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・ "O" Is for Outlaw
・ "O"-Jung.Ban.Hap.
・ "Ode-to-Napoleon" hexachord
・ "Oh Yeah!" Live
・ "Our Contemporary" regional art exhibition (Leningrad, 1975)
・ "P" Is for Peril
・ "Pimpernel" Smith
・ "Polish death camp" controversy
・ "Pro knigi" ("About books")
・ "Prosopa" Greek Television Awards
・ "Pussy Cats" Starring the Walkmen
・ "Q" Is for Quarry
・ "R" Is for Ricochet
・ "R" The King (2016 film)
・ "Rags" Ragland
・ ! (album)
・ ! (disambiguation)
・ !!
・ !!!
・ !!! (album)
・ !!Destroy-Oh-Boy!!
・ !Action Pact!
・ !Arriba! La Pachanga
・ !Hero
・ !Hero (album)
・ !Kung language
・ !Oka Tokat
・ !PAUS3
・ !T.O.O.H.!
・ !Women Art Revolution


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keyness : ウィキペディア英語版
keyness

Keyness is a term used in linguistics to describe the quality a word or phrase has of being "key" in its context. Keywords are "items of unusual frequency in comparison with a reference corpus".〔Scott, M. & Tribble, C., 2006, ''Textual Patterns: keyword and corpus analysis in language education'', Amsterdam: Benjamins, 55.〕
Compare this with collocation, the quality linking two words or phrases usually assumed to be within a given span of each other. Keyness is a ''textual'' feature, not a language feature (so a word has keyness in a certain textual context but may well not have keyness in other contexts, whereas a node and collocate are often found together in texts of the same genre so collocation is to a considerable extent a ''language'' phenomenon). The set of keywords found in a given text share keyness, they are co-key. Words typically found in the same texts as a key word are called ''associates''.

==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「keyness」の詳細全文を読む



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