Triple

T14321857
Position Surface form Disambiguated ID Type / Status
Subject Vincentian dialect E355109 entity
Predicate instanceOf P0 FINISHED
Object Caribbean English Creole C5627 CONCEPT FINISHED

How this triple was built (1 step)

Every LLM step that produced this triple, in pipeline order — named-entity classification, the disambiguation choices (the exact options shown, with the pick highlighted), and the generated description. The batch + timestamp of each is in the Provenance table below.

CD Concept disambiguation gpt-5-mini-2025-08-07
Target class: Caribbean English Creole
Context triple: [Vincentian dialect, instanceOf, Caribbean English Creole]
  • A. Caribbean creole language
    A Caribbean creole language is a stable, fully developed natural language that emerged in the Caribbean from the contact and blending of European colonial languages with African, Indigenous, and other linguistic influences.
  • B. Atlantic English-lexifier creole chosen
    An Atlantic English-lexifier creole is a creole language that developed around the Atlantic basin with English as its primary lexical source, typically arising from prolonged contact between English speakers and diverse African and other populations in colonial and postcolonial settings.
  • C. Arawakan language
    An Arawakan language is any member of a large family of indigenous languages of South America and the Caribbean, historically spoken across a vast area from the Amazon Basin to the Antilles.
  • D. creole language group
    A creole language group is a collection of fully developed natural languages that have evolved from the contact, mixing, and nativization of multiple parent languages, typically emerging in multilingual and colonial settings.
  • E. Cariban language
    A Cariban language is a member of the Cariban family of indigenous languages spoken primarily in northern South America, known for their complex verb morphology and diverse phonological systems.
  • F. None of above.

Provenance (1 batch)

The batch behind each pipeline step, in order, with when it ran. Timestamps are batch-level — stages were processed in waves, so the object chain (NER → NED1 → NEDg → NED2) reads in order, but predicate / elicitation batches can sit in a different wave.

Step Stage Batch ID Status When
creating Elicitation batch_69d8278ed42c8190b9f882dcce611347 completed April 9, 2026, 10:26 p.m.
Created at: April 10, 2026, 1:13 a.m.