Abstract
Digital humanities provide possibilities for the creation of new pathways for research in the field of Humanities and Social Sciences. A complete digital infrastructure has to be created to realize these possibilities. Since the 1960’s computational linguists are trying to develop tools for better communication between human languages and machines. A digital dictionary is one such tool. It forms the core of natural language processing (NLP) based tasks. Digital dictionaries contain an enormous amount of information and are very useful, but their design is structured according to the specific needs either of the language learners or the program for which they had been designed, so data access for other NLP tasks is either limited or denied completely. The creation of a completely new digital dictionary becomes inevitable in such a scenario.
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