Access a database of word frequencies, in various natural languages.
Go to file
2015-06-24 17:11:50 -04:00
tests Switch to a more precise centibel scale. 2015-06-22 17:36:30 -04:00
wordfreq caches non_punct regex in non_punct.txt 2015-06-24 17:11:50 -04:00
.gitignore Add wordfreq_data files. 2013-10-31 13:39:02 -04:00
MANIFEST.in add new data files from wordfreq_builder 2015-05-11 18:45:47 -04:00
MIT-LICENSE.txt Update the copyright year in the license 2015-06-18 18:55:59 -04:00
README.md add installation instructions to the readme 2015-05-28 14:02:12 -04:00
setup.py clearer error on py2 2015-05-28 14:05:11 -04:00

Tools for working with word frequencies from various corpora.

Author: Robyn Speer

Installation

wordfreq requires Python 3 and depends on a few other Python modules (msgpack-python, langcodes, and ftfy). You can install it and its dependencies in the usual way, either by getting it from pip:

pip3 install wordfreq

or by getting the repository and running its setup.py:

python3 setup.py install

To handle word frequency lookups in Japanese, you need to additionally install mecab-python3, which itself depends on libmecab-dev. These commands will install them on Ubuntu:

sudo apt-get install mecab-ipadic-utf8 libmecab-dev
pip3 install mecab-python3

License

wordfreq is freely redistributable under the MIT license (see MIT-LICENSE.txt), and it includes data files that may be redistributed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/).

wordfreq contains data extracted from Google Books Ngrams (http://books.google.com/ngrams) and Google Books Syntactic Ngrams (http://commondatastorage.googleapis.com/books/syntactic-ngrams/index.html). The terms of use of this data are:

Ngram Viewer graphs and data may be freely used for any purpose, although
acknowledgement of Google Books Ngram Viewer as the source, and inclusion
of a link to http://books.google.com/ngrams, would be appreciated.

It also contains data derived from the following Creative Commons-licensed sources:

Some additional data was collected by a custom application that watches the streaming Twitter API, in accordance with Twitter's Developer Agreement & Policy. This software only gives statistics about words that are very commonly used on Twitter; it does not display or republish any Twitter content.