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Retry the update of the language schema prior to release. #276

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36 changes: 18 additions & 18 deletions library_schemas/lang/prerelease/HED_lang_1.0.0.mediawiki
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ The HED Language schema is a Hierarchical Event Descriptors Library Schema Langu
* Austroasiatic <nowiki>[A system of communication belonging to the family of languages mainly spoken in Southeast Asia, South Asia and East Asia.]</nowiki>
** Vietnamese <nowiki>[An Austroasiatic language mainly spoken in Vietnam.]</nowiki>
* Austronesian-language <nowiki>[A system of communication belonging to the family of languages mainly spoken in Southeast Asi, Madagascar, the islands of the Pacific Ocean and Taiwan.]</nowiki>
** Malay <nowiki>[An Austronesian language manily spoken in Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, East Timor and parts of Thailand.]</nowiki>
** Malay <nowiki>[An Austronesian language mainly spoken in Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, East Timor and parts of Thailand.]</nowiki>
* Dravidian <nowiki>[A system of communication belonging to the family of languages mainly spoken in Southern India, Northeast Sri Lanka Southwest Pakistan and some regions of Nepal.]</nowiki>
** Tamil <nowiki>[A Dravidian Language spoken the Indian state Tamil Nadu, Puducherry and Sri Lanka and Singapore.]</nowiki>
* Indo-European-language <nowiki>{suggestedTag=Language-property} [A system of communication belonging to the family of languages native to the majority of Europe, the Iranian plateau, and the northern Indian subcontinent.]</nowiki>
Expand All @@ -24,29 +24,29 @@ The HED Language schema is a Hierarchical Event Descriptors Library Schema Langu
** Germanic-language <nowiki>[A system of communication belonging to the family of languages originating in Northwestern and Central Europe and Scandinavia, currently spoken mainly in Europe, North America, Oceania and Southern Africa.]</nowiki>
*** Danish <nowiki>[A Germanic language, mainly spoken in Denmark.]</nowiki>
*** Dutch <nowiki>[A Germanic Language which is spoken in parts of Western Europe, South America and the Caribbean islands.]</nowiki>
*** English <nowiki>[A Germanic Language which is spoken in the United Kingdom, parts of North America, and Oceania and is used in parts of Africa, Asia and Oceania as an adminastrative language.]</nowiki>
*** English <nowiki>[A Germanic Language which is spoken in the United Kingdom, parts of North America, and Oceania and is used in parts of Africa, Asia and Oceania as an administrative language.]</nowiki>
*** German <nowiki>[A Germanic Language which is mainly spoken in Western and Central Europe.]</nowiki>
*** Icelandic <nowiki>[A Germanic language mainly spoken in Iceland.]</nowiki>
*** Norwegian <nowiki>[A Germanic language mainly spoken in Norway.]</nowiki>
*** Swedish <nowiki>[A Germanic language mainly spoken in Sweden and parts of Finland.]</nowiki>
** Romance-language <nowiki>[A system of communication belonging to the family of languages directly descending from Vulgar Latin.]</nowiki>
*** Catalan <nowiki>[A Romance language spoken in Andorra, and several autonomous communities in Eastern Spain as well as a department in Southern France.]</nowiki>
*** French <nowiki>[A Romance language spoken in parts of Western Europe, North America and Africa, and is used as an adminatrative or official language in parts of the world.]</nowiki>
*** French <nowiki>[A Romance language spoken in parts of Western Europe, North America and Africa, and is used as an administrative or official language in parts of the world.]</nowiki>
*** Galician <nowiki>[A Romance language mainly spoken in Galicia.]</nowiki>
*** Gallo-Rhaetian-language <nowiki>[A group of historically related Romance varieties spoken in Switzerland and Northern Italy.]</nowiki>
*** Italian <nowiki>[A Romance language mainly spoken in Italy and parts of Switzerland.]</nowiki>
*** Portuguese <nowiki>[A Romance language spoken in Portugal and part of South America (Brazil) and is used as administrative language in other parts of the world.]</nowiki>
*** Romanian <nowiki>[A Romance language spoken in Romania and Moldova as well as small communities in Bulgaria, Hungary, Serbia and Ukraine.]</nowiki>
*** Spanish <nowiki>[A Romance language spoken in Spain and large parts of the Americas.]</nowiki>
** Slavic-language <nowiki>[A system of communication belonging to the family of languages originating in Eastern Europe.]</nowiki>
*** Bulgarian <nowiki>[A slavic language spoken mainly in Bulgaria.]</nowiki>
*** Croatian <nowiki>[A slavic language spoken mainly in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and parts of Serbia.]</nowiki>
*** Bulgarian <nowiki>[A Slavic language spoken mainly in Bulgaria.]</nowiki>
*** Croatian <nowiki>[A Slavic language spoken mainly in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro and parts of Serbia.]</nowiki>
*** Czech <nowiki>[A Slavic language spoken mainly in the Czech Republic.]</nowiki>
*** Macedonian <nowiki>[A slavic language spoken mainly in North Macedonia.]</nowiki>
*** Polish <nowiki>[A slavic language spoken mainly in Poland.]</nowiki>
*** Macedonian <nowiki>[A Slavic language spoken mainly in North Macedonia.]</nowiki>
*** Polish <nowiki>[A Slavic language spoken mainly in Poland.]</nowiki>
*** Russian <nowiki>[A Slavic language spoken mainly in Europe and used in parts of Eastern Europe, West and Central Asia.]</nowiki>
*** Slovak <nowiki>[A slavic language spoken mainly in Slovakia.]</nowiki>
*** Ukrainian <nowiki>[A slavic language spoken mainly in Ukraine.]</nowiki>
*** Slovak <nowiki>[A Slavic language spoken mainly in Slovakia.]</nowiki>
*** Ukrainian <nowiki>[A Slavic language spoken mainly in Ukraine.]</nowiki>
* Japonic <nowiki>[A system of communication belonging to the family of languages mainly spoken in Japan and the Ryukyu Islands.]</nowiki>
** Japanese <nowiki>[A Japonic language mainly spoken in Japan.]</nowiki>
* Koreanic <nowiki>[A system of communication belonging to the family of languages mainly spoken in Korea.]</nowiki>
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -106,6 +106,12 @@ The HED Language schema is a Hierarchical Event Descriptors Library Schema Langu
** Aspect <nowiki>[Non-deictic category of verbal morphology that describes the internal temporal contour of an event and presents it for instance as ongoing or completed.]</nowiki>
*** Imperfective-aspect <nowiki>[Presenting an ongoing or unfolding or repeated or habitual event.]</nowiki>
*** Perfective-aspect <nowiki>[Presenting a completed event.]</nowiki>
** Case <nowiki>[Formal feature of several word classes (e.g., nouns, pronouns, adjectives, determiners) that identifies their syntactic function.]</nowiki>
*** Ablative <nowiki>[Used to express motion away from something, among other uses.]</nowiki>
*** Accusative <nowiki>[Used to indicate the direct object of a transitive verb.]</nowiki>
*** Dative <nowiki>[Used to indicate the recipient or beneficiary of an action.]</nowiki>
*** Genitive <nowiki>[Used to indicate attributive relations between nouns among other uses.]</nowiki>
*** Nominative <nowiki>[Generally marks the subject of a verb, or a predicate nominal or adjective, as opposed to its object, or other verb arguments.]</nowiki>
** Countability <nowiki>[A grammatical category that determines how the quantity of a concept is expressed.]</nowiki>
*** Countable <nowiki>[Syntactic property of nouns that can be modified by quantities (expressed by grammatical number, e.g. singular, plural).]</nowiki>
*** Uncountable <nowiki>[Syntactic property of nouns that makes their referents undifferentiated units.]</nowiki>
Expand All @@ -121,14 +127,8 @@ The HED Language schema is a Hierarchical Event Descriptors Library Schema Langu
*** Conditional <nowiki>[Used for speaking of an event whose realization is dependent upon another condition.]</nowiki>
*** Imperative <nowiki>[Expresses direct commands, prohibitions, and requests.]</nowiki>
*** Progressive <nowiki>[Expresses an incomplete state or action.]</nowiki>
*** Subjunctive <nowiki>[Used in dependent clauses to discussing imaginary or hypothetical events and situations, expressing opinions or emotions, or making polite requests, among other uses.]</nowiki>
*** Subjunctive <nowiki>[Used in dependent clauses to discussing imaginary or hypothetical events and situations, expressing opinions or emotions, or making polite requests, among a broad range of other uses across languages.]</nowiki>
** Noun-class <nowiki>[Formal category of nouns based on characteristic features of their referents, such as gender, animacy, shape, location or directionality.]</nowiki>
*** Case <nowiki>[Formal feature of several word classes (e.g., nouns, pronouns, adjectives, determiners) that identifies their syntactic function.]</nowiki>
**** Ablative <nowiki>[Used to express motion away from something, among other uses.]</nowiki>
**** Accusative <nowiki>[Used to indicate the direct object of a transitive verb.]</nowiki>
**** Dative <nowiki>[Used to indicate the recipient or beneficiary of an action.]</nowiki>
**** Genitive <nowiki>[Used to indicate attributive relations between nouns among other uses.]</nowiki>
**** Nominative <nowiki>[Generally marks the subject of a verb, or a predicate nominal or adjective, as opposed to its object, or other verb arguments.]</nowiki>
** Tense <nowiki>[Deictic category of verbal morphology that situates an event (on an imaginary timeline) as either anterior, posterior or simultaneous to a reference point, prototypically time of speech.]</nowiki>
*** Future-tense <nowiki>[Referring to an event posterior to time of speech.]</nowiki>
**** Future-perfect <nowiki>[Referring to a future event relative to another reference point (not the time of speech).]</nowiki>
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -228,8 +228,8 @@ The HED Language schema is a Hierarchical Event Descriptors Library Schema Langu
* Syntactic-role <nowiki>[Role a language-item takes in syntax.]</nowiki>
** Complement <nowiki>[The constituent selected by a head.]</nowiki>
*** Syntactic-object <nowiki>[Complement of a verbal head.]</nowiki>
**** Direct-syntactic-object <nowiki>[A word or phrase which receives the action of the verb.]</nowiki>
**** Indirect-syntactic-object <nowiki>[A word of phrase which receives the direct object.]</nowiki>
**** Direct-syntactic-object <nowiki>[A constituent which receives the action of the verb or comes into existence by this action.]</nowiki>
**** Indirect-syntactic-object <nowiki>[A constituent representing a secondary or passive participant, often a goal, a beneficiary or an experiencer.]</nowiki>
** Modifier <nowiki>[Optional element in a phrase or a clause that specifies a noun or acts as an adjunct.]</nowiki>
*** Adjunct <nowiki>[Optional element in a clause or sentence that provides information about the temporal, local (etc.) circumstances under which an event occurred.]</nowiki>
** Predicate <nowiki>[Basic constituent of a clause that expresses a property or condition of the subject or an action performed by it.]</nowiki>
Expand Down
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