122,500 research outputs found
Letter, C. L. Coffey to Putnam Darden
This undated, handwritten letter, is written from C. L. Coffey to Captain Darden concerning Coffey\u27s shoe business, the type of currency he accepts as payment and whether or not he will be able to make Darden a pair of shoes. The edge of the blue paper are jagged and ripped. A note about the weight of the hide dates the letter around July 18, 1865.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-darden-papers/1149/thumbnail.jp
Oral history interview with Wallace Coffey
Wallace Coffey, former chairman of the Comanche Tribe, discusses his political career serving as director of the Nebraska Indian Commission and eventually becoming the chairman of the Comanche Tribe in 1991. He talks about his grandfather, Eli Coffey, who served in Troop L of the 7th Cavalry and his lasting legacy on his family.The Troop L Collection is a series of interviews conducted as a part of dissertation research for Andy Moser, titled A Shadowed Path, Native American Soldiers in the US Army, 1891-1897. Through interviews with the troop's descendants, the purpose of the Troop L Oral History Project is to provide Native American perspective to the documented history of Troop L, 7th Cavalry, which was stationed at Fort Sill from 1891-1897
Oral History Interview: Dr. William Coffey
This interview is one of a series conducted concerning the history of Marshall University. At the time of the interview, Dr. Coffey was assistant vice- president for Academic Affairs at Marshall and associate director of research with the Board of Regents. The topic of the interview is academic freedom in relation to the Bottino Case (Michael L. Bottino?) and the resolution of that case.https://mds.marshall.edu/oral_history/1245/thumbnail.jp
Christina M. Coffey
Christina M. Coffey receives an award for five years of service in Student Affairs. (l-r) President William Perry, Christina M. Coffey, Vice President of Student Affairs Dan Nadler.https://thekeep.eiu.edu/years_of_service_2013/1101/thumbnail.jp
Account Statement for John P. Darden to C. L. Coffey, 1858-1859
This handwritten account statement details John P. Darden\u27s charges for leather and shoes purchased from C. L. Coffey in Fayette, Mississippi during 1858 and 1859. The statement includes 12.90 of credits to equal $2.75 due to Darden. The statement also includes a note from Coffey explaining the statement.https://scholarsjunction.msstate.edu/mss-darden-papers/1175/thumbnail.jp
Correction: Forrester, N.L.; Coffey, L.L.; Weaver, S.C. Arboviral Bottlenecks and Challenges to Maintaining Diversity and Fitness during Mosquito Transmission. Viruses 2014, 6, 3991–4004
In the original manuscript, Forrester, N.L.; Coffey, L.L.; Weaver, S.C. Arboviral Bottlenecks and Challenges to Maintaining Diversity and Fitness during Mosquito Transmission. Viruses 2014, 6, 3991–4004, Figure 1 contains an error, the third bottle was absent from the figure:[...
Orozco's Quetzalcoatl : history, myth, and melancholy in the epic of American civilization
Mary Coffey, associate professor of Art History at Darthmouth College, delivers a talk entitled "Orozco's Quetzalcoatl: history, myth, and melancholy in the epic of American civilization". Coffey talks about Jos Clemente Orozco's fresco, "The epic of American civilization", held in the lower level of Dartmouth College's Baker Memorial Library. She analyzes the art and the story it tells of the Aztec deity Quetzalcoatl, Orozco's intent, and the juxtaposition of Mesoamerican beliefs with Judaeo-Christian religion. Coffey answers questions from the audience. Coffey is the keynote speaker at the Art History and Visual Culture Undergraduate Symposium 2016
Original filing title: Anniversary, 125th Event | Bloomberg, Michael R. | Bryn-Julson, Phyllis | Zeger, Scott L. | Coffey, Donald S.
Photograph of 125th Anniversary event, held at B&O Railroad Museum, with Michael R. Bloomberg, Phyllis Bryn-Julson, Scott L. Zeger, and Donald S. Coffey
Looking for pre-selected multiword units in an untagged corpus of written Italian: maximizing the potential of the search program DBT
In the course of research being carried out in the field of bilingual phraseology, the Italian Reference Corpus (IRC) was used as a potential source of contextualized examples for previously selected multiword units. In all, about 2000 items were looked for. These included both multiword lexical units and complete utterances. Before discussing the search program used and search techniques employed, it should be pointed out that the IRC is an untagged corpus. The user has no automatic help of a syntactic, semantic or other nature; immediate access is available only to raw individual words, or rather character strings. For the user interested in locating multiword units, the resultant intrinsic problems may be divided into two types. Firstly, basing one\u27s search on individual word forms (as opposed to looking for phrases which have in some way been tagged as such) will often result in a certain amount of irrelevant material. Secondly, since many phraseological units are subject to a greater or lesser amount of variation, it may as a consequence be difficult to find all occurrences. In information science the terms precision and recall would be used with regard to these two problems. Jeremy Clear explains precision and recall in the following way
Considerations emerging from a frequency study of multiword units in a corpus of contemporary written Italian
In this article we discuss the notion of corpus frequency as applied to multiword units. Most commonly, corpus frequency data regards single word forms, mainly because such data is very easy to obtain. It would be much more useful, however, to have access to information regarding the relative frequency of all units of meaning or function in a given language. That is, frequency data should be available for both single-word and multi-word units, and be sense-differentiated where homonymy exists. Such information would play an important role in contributing to the overall description of a language, in making cross-corpus and cross-language comparisons, and in providing the basis for other computational tasks.
In the present paper we discuss some of the major problems involved in drawing up frequency figures for multiword units, and then proceed to present a case study of how partial frequency data was arrived at for a corpus of written Italian. We also make cross-corpus comparisons, notably with a typologically similar corpus of English
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