I haven't used it myself, but my colleagues use Wordsmith for tagging and linguistic analysis: http://www.lexically.net/wordsmith/
Laurent
Department of French, Italian and Classical Languages University of Stockholm, Sweden
On 11/16/06, Dan Kline afdtk@uaa.alaska.edu wrote:
Hi, folks—
Please forgive if this is a pure newby question.
I'm looking to do some analysis of a large body of poetry, and I'd like to be able to sort according to individual words and then map those usages against other terms to map out their relationships. I'd also like to be able to tag the terms in a number of ways, especially according to date of appearance. I know I've run across references to software that allows this kind of thing (other than just fancy SQL programming), but I can't call any of it to mind.
Anyone know of any easily accessible and not too expensive software that does this kind of thing? Or is my memory completely faulty?
Thx, and best from Anchorage,
Dan
Daniel T. Kline, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of English
U of Alaska Anchorage (PSB 212-C)
3211 Providence Drive
Anchorage, Alaska 99508
907-786-4364 | afdtk@uaa.alaska.edu
The Electronic Canterbury Tales:
http://afdtk.uaa.alaska.edu/ect_main.htm
"Fortunately, I keep my feathers numbered
for just such an emergency."
Digital Medievalist Project Homepage: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org Journal (Spring 2005-): http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/journal.cfm RSS (announcements) server: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/rss/rss2.cfm Wiki: http://sql.uleth.ca/dmorgwiki/index.php Change membership options: http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l Submit RSS announcement: http://www.digitalmedievalist.org/newitem.cfm Contact editorial Board: digitalmedievalist@uleth.ca dm-l mailing list dm-l@uleth.ca http://listserv.uleth.ca/mailman/listinfo/dm-l