释义 |
Definition of disambiguate in English: disambiguateverb dɪsamˈbɪɡjʊeɪtˌdɪsæmˈbɪɡjəˌweɪt [with object]Remove uncertainty of meaning from (an ambiguous sentence, phrase, or other linguistic unit) 消除(模棱两可的句子、词组或其他语言单位)的歧义 word senses can be disambiguated by examining the context Example sentencesExamples - In fact, one of the primary tasks of recognition memory could be to disambiguate potential, competing sources of processing fluency to arrive at the knowledge that the item or event was experienced at a particular time in the past.
- In order to disambiguate the term, I shall call paradigms of this second kind ‘disciplinary paradigms', as opposed to the ‘exemplary paradigms' described earlier.
- Even if the context might be enough to disambiguate, it just wouldn't sound serious.
- Therefore, an ontological model can effectively disambiguate meanings of words from free text sentences.
- Many top-down influences have been shown to influence perception, to disambiguate ambiguous information, or to provide a context in which to interpret information.
- Evans et al.'s paper in this issue is an excellent example of how rigorous statistical methods can help to disambiguate the sources of particular patterns of correlation.
- The closest Wise comes to disambiguating the narrative occurs in the final scene, when, as noted above, the wheel of Eleanor's car moves of its own accord to kill its driver.
- Unless you are using it to disambiguate items in a list, a semicolon should be used only between independent clauses - that is, clauses that can stand as complete sentences on their own.
- We know from much evidence that native speakers of all written languages use context to disambiguate homophone pairs that have a single written form.
- Interestingly, when creating the spirituality and health thesaurus, I thought we were disambiguating terms until we did the indexing pilot study.
- Note that even when the percentage of words correctly identified is very low (high degree of perceptual stress), older adults appear to be better able to use context to disambiguate words.
- Nonetheless, when text is read, the absence of a vowel is a cue to retrieve the semantic context so as to disambiguate opaque words that are ambiguous.
- The original message may not at first be interpretable, but then it is disambiguated through a zoom in.
Derivativesnoun dɪsambɪɡjʊˈeɪʃ(ə)n These kinds of approaches do not use multiagent architectures and instead target complex knowledge representation and sophisticated meaning disambiguation. Example sentencesExamples - The imperfections of polysemy analyses have not deterred computational linguists from attempting to devise algorithms for disambiguation and sense selection.
- Her research in computational linguistics includes work in the areas of word-sense disambiguation and discourse analysis, where she has published numerous papers over the past 15 years.
- Zoom-ins that do not create any significant disembedding or disambiguation will also not be counted.
- The goal of the interview is the disambiguation of the client's need.
Definition of disambiguate in US English: disambiguateverbˌdisamˈbiɡyəˌwātˌdɪsæmˈbɪɡjəˌweɪt [with object]Remove uncertainty of meaning from (an ambiguous sentence, phrase, or other linguistic unit) 消除(模棱两可的句子、词组或其他语言单位)的歧义 word senses can be disambiguated by examining the context Example sentencesExamples - Many top-down influences have been shown to influence perception, to disambiguate ambiguous information, or to provide a context in which to interpret information.
- Interestingly, when creating the spirituality and health thesaurus, I thought we were disambiguating terms until we did the indexing pilot study.
- In order to disambiguate the term, I shall call paradigms of this second kind ‘disciplinary paradigms', as opposed to the ‘exemplary paradigms' described earlier.
- In fact, one of the primary tasks of recognition memory could be to disambiguate potential, competing sources of processing fluency to arrive at the knowledge that the item or event was experienced at a particular time in the past.
- Nonetheless, when text is read, the absence of a vowel is a cue to retrieve the semantic context so as to disambiguate opaque words that are ambiguous.
- The original message may not at first be interpretable, but then it is disambiguated through a zoom in.
- Evans et al.'s paper in this issue is an excellent example of how rigorous statistical methods can help to disambiguate the sources of particular patterns of correlation.
- Even if the context might be enough to disambiguate, it just wouldn't sound serious.
- Note that even when the percentage of words correctly identified is very low (high degree of perceptual stress), older adults appear to be better able to use context to disambiguate words.
- We know from much evidence that native speakers of all written languages use context to disambiguate homophone pairs that have a single written form.
- Therefore, an ontological model can effectively disambiguate meanings of words from free text sentences.
- Unless you are using it to disambiguate items in a list, a semicolon should be used only between independent clauses - that is, clauses that can stand as complete sentences on their own.
- The closest Wise comes to disambiguating the narrative occurs in the final scene, when, as noted above, the wheel of Eleanor's car moves of its own accord to kill its driver.
|