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Static Hash-Based Lookup for BNC Terms

Project description

BNC Lookup

PyPI version PyPI downloads Python versions License Code style: ruff Pre-commit Tests

Is this token a word? O(1) answer. No setup. No dependencies.

A simple question deserves a simple answer. This library gives you instant yes/no validation against 669,000 word forms from the British National Corpus, plus frequency ranking.

Quick Start

pip install bnc-lookup
import bnc_lookup as bnc

# Check if a word exists
bnc.exists('the')          # True
bnc.exists('however')      # True
bnc.exists('xyzabc123')    # False

# Get frequency bucket (1=most common, 100=least common)
bnc.bucket('the')          # 1
bnc.bucket('python')       # 4
bnc.bucket('qwerty')       # 12
bnc.bucket('xyzabc123')    # None (not found)

# Handles plurals automatically
bnc.exists('computers')    # True
bnc.bucket('computers')    # 1

# Case insensitive
bnc.exists('THE')          # True

Features

  • Zero Dependencies - Pure Python, no external packages
  • Zero I/O - No filesystem access, no database queries
  • Zero Setup - No corpus downloads or configuration
  • Microsecond Lookups - O(1) dictionary access
  • Smart Plurals - Automatically checks singular forms
  • Frequency Ranking - 100 buckets from most to least common
  • Simple API - Two functions: exists() and bucket()

The Problem This Solves

In NLP, you frequently need to answer the question: "Is this token a real word?"

Not "what does it mean?" Not "give me synonyms." Just: is this a word?

bnc.exists('computer') bnc.exists('asdfgh')
True False

That's it. O(1) response. No ambiguity.

Frequency Buckets

Words are ranked into 100 buckets based on their frequency in the BNC corpus:

Bucket Description Examples
1 Most frequent (~6,700 words) the, of, and, is, computer
2-10 Very common algorithm, python, beautiful
11-50 Common qwerty, specialized terms
51-99 Less common Rare but valid words
100 Least frequent Obscure terms
import bnc_lookup as bnc

# Filter by frequency
def is_common_word(word):
    bucket = bnc.bucket(word)
    return bucket is not None and bucket <= 10

Why BNC?

The British National Corpus isn't an academic wordlist (too narrow). It's not a web scrape (too noisy). It's not slang (too ephemeral).

It's a 100-million-word corpus of real British English collected from written and spoken sources between 1991-1994. Books, newspapers, academic papers, conversations. The BNC frequency list captures ~669,000 unique word forms actually used by native speakers.

If a token passes the BNC test, you can be confident it's a word that real people actually use.

Real Words vs Dictionary Words

How much of real-world English is in the dictionary? We compared BNC against WordNet:

BNC Vocabulary Zones by WordNet Coverage

93% of common words (bucket 1-10) are in WordNet. But dictionaries miss proper nouns, technical terms, compounds, and domain jargon that appear constantly in real text.

That's the gap BNC fills. Full analysis

When to Use This

  • Tokenization filtering: Keep real words, discard garbage
  • Input validation: Reject nonsense in user input
  • NLP preprocessing: Filter candidates before expensive operations
  • Spell-check pre-filtering: Quick reject obvious non-words before fuzzy matching
  • Data cleaning: Identify malformed or corrupted text
  • Frequency-based filtering: Prefer common words over obscure ones

What This Doesn't Do

  • No definitions, synonyms, or semantic relationships (use spaCy for that)
  • No spell-checking or suggestions (just existence check)
  • No irregular plural handling ("mice" → "mouse")

Documentation

For detailed usage, performance benchmarks, and advanced features, see the API Documentation.

Development

git clone https://github.com/craigtrim/bnc-lookup.git
cd bnc-lookup
make install  # Install dependencies
make test     # Run tests
make all      # Full build pipeline

See API Documentation for detailed development information.

License

This package is dual-licensed:

  • Software: MIT License
  • BNC Data: BNC User Licence

See LICENSE for complete terms.

Attribution

This package contains data derived from the British National Corpus frequency lists:

BNC frequency lists compiled by Adam Kilgarriff. Source: https://www.kilgarriff.co.uk/BNClists/all.num.gz

The British National Corpus, version 3 (BNC XML Edition). 2007. Distributed by Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, on behalf of the BNC Consortium.

Note: This is a static snapshot of BNC frequency data. The data is not automatically updated.

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