatives to single-family dwellings (e.g., rooming houses, residence hotels) in many areas. But some also seems to be a linguistic, social, and political change in usage.

    Ngram: "homelessness": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    Ngram: "homeless, vagrant, itinerant": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    The message is that ngrams and the Google corpus are useful but also require interpretation.

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #homelessness

  18. On the changing of language usage patterns over time, homelessness is an interesting case.

    I'd discovered some time back, that term broke into usage suddenly in 1980. It wasn't entirely unknown before, but the concept often appeared as a compound verb, "made homeless", rather than as a noun, "homeless (man|woman|person)", and almost always as an immediate consequence of some disaster, such as a structural fire, hurricane, flood, or earthquake. Earlier terms that had been used to describe long-term lack of reliable housing include vagrant, itinerant, and the like (I'd need to look these up again).

    Part of this seems to be due to changes in how housing was approached in the US, and especially the elimination of alternatives to single-family dwellings (e.g., rooming houses, residence hotels) in many areas. But some also seems to be a linguistic, social, and political change in usage.

    Ngram: "homelessness": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    Ngram: "homeless, vagrant, itinerant": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    The message is that ngrams and the Google corpus are useful but also require interpretation.

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #homelessness

  19. On the changing of language usage patterns over time, homelessness is an interesting case.

    I'd discovered some time back, that term broke into usage suddenly in 1980. It wasn't entirely unknown before, but the concept often appeared as a compound verb, "made homeless", rather than as a noun, "homeless (man|woman|person)", and almost always as an immediate consequence of some disaster, such as a structural fire, hurricane, flood, or earthquake. Earlier terms that had been used to describe long-term lack of reliable housing include vagrant, itinerant, and the like (I'd need to look these up again).

    Part of this seems to be due to changes in how housing was approached in the US, and especially the elimination of alternatives to single-family dwellings (e.g., rooming houses, residence hotels) in many areas. But some also seems to be a linguistic, social, and political change in usage.

    Ngram: "homelessness": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    Ngram: "homeless, vagrant, itinerant": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    The message is that ngrams and the Google corpus are useful but also require interpretation.

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #homelessness

  20. On the changing of language usage patterns over time, homelessness is an interesting case.

    I'd discovered some time back, that term broke into usage suddenly in 1980. It wasn't entirely unknown before, but the concept often appeared as a compound verb, "made homeless", rather than as a noun, "homeless (man|woman|person)", and almost always as an immediate consequence of some disaster, such as a structural fire, hurricane, flood, or earthquake. Earlier terms that had been used to describe long-term lack of reliable housing include vagrant, itinerant, and the like (I'd need to look these up again).

    Part of this seems to be due to changes in how housing was approached in the US, and especially the elimination of alternatives to single-family dwellings (e.g., rooming houses, residence hotels) in many areas. But some also seems to be a linguistic, social, and political change in usage.

    Ngram: "homelessness": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    Ngram: "homeless, vagrant, itinerant": books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    The message is that ngrams and the Google corpus are useful but also require interpretation.

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #homelessness

  21. Google Ngrams: "white nationalist"

    Apropos some recent discussions, I've been looking into a number of aspects of this term and aspects related to it.

    Google Ngram Viewer is a powerful, if occasionally problematic, tool for exploring language and terms used within it.

    An ngram of the headline phrase of this toot ... shows an immense rise in prevalence of the term through 2019 (the most recent data in the corpus), roughly 10 times the 2010 level.

    What's driving that isn't necessarily clear --- language and usage reflects both the reflected real-world phenomena described by terms, and preferences for certain terms over others.

    But it's attention-grabbing all the same. And a bit sobering.

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #racism

  22. Google Ngrams: "white nationalist"

    Apropos some recent discussions, I've been looking into a number of aspects of this term and aspects related to it.

    Google Ngram Viewer is a powerful, if occasionally problematic, tool for exploring language and terms used within it.

    An ngram of the headline phrase of this toot ... shows an immense rise in prevalence of the term through 2019 (the most recent data in the corpus), roughly 10 times the 2010 level.

    What's driving that isn't necessarily clear --- language and usage reflects both the reflected real-world phenomena described by terms, and preferences for certain terms over others.

    But it's attention-grabbing all the same. And a bit sobering.

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #racism

  23. Google Ngrams: "white nationalist"

    Apropos some recent discussions, I've been looking into a number of aspects of this term and aspects related to it.

    Google Ngram Viewer is a powerful, if occasionally problematic, tool for exploring language and terms used within it.

    An ngram of the headline phrase of this toot ... shows an immense rise in prevalence of the term through 2019 (the most recent data in the corpus), roughly 10 times the 2010 level.

    What's driving that isn't necessarily clear --- language and usage reflects both the reflected real-world phenomena described by terms, and preferences for certain terms over others.

    But it's attention-grabbing all the same. And a bit sobering.

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #racism

  24. Google Ngrams: "white nationalist"

    Apropos some recent discussions, I've been looking into a number of aspects of this term and aspects related to it.

    Google Ngram Viewer is a powerful, if occasionally problematic, tool for exploring language and terms used within it.

    An ngram of the headline phrase of this toot ... shows an immense rise in prevalence of the term through 2019 (the most recent data in the corpus), roughly 10 times the 2010 level.

    What's driving that isn't necessarily clear --- language and usage reflects both the reflected real-world phenomena described by terms, and preferences for certain terms over others.

    But it's attention-grabbing all the same. And a bit sobering.

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #racism

  25. Google Ngrams: "white nationalist"

    Apropos some recent discussions, I've been looking into a number of aspects of this term and aspects related to it.

    Google Ngram Viewer is a powerful, if occasionally problematic, tool for exploring language and terms used within it.

    An ngram of the headline phrase of this toot ... shows an immense rise in prevalence of the term through 2019 (the most recent data in the corpus), roughly 10 times the 2010 level.

    What's driving that isn't necessarily clear --- language and usage reflects both the reflected real-world phenomena described by terms, and preferences for certain terms over others.

    But it's attention-grabbing all the same. And a bit sobering.

    books.google.com/ngrams/graph?

    #ngrams #NgramViewer #racism