NLDB '02 Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Applications of Natural Language to Information Systems-Revised Papers
Generic Schema Matching with Cupid
Proceedings of the 27th International Conference on Very Large Data Bases
COLING '98 Proceedings of the 17th international conference on Computational linguistics - Volume 1
Yago: a core of semantic knowledge
Proceedings of the 16th international conference on World Wide Web
Frame Detection over the Semantic Web
ESWC 2009 Heraklion Proceedings of the 6th European Semantic Web Conference on The Semantic Web: Research and Applications
Towards a universal wordnet by learning from combined evidence
Proceedings of the 18th ACM conference on Information and knowledge management
BabelNet: building a very large multilingual semantic network
ACL '10 Proceedings of the 48th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
Untangling the cross-lingual link structure of Wikipedia
ACL '10 Proceedings of the 48th Annual Meeting of the Association for Computational Linguistics
MENTA: inducing multilingual taxonomies from wikipedia
CIKM '10 Proceedings of the 19th ACM international conference on Information and knowledge management
Web query expansion by wordnet
DEXA'05 Proceedings of the 16th international conference on Database and Expert Systems Applications
Putting pieces together: combining FrameNet, VerbNet and WordNet for robust semantic parsing
CICLing'05 Proceedings of the 6th international conference on Computational Linguistics and Intelligent Text Processing
Uby: a large-scale unified lexical-semantic resource based on LMF
EACL '12 Proceedings of the 13th Conference of the European Chapter of the Association for Computational Linguistics
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We present UWN, a large multilingual lexical knowledge base that describes the meanings and relationships of words in over 200 languages. This paper explains how link prediction, information integration and taxonomy induction methods have been used to build UWN based on WordNet and extend it with millions of named entities from Wikipedia. We additionally introduce extensions to cover lexical relationships, frame-semantic knowledge, and language data. An online interface provides human access to the data, while a software API enables applications to look up over 16 million words and names.