Towards a standardized annotation of rhyme judgments in Chinese historical phonology (and beyond)

Main author: List, Johann-Mattis
Other authors: Hill, Nathan W.
Foster, Christopher
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-31449
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
topic PL Languages and literatures of Eastern Asia, Africa, Oceania
description Although rhyme analysis plays a crucial role in the reconstruction of Old Chinese phonol-ogy, the field has not yet developed a standardized annotation framework for rhyme judg-ments applied to Ancient Chinese texts. Building on initial attempts to standardize cross-linguistic data for the purpose of historical and typological language comparison (as part of the Cross-Linguistic Data Formats initiative), we present a proposal for consistent and trans-parent rhyme annotation. This proposal allows scholars to annotate the rhymes they identify in historical texts in such a way that the judgments can be analyzed with computational tools as well as conveniently inspected by scholars. Our framework is accompanied by software tools and exemplary datasets, which were annotated by various scholars, and reflect not only Chinese, but also contemporary poetry in different languages. In the paper, we present the framework and also point to caveats and current insufficiencies in annotation. In doing so, we hope to inspire more scholars working on Old Chinese reconstruction to share their judgments, allowing others working in the field to improve, revise, and analyze them.
format Journal Article
author List, Johann-Mattis
author_facet List, Johann-Mattis
Hill, Nathan W.
Foster, Christopher
authorStr List, Johann-Mattis
author_letter List, Johann-Mattis
author2 Hill, Nathan W.
Foster, Christopher
author2Str Hill, Nathan W.
Foster, Christopher
title Towards a standardized annotation of rhyme judgments in Chinese historical phonology (and beyond)
publisher Gorgias Press
publishDate 2019
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/31449/