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I am using NLTK to extract nouns from a text-string starting with the following command:

tagged_text = nltk.pos_tag(nltk.Text(nltk.word_tokenize(some_string)))

It works fine in English. Is there an easy way to make it work for German as well?

(I have no experience with natural language programming, but I managed to use the python nltk library which is great so far.)

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  • 1
    An advantage you might exploit is that all nouns are capitalized in German. Apr 30, 2012 at 12:24
  • 2
    Tag german removed as part of the 2012 cleanup. Apr 30, 2012 at 12:25

6 Answers 6

23

Natural language software does its magic by leveraging corpora and the statistics they provide. You'll need to tell nltk about some German corpus to help it tokenize German correctly. I believe the EUROPARL corpus might help get you going.

See nltk.corpus.europarl_raw and this answer for example configuration.

Also, consider tagging this question with "nlp".

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  • 2
    +1 for beating me to it ;-), also thanks for the hint about tagging the question itself.
    – mjv
    Oct 28, 2009 at 21:07
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    Thx. I got the German file from the EUROPAL corpus with your help and another useful hint. code.google.com/p/nltk/issues/detail?id=415 On to training the tokenizer. Johannes Oct 29, 2009 at 10:55
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    With the europarl_raw module you can only train a tokenizer but not a POS tagger because the corpus is not POS tagged.
    – Suzana
    Feb 28, 2013 at 17:23
  • The link is broken.
    – Mann
    Jul 30, 2018 at 8:16
  • @Mann thanks, I tried to fix with relevant updated links.
    – Mike Atlas
    Jul 31, 2018 at 22:28
19
+100

The Pattern library includes a function for parsing German sentences and the result includes the part-of-speech tags. The following is copied from their documentation:

from pattern.de import parse, split
s = parse('Die Katze liegt auf der Matte.')
s = split(s)
print s.sentences[0]

>>>   Sentence('Die/DT/B-NP/O Katze/NN/I-NP/O liegt/VB/B-VP/O'
     'auf/IN/B-PP/B-PNP der/DT/B-NP/I-PNP Matte/NN/I-NP/I-PNP ././O/O')

Update: Another option is spacy, there is a quick example in this blog article:

import spacy

nlp = spacy.load('de')
doc = nlp(u'Ich bin ein Berliner.')

# show universal pos tags
print(' '.join('{word}/{tag}'.format(word=t.orth_, tag=t.pos_) for t in doc))
# output: Ich/PRON bin/AUX ein/DET Berliner/NOUN ./PUNCT
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    Thanks for sharing Suzanna. Tested the Spacy de_core_news_mdmodel for PoS and NER specifically. The results are mediocre. The HanTa is slightly better (see post below). Trying to get TreeTagger working in the hope for better results.
    – Simone
    Feb 19 at 17:16
4

Part-of-Speech (POS) tagging is very specific to a particular [natural] language. NLTK includes many different taggers, which use distinct techniques to infer the tag of a given token in a given token. Most (but not all) of these taggers use a statistical model of sorts as the main or sole device to "do the trick". Such taggers require some "training data" upon which to build this statistical representation of the language, and the training data comes in the form of corpora.

The NTLK "distribution" itself includes many of these corpora, as well a set of "corpora readers" which provide an API to read different types of corpora. I don't know the state of affairs in NTLK proper, and if this includes any german corpus. You can however locate free some free corpora which you'll then need to convert to a format that satisfies the proper NTLK corpora reader, and then you can use this to train a POS tagger for the German language.

You can even create your own corpus, but that is a hell of a painstaking job; if you work in a univeristy, you gotta find ways of bribing and otherwise coercing students to do that for you ;-)

0
4

Possibly you can use the Stanford POS tagger. Below is a recipe I wrote. There are python recipes for German NLP that I've compiled and you can access them on http://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/alvations/DLTK/blob/master/docs/index.html

#-*- coding: utf8 -*-

import os, glob, codecs

def installStanfordTag():
    if not os.path.exists('stanford-postagger-full-2013-06-20'):
        os.system('wget http://nlp.stanford.edu/software/stanford-postagger-full-2013-06-20.zip')
        os.system('unzip stanford-postagger-full-2013-06-20.zip')
    return

def tag(infile):
    cmd = "./stanford-postagger.sh "+models[m]+" "+infile
    tagout = os.popen(cmd).readlines()
    return [i.strip() for i in tagout]

def taglinebyline(sents):
    tagged = []
    for ss in sents:
        os.popen("echo '''"+ss+"''' > stanfordtemp.txt")
        tagged.append(tag('stanfordtemp.txt')[0])
    return tagged

installStanfordTag()
stagdir = './stanford-postagger-full-2013-06-20/'
models = {'fast':'models/german-fast.tagger',
          'dewac':'models/german-dewac.tagger',
          'hgc':'models/german-hgc.tagger'}
os.chdir(stagdir)
print os.getcwd()


m = 'fast' # It's best to use the fast german tagger if your data is small.

sentences = ['Ich bin schwanger .','Ich bin wieder schwanger .','Ich verstehe nur Bahnhof .']

tagged_sents = taglinebyline(sentences) # Call the stanford tagger

for sent in tagged_sents:
    print sent
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2

It seems to be a little late to answer the question, but it might be helpful for anyone who finds this question by googling like i did. So i'd like to share the things I found out.

The HannoverTagger might be a useful tool for this Task. You can find tutorials here and here(german), but the second one is in german.

The Tagger seems to use the STTS Tagset, if you need a complete list of all Tags.

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  • yes - I thought there was another option to the big "known" ones but forgot what it is called. Thanks for sharing.
    – Simone
    Feb 16 at 11:05
1

I have written a blog-post about how to convert the German annotated TIGER Corpus in order to use it with the NLTK. Have a look at it here.

1
  • 5
    Referenced blog post not available anymore.
    – Tim
    Sep 7, 2013 at 20:12

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