README.md in zenlish-0.1.18 vs README.md in zenlish-0.1.19
- old
+ new
@@ -18,11 +18,11 @@
users with a language that is close enough to English.
### Project status
The project is still in inception. Currently, zenlish is able to parse all
-sentences from lessons 1-A up to 3-A. The parser is able to cope with syntactical
+sentences from lessons 1-A up to 3-B. The parser is able to cope with syntactical
ambiguities generating parse forests instead of parse trees.
The intent is to deliver gem versions in small increments.
#### Zenlish as a library (gem)
@@ -36,15 +36,15 @@
#### Some project metrics (v. 0.1.15)
|Metric|Value|
|:-:|:-:|
-| Number of lemmas in dictionary | 106 |
-| [Coverage 100 commonest English words](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Most_common_words_in_English) | 53% |
-| Number of production rules in grammar | 148 |
-| Number of lessons covered | 17 |
-| Number of sentences in spec files | 235 |
+| Number of lemmas in dictionary | 111 |
+| [Coverage 100 commonest English words](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Most_common_words_in_English) | 56% |
+| Number of production rules in grammar | 151 |
+| Number of lessons covered | 18 |
+| Number of sentences in spec files | 255 |
## Installation...
### ...with Rubygem
Install the gem yourself as:
@@ -119,10 +119,10 @@
## Roadmap
Here a tentative roadmap:
#### A) Ability to parse sentences from [Learn These Words First](http://learnthesewordsfirst.com/)
-*STARTED*. 17.7% complete
+*STARTED*. 18.8% complete
This website advocates the idea of a multi-layered dictionary.
At the core, there are about 300 essential words.
The choice of these words is inspired by the semantic primitives of [NSM
(Natural Semantic Metalanguage)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_semantic_metalanguage).
The essential words are introduced in twelve lessons. Each lesson put the words