Length | Sentence |
---|---|
13 | « C’est faux. |
14 | : Tout dépend. |
14 | : Tout à fait. |
14 | : Surtout pas. |
14 | Et pour cause. |
14 | Autant savoir. |
14 | » Sans succès. |
14 | À suivre donc. |
14 | : C’est grave. |
14 | » Rien que ça. |
Length | Sentence |
---|---|
15 | Il n’y ait pas! |
15 | Et c’est parti! |
15 | Là c’est parti! |
15 | Là c’est mieux! |
15 | Et c’est juste! |
15 | Et c’est grave! |
15 | Là c’est grave! |
15 | Et c’est géant! |
15 | Là c’est assez! |
15 | Je m’en occupe! |
Length | Sentence |
---|---|
15 | Si c’est oui (? |
15 | Je n’ai pas be? |
15 | On n’a rien vu? |
15 | Qui y est prêt? |
15 | Oui vous savez? |
15 | Que vous dire ? |
15 | …Je vous ai pr? |
15 | Sur votre tête? |
15 | Qui vote quoi ? |
15 | Qui voit juste? |
Here we see the absolutely shortest sentences in the corpus. In three tables we find declarative, exclamatory and interrogative sentences.
The sentences give some insight into the language or the corpus. Moreover, in the case of malformed sentences they may give hints for better preprocessing.
We find only sentences which were accepted by the preprocessing. For language detection, usually a minimum number of known words is necessary. Because of this, some very short sentences may be missing in the corpus.
select char_length(sentence) as le, sentence from sentences where sentence like "%!" and 40>length(sentence) order by le limit 15;
4.1.2 Sentences of fixed length I
4.1.3 Sentences of fixed length II
4.1.4 Sentences of fixed length III
4.1.5 Longest sentences