adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ NOUN
data
▪
In addition, let us encourage colleagues to integrate machine-readable data and computer exercises into their thematic courses.
▪
The project is also incorporating existing machine-readable data files, relating to the nineteenth century, into its relational database.
▪
In an ideal world, the one body of machine-readable data would support these four very different processing aims.
▪
Only this will ensure that in future all machine-readable data can be exchanged across disciplinary and professional boundaries.
▪
Data archives also have an important role to play in setting standards for the documenting of machine-readable data.
▪
Finally, we need to ensure that the creators of machine-readable data upon whom we will increasingly rely adopt standard practices.
▪
Indeed, they already store numerous records generated by government agencies and have developed strong links with the producers of machine-readable data .
▪
In the case of the database project, it is doubtful that the machine-readable data would be of any use whatsoever.
dictionary
▪
A number of sources of semantic information are identified, the most notable of which being machine-readable dictionaries and text corpora.
▪
A definitive list of words was derived from a number of machine-readable dictionaries .
▪
It is suggested that semantic analysis using machine-readable dictionaries is restricted to their definitions and not their expansions.
▪
Others have attempted to extract information from pre-compiled sources such as machine-readable dictionaries and thesauri.
▪
Lexical, syntactic and semantic information needed for the system can be obtained from a machine-readable dictionary .
form
▪
The preservation of information captured in machine-readable form undoubtedly presents a host of problems to traditional archives.
▪
National and international bibliographic data can be fed into computers in machine-readable form .
▪
A machine-readable form available for the computer systems under 1f, ie, on cassette-tapes or discs. 4.
▪
In future an increasing amount of information will only be available to history students and teachers in machine-readable form .
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪
A definitive list of words was derived from a number of machine-readable dictionaries.
▪
A number of sources of semantic information are identified, the most notable of which being machine-readable dictionaries and text corpora.
▪
In addition, let us encourage colleagues to integrate machine-readable data and computer exercises into their thematic courses.
▪
It is suggested that semantic analysis using machine-readable dictionaries is restricted to their definitions and not their expansions.
▪
It is therefore highly important to establish that the machine-readable product of Step 1 will be susceptible of all the necessary manipulation.
▪
Most user and system activity was captured and stored in machine-readable log files.
▪
The preservation of information captured in machine-readable form undoubtedly presents a host of problems to traditional archives.
▪
The project is also incorporating existing machine-readable data files, relating to the nineteenth century, into its relational database.