Old Norwegian Homily book. This is the transcribed, syntactically analysed version of The Old Norwegian Homily Book (Gammalnorsk homiliebok) in AM 619 4to (ca. 1200–1225).
This is one of four Old Norwegian manuscripts in the Menotec collection which is searchable in the INESS portal.
The Menotec collection in INESS contains four central manuscripts in Old Norwegian (although the ISO language code is termed “Old Norse”): The Old Norwegian Homily Book in AM 619 4to (ca. 1200–1225), the legendary saga of St Olaf in Upps DG 8 II (ca. 1225–1250), Strengleikar in Upps DG 4–7 4to (ca. 1270) and the Law of Magnus the Lawmender in Holm perg 34 4to (ca. 1275–1300).
Menotec was an infrastructure project funded by the Norwegian Research Council (2010–2012) with the aim of transcribing and annotating a corpus of Old Norwegian texts.
The texts in the Menotec collection in INESS have been annotated morphologically (adding the lemma and the grammatical form of each word) and syntactically; the syntactic annotation is based on dependency analysis, as this has been developed in the PROIEL project.
The transcribed texts are published in the Medieval Nordic Text Archive (MENOTA). The annotated texts are published in the treebank of the PROIEL project, and are accessible through the INESS portal.
To read more about Menotec, please cf. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menotec
Old Norwegian Homily book. This is the transcribed, syntactically analysed version of The Old Norwegian Homily Book (Gammalnorsk homiliebok) in AM 619 4to (ca. 1200–1225).
This is one of four Old Norwegian manuscripts in the Menotec collection which is searchable in the INESS portal.
The Menotec collection in INESS contains four central manuscripts in Old Norwegian (although the ISO language code is termed “Old Norse”): The Old Norwegian Homily Book in AM 619 4to (ca. 1200–1225), the legendary saga of St Olaf in Upps DG 8 II (ca. 1225–1250), Strengleikar in Upps DG 4–7 4to (ca. 1270) and the Law of Magnus the Lawmender in Holm perg 34 4to (ca. 1275–1300).
Menotec was an infrastructure project funded by the Norwegian Research Council (2010–2012) with the aim of transcribing and annotating a corpus of Old Norwegian texts.
The texts in the Menotec collection in INESS have been annotated morphologically (adding the lemma and the grammatical form of each word) and syntactically; the syntactic annotation is based on dependency analysis, as this has been developed in the PROIEL project.
The transcribed texts are published in the Medieval Nordic Text Archive (MENOTA). The annotated texts are published in the treebank of the PROIEL project, and are accessible through the INESS portal.
To read more about Menotec, please cf. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menotec
Extended metadata
resource Common Info
resource Type: corpus
identification Info
resource Name: Old Norwegian Homily book (AM 619 4to)
description: Old Norwegian Homily book. This is the transcribed, syntactically analysed version of The Old Norwegian Homily Book (Gammalnorsk homiliebok) in AM 619 4to (ca. 1200–1225).
This is one of four Old Norwegian manuscripts in the Menotec collection which is searchable in the INESS portal.
The Menotec collection in INESS contains four central manuscripts in Old Norwegian (although the ISO language code is termed "Old Norse"): The Old Norwegian Homily Book in AM 619 4to (ca. 1200–1225), the legendary saga of St Olaf in Upps DG 8 II (ca. 1225–1250), Strengleikar in Upps DG 4–7 4to (ca. 1270) and the Law of Magnus the Lawmender in Holm perg 34 4to (ca. 1275–1300).
Menotec was an infrastructure project funded by the Norwegian Research Council (2010–2012) with the aim of transcribing and annotating a corpus of Old Norwegian texts.
The texts in the Menotec collection in INESS have been annotated morphologically (adding the lemma and the grammatical form of each word) and syntactically; the syntactic annotation is based on dependency analysis, as this has been developed in the PROIEL project.
The transcribed texts are published in the Medieval Nordic Text Archive (MENOTA). The annotated texts are published in the treebank of the PROIEL project, and are accessible through the INESS portal.
To read more about Menotec, please cf. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menotec
annotation Format: The morphological annotation lists the word's POS, grammatical features (case, number, etc.) and lemma form; the latter following the orthography in "Gammelnorsk Ordboksverk".
tagset: cf. Guidelines for Morphological and Syntactic Annotation of Old Norwegian Texts, see link under "Annotation manual" in metadata.
theoretic Model: cf. Guidelines for Morphological and Syntactic Annotation of Old Norwegian Texts, see link under "Annotation manual" in metadata.
annotation Manual Structured
role: annotationManual
document Info
document Type: book
title: Guidelines for Morphological and Syntactic Annotation of Old Norwegian Texts
author: Odd Einar Haugen and Fartein Th. Øverland
year: 2014
publisher: Bergen Language and Linguistic Studies (BeLLS)
time Coverage: 1200-1225 (the dating of the manuscript)
dc:type
corpus
dc:title
Old Norwegian Homily book (AM 619 4to)
dc:identifier
oai:clarino.uib.no:non-homiliebok-dep
dc:description
Old Norwegian Homily book. This is the transcribed, syntactically analysed version of The Old Norwegian Homily Book (Gammalnorsk homiliebok) in AM 619 4to (ca. 1200–1225).
This is one of four Old Norwegian manuscripts in the Menotec collection which is searchable in the INESS portal.
The Menotec collection in INESS contains four central manuscripts in Old Norwegian (although the ISO language code is termed "Old Norse"): The Old Norwegian Homily Book in AM 619 4to (ca. 1200–1225), the legendary saga of St Olaf in Upps DG 8 II (ca. 1225–1250), Strengleikar in Upps DG 4–7 4to (ca. 1270) and the Law of Magnus the Lawmender in Holm perg 34 4to (ca. 1275–1300).
Menotec was an infrastructure project funded by the Norwegian Research Council (2010–2012) with the aim of transcribing and annotating a corpus of Old Norwegian texts.
The texts in the Menotec collection in INESS have been annotated morphologically (adding the lemma and the grammatical form of each word) and syntactically; the syntactic annotation is based on dependency analysis, as this has been developed in the PROIEL project.
The transcribed texts are published in the Medieval Nordic Text Archive (MENOTA). The annotated texts are published in the treebank of the PROIEL project, and are accessible through the INESS portal.
To read more about Menotec, please cf. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menotec