Perseus under PhiloLogic: Difference between revisions

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==Description==
==Description==


Perseus Project Texts Loaded under PhiloLogic, Greek and Latin Morphology (current Release #2, April 2010)
The Perseus Under Philologic project allows for linguistic exploration of the texts from the [[Perseus Digital Library]]], allowing for complex queries.


From the [http://perseus.uchicago.edu/about.html Info, FAQ and help] page, by Helma Dik (accessed 2010-06-04):
From the description from the [https://perseus.uchicago.edu/ main page] of the project, accessed 10-07-2025):


<blockquote><p>The texts made available are practically all used by permission from the Perseus Project at Tufts University. However, the mechanism for browsing and searching the Perseus Project texts is a different one. It is [[PhiloLogic]], an open-source system that was especially developed for large textual databases by the ARTFL project at the University of Chicago.</p>
<blockquote><p>The project makes a selection of the Perseus texts available, "but the mechanism for browsing and searching them is a different one. It is [[PhiloLogic]], an open-source system that was especially developed for large textual databases by the [https://artfl-project.uchicago.edu/ ARTFL] project at the University of Chicago.</p>


<p>The '''Perseus under PhiloLogic''' collection is intended to use the rich encoding for searching the texts, and for other tasks that are less about reading and more about research: corpus linguistics, above all.</p>
<p>The '''Perseus under PhiloLogic''' collection is intended to use the "rich encoding for searching the texts, and for other tasks that are less about reading and more about research: corpus linguistics, above all."</p>


<p>Currently it is possible to search not only for words or strings, but also for occurrences of a lemma or part-of-speech code, thanks to prefixes 'lemma:' or 'pos:'. For example, 'lemma:nostos' or 'lemma:sum'.</p>
<p>Currently it is possible to search not only for words or strings, but also for occurrences of a lemma or part-of-speech code, thanks to prefixes ''''lemma:'''' or ''''pos:''''. For example, 'lemma:nostos' or 'lemma:sum'.</p>
 
<p>The prefix ''''form:'''' ignores the more complex instructions for part-of-speech codes that follow. You simply write out what you think wiLSJll sufficiently describe the form you are looking for, in any order, but use hyphens between terms. For instance, 'form:optative-act-singular' for an active optative in the singular, where 'form:sg-opt-act' would do the same thing.</p></blockquote>
 
In May 2021 the old server was unplugged and the material of the project is available through new links:
 
* [https://artflsrv03.uchicago.edu/philologic4/Greek/ Greek texts]
 
* [https://artflsrv03.uchicago.edu/philologic4/Latin/ Latin texts]
 
* [https://artflsrv03.uchicago.edu/philologic4/Commentaries521/ Commentaries]
 
* [https://artflsrv03.uchicago.edu/philologic4/Monographs/ Monographs]
 
* [https://artflsrv03.uchicago.edu/philologic4/LSJ/ LSJ dictionary of Ancient Greek]
 
* [https://artflsrv03.uchicago.edu/philologic4/LewisShort521/ Lewis and Short dictionary of Latin]
 
* [https://artflsrv03.uchicago.edu/efts/woodhouse/woodhouse_search.html Woodhouse dictionary of Ancient Greek]


<p>The prefix 'form:' ignores the more complex instructions for part-of-speech codes that follow. You simply write out what you think will sufficiently describe the form you are looking for, in any order, but use hyphens between terms. For instance, 'form:optative-act-singular' for an active optative in the singular, where 'form:sg-opt-act' would do the same thing.</p></blockquote>


[[category:Projects]]
[[category:Projects]]
[[category:XML]]
[[category:XML]]
[[category:linguistics]]
[[category:linguistics]]

Revision as of 13:45, 10 July 2025

Available

Director

  • Helma Dik

Description

The Perseus Under Philologic project allows for linguistic exploration of the texts from the Perseus Digital Library], allowing for complex queries.

From the description from the main page of the project, accessed 10-07-2025):

The project makes a selection of the Perseus texts available, "but the mechanism for browsing and searching them is a different one. It is PhiloLogic, an open-source system that was especially developed for large textual databases by the ARTFL project at the University of Chicago.

The Perseus under PhiloLogic collection is intended to use the "rich encoding for searching the texts, and for other tasks that are less about reading and more about research: corpus linguistics, above all."

Currently it is possible to search not only for words or strings, but also for occurrences of a lemma or part-of-speech code, thanks to prefixes 'lemma:' or 'pos:'. For example, 'lemma:nostos' or 'lemma:sum'.

The prefix 'form:' ignores the more complex instructions for part-of-speech codes that follow. You simply write out what you think wiLSJll sufficiently describe the form you are looking for, in any order, but use hyphens between terms. For instance, 'form:optative-act-singular' for an active optative in the singular, where 'form:sg-opt-act' would do the same thing.

In May 2021 the old server was unplugged and the material of the project is available through new links: