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Lexical density

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In computational linguistics, lexical density constitutes the estimated measure of content per functional (grammatical) and lexical units (lexemes) in total. It is used in discourse analysis as a descriptive parameter which varies with register and genre. Spoken texts tend to have a lower lexical density than written ones, for example.

Lexical density may be determined thus:

Ld = (Nlex / N)x100

Where:

Ld = the analysed text's lexical density

NLex = the number of lexical word tokens (nouns, adjectives, verbs, adverbs) in the analysed text

N = the number of all tokens (total number of words) in the analysed text

(Please note that the variable symbols applied herein are by no means conventional, they are simply random chosen designations that serve to illustrate the example in question.)

[edit] See also

[edit] Further Reading

  • Ure, J (1971). Lexical density and register differentiation. In G. Perren and J.L.M. Trim (eds), Applications of Linguistics, London: Cambridge University Press. 443-452.

[edit] External links


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