Universal Dependencies

Authors

Abstract

Universal Dependencies (UD) is a framework for morphosyntactic annotation of human language, which to date has been used to create treebanks for more than 90 languages. In this article, we outline the linguistic theory of the UD framework, which draws on a long tradition of typologically oriented grammatical theories. Grammatical relations between words are centrally used to explain how predicate-argument structures are encoded morphosyntactically in different languages while morphological features and part-of-speech classes give the properties of words. We argue that this theory is a good basis for cross-linguistically consistent annotation of typologically diverse languages in a way that supports computational natural language understanding as well as broader linguistic studies.

Author Biographies

  • Marie-Catherine de Marneffe, The Ohio State University

    The Ohio State University, Department of Linguistics

    Associate Professor

  • Christopher D. Manning, Stanford University

    Stanford University, Department of Linguistics, Department of Computer Science

    Professor

  • Joakim Nivre, Uppsala University

    Uppsala University, Department of Linguistics and Philology

    Professor

  • Daniel Zeman, Charles University in Prague

    Charles University in Prague, Institute of Formal and Applied Linguistics

    Researcher

Published

2024-11-21