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A freeware corpus analysis toolkit for concordancing and text analysis. Macintosh OS X 10.7-10.10 (3.4.3) Macintosh OS X 10.6 (3.4.1) All previous releases of AntConc can be found at the following link. <.exe> files are for Windows. <.zip> files are for Macintosh OS X. <.tar.gz> files are for Linux. The latest development versions of AntConc are below. Be careful to not run these versions in a folder containing a settings file from an older version of AntConc as they are not compatible. I recommend running the new version in an empty folder and exporting a new settings file that matches your previous one. Windows 64-bit (3.5.0 Dev) Macintosh OS X (10.7-10.10) (3.5.0 Dev) Linux 64-bit (3.5.0 Dev) Screenshots of different versions of AntConc. General Discussion (Google Groups) YouTube Tutorials (by Laurence Anthony) 11-part series (Version 3.4.0) 10-part series (Version 3.2.4) YouTube Tutorials (by Monika Bednarek)

6-part series (Version 3.2.0) YouTube Tutorials (by Hyun Jung) 8-part series (Version 3.2.0) Youku Tutorials (by Laurence Anthony) Getting Started (Version 3.2.0) Concordance Tool - Basic Features (Version 3.2.0) Guide by Warren Tang (Hiroshima University, Japan) AntConc 3.2.1 Tutorial (in English) Latest version available here. Guide by Taku Kaneta and Akira Murakami (Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Japan) AntConc3.2.2 Tutorial (in Japanese) AntConc3.3.5 (in Arabic) by Ahmad Haider (University of Canterbury, New Zealand AntConc3.2.4 (in Korean) by Dr CK Jung (Centre for Corpus Research, Yonsei University, Korea) AntConc3.2.1 (in Chinese) by Xiong Qing'an (University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu, China) AntConc3.1.0 Readme File (in German) by Regine Muller My current tentative plans. If you would like see others, please feel free to suggest them on the Drag and drop file handling.

Add the ability to save the results from the 'Plot' tool to an image file. Generate sampled results (e.g., Every Nth hit in KWIC). Add more statistical measures Allow more file import types (e.g., PDF) Redesign the database architecture to handle massive corpora. Improve tag handling (XML/Part-Of-Speech/...) Add Concgrams (Wildcard/Regex context search) option Simplify token definition settings Allow localization of interface
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trane packaged ac unit Use the following method to cite/reference AntConc according to the APA style guide: Anthony, L. (YEAR OF RELEASE).

AntConc (Version VERSION NUMBER) [Computer Software]. Tokyo, Japan: Waseda University. For example if you download AntConc 3.4.3, which was released in 2014, you would cite/reference it as follows:AntConc (Version 3.4.3) [Computer Software]. Tokyo, Japan: Waseda University. Note that the APA instructions are not entirely clear about citing software, and it is debatable whether or not the "Available from ..." statementSee here for more details. These lists can be imported into AntConc and used as reference corpora word lists to create keyword lists. British National Corpus (BNC) frequency lists. BNC word frequency lists - written, spoken, combined (lowercase) BE06 corpus and AME06 corpus frequency lists. Developed by Paul Baker. For more information on the design of the corpora behind these lists, see Paul Baker's homepage. BE06 and AME06 word frequency list Brown Corpus frequency lists. Brown Corpus word frequency list (lowercase) Brown Corpus word frequency list (mixed case)

These can be imported into AntConc to create lemma word lists. An English lemma list based on all words in the BNC corpus (created by Laurence Anthony). To use this list, *append* a hyphen (-) and apostrophe (') character to the AntConc token definition (see global settings). Someya Lemma List (no hypens) An edited version of the Someya English lemma list with no hypenated words (original list created by Yasumasa Someya). The original Someya English lemma list (created by Yasumasa Someya). A French lemma list (created by Benoît Sagot). References to works citing AntConc can by found on Google Scholar here.At the heart of this exciting new synth is a top-of-the-line voice engine that delivers world-class sounds — including grand and electric pianos, lush strings, beautiful guitars, powerful brass, percussion, plus banks of exotic instruments, modern synth sounds, and much more. The sound-bank is so diverse, it can compliment any style of music! And if you want to customize the sounds, the dedicated “Sound Modify” knobs on the front panel let you instantly cater each sound to your specifications, even while you’re playing.

A software editor is also provided if you prefer more advanced editing via PC. With so many sounds onboard, it could be a daunting task to find what you need. But fear not — the JUNO-Di simplifies the process of finding sounds with its dedicated category buttons. If you want a piano, for example, just press the Piano button. You can even assign your most-used sounds to the Favorite buttons for instant access. Editing is easy too. If you want to create layers or splits, dedicated buttons and the large LCD make the process fast and friendly. And don’t forget the onboard rhythm patterns, which can be easily adjusted on the fly with a dedicated tempo control. It’s a great tool for practice and performance. The JUNO-Di was born to travel. It’s strong yet amazingly lightweight (only 5.2kg) making it easy to lift and carry. The battery compatibility lets you play for up to five hours without plugging in (uses Ni-MH AA-size rechargeable batteries). When used in conjunction with a battery-powered amp such as Roland’s famous CUBE Street or MOBILE CUBE, the JUNO-Di can be played and heard anywhere.

A battery-life indicator on the front panel ensures that you won’t lose power unexpectedly. More than meets the eye, the JUNO-Di lets you plug a microphone into its external input and process your voice through the built-in vocoder. A dedicated reverb is assigned to the input, so you can add lush ambience to your voice without taking away from the main onboard effects. Sing along with your performances and transform your voice in colorful and creative ways, from silky smooth to sci-fi robotic. With its USB MEMORY port and Song Player function, the JUNO-Di enables direct playback and control of backing tracks from a USB key. You can play MP3, WAV, AIFF, and SMF files, and control them from the dedicated buttons on the front panel. Impress your audiences with full-band performances from a single keyboard! Additionally, the Center Cancel feature lets you sing along karaoke-style with audio files in the Song Player for a complete entertainment experience. You can also connect MP3 players directly to the JUNO-Di through its external input.