In the past I have asked for tools to help me find references for the co-occurrence of multiple words. Now I am asking for tools or resources that will allow me to enter one word and find a ranked list of others words that co-occur with that term. Ideally this search could be navigated by using STRONGS numbers, and would be available for OT and NT.
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Co-occur suggests a word that occurs before OR after a word. That what you mean? – Der Übermensch Jun 05 '20 at 03:56
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1Yes, thank-you for asking – Roby Vicary Jun 05 '20 at 03:57
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1That's something for which I never had a need to search. Interested in reading answers though. – Der Übermensch Jun 05 '20 at 03:58
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1Are you familiar with search that look for multiple words in the same verse, and searches that do quotes? You could do a search: "a b" OR "b a" – Perry Webb Jun 05 '20 at 12:23
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Yes, I linked to a question that led me to resources that show multiple words in the same verse in the question description; and I have found quoting resources elsewhere. Thanks! – Roby Vicary Jun 05 '20 at 12:29
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I'm sure you could do this with Accordance or Logos, though I don't know the exact search parameters myself. Do you have one of them? – curiousdannii Jun 07 '20 at 10:24
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Sorry I don't have either and I'm a bit naive in regard to both systems, so if you could explain either that would be appreciated. One example term is H3820. – Roby Vicary Jun 07 '20 at 10:36
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1I don't know of any existing handy resource. However, it is easy to build one quickly using AI N-gram technology. – Jun 07 '20 at 12:06
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Hi Tony, that sounds like a great suggestion, but I don't know how to make that happen. Are you able to expand on your thinking, for guidance? – Roby Vicary Jun 07 '20 at 12:28
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See How can I search for the co-occurrence of two words (ideally searching by Strong’s numbers)? – Codosaur Jun 09 '20 at 13:29
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Hi, that is one of my questions as I referenced above. It's a bit different but thanks for looking though :) – Roby Vicary Jun 09 '20 at 13:49
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One way to think about it would be a reverse but complimentary function. Rather than looking for all the locations multiple words co-occur I am looking for all the words that co-occur with one term, regardless of location. Does that make sense? – Roby Vicary Jun 09 '20 at 13:55
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This is provided for every word you look upon in Logeion:
https://logeion.uchicago.edu/%CE%B6%CF%89%CE%AE
The only ways I can think of that this wonderful tool could be improved is if:
- it included BDAG
- the abbreviations in LSJ weren't so cryptic
- it could read my mind!
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TI.exe is freely available for academic usage. The program generates a word-occurrence matrix, a word co-occurrence matrix, and a normalized co-occurrence matrix from a set of lines (e.g., titles) and a word list.