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As a consequence of the rule, "content words" tend to have at least three letters.
In the key word phase they start to identify and use key content words.
Semantic analysis may also help by identifying a domain code for content words.
They also noted that monovocalic content words are always long.
Why is it that content words tend to be preserved and function words omitted?
Hence the eventual output can only be an unstructured sequence of content words.
This could also suggest candidate words in conjunction with other information, if the unknown word is a content word.
Content words in nearly all languages contain, and may consist only of root morphemes.
Content words such as nouns, verbs and adjectives may be preserved.
Their syntax is identical, such that a passage in one language can be translated to the other by simply changing the content words.
Content words tend to carry more information.
They are different from content words.
In Old English, inflections increased the length of most content words in any case.
Grammatical words, as a class, can have distinct phonological properties from content words.
For example, in some of the Khoisan languages, most content words begin with clicks, but very few function words do.
Despite his contented words, his eyes looked wistful.
The pauses seem to occur between sentences, conjunctional points and before the first content word in a sentence.
If this structure is not generated the patient will be left with a collection of content words but no argument structure in which to insert them.
If the correct word is a content word, add its score to the' correct-word scorelist'.
While many function words have more than two letters (and, she, were, therefore, etc.), the exceptions to the rule are rather two-letter content words.
This sentence (like most others) is composed of the two types of words: function words and content words.
Classifiers are bound morphemes: they do not have any meaning by themselves and are always used in conjunction with a noun or another content word.
Dictionaries define the specific meanings of content words, but can only describe the general usages of function words.
The descriptor lexical is applied to the words of a language's lexicon, often to indicate a content word, as distinct from a function word.
Furthermore, they showed that over 80% of the content words were fixated, compared to only 40% of the function words.