Triple

T4948071
Position Surface form Disambiguated ID Type / Status
Subject On Famous Women E111099 entity
Predicate instanceOf P0 FINISHED
Object medieval Latin prose work C1507 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: medieval Latin prose work
Context triple: [On Famous Women, instanceOf, medieval Latin prose work]
  • A. medieval literary work
    A medieval literary work is a written or orally transmitted text from roughly the 5th to the 15th century that reflects the cultural, religious, and social contexts of the Middle Ages through genres such as epics, romances, hagiographies, chronicles, and lyric poetry.
  • B. medieval prose text chosen
    A medieval prose text is a written work from the Middle Ages composed in continuous, non-verse form, often preserving narratives, religious teachings, legal codes, or historical accounts in the vernacular or Latin.
  • C. medieval Hebrew lexicographical work
    A medieval Hebrew lexicographical work is a scholarly text from the Middle Ages that systematically defines, explains, and often translates Hebrew words, typically for biblical, liturgical, or grammatical study.
  • D. Latin prose
    Latin prose is a form of written Latin characterized by continuous, non-metrical language used for narrative, rhetorical, historical, philosophical, legal, and everyday texts in ancient Rome and later Latin traditions.
  • E. ancient Greek prose work
    An ancient Greek prose work is a written composition in the Greek language from antiquity, typically in continuous, non-metrical form, encompassing genres such as history, philosophy, rhetoric, and narrative.
  • 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_69bd441721cc819085c7e33fe0876818 completed March 20, 2026, 12:56 p.m.
Created at: March 20, 2026, 1:31 p.m.