- In short, in order to deal with future challenges, it is crucial that we invest more in education.
- För att kunna klara framtida utmaningar måste vi helt enkelt satsa mer på våra barn.
- If the British Government invested more in the European Union, they could make savings on their foreign policy, in William Hague’s department.
- Om den brittiska regeringen satsade mer på EU skulle de kunna göra besparingar på utrikespolitikens område, William Hagues avdelning.
- A big step forward will be the subsequent Luxembourg process, which invests in new technology and uses it to put Europe on the path to growth.
- Ett stort steg framåt är Luxemburgprocessen, där man satsar på ny teknik och strävar till att leda in Europa på tillväxtens spår.
- It is also important to invest in the prevention of crime, which is naturally a matter of considerably broader scope than an issue merely for legislative policy.
- Det är också viktigt att satsa på den förebyggande brottsbekämpningen, vilket är förstås en fråga som rör betydligt fler områden än bara rättspolitiken.
- In addition to this, farmers as well as the food industry have invested a great deal in quality, in order to rid us of the scandals which have marred the European agricultural model.
- Ett annat faktum är att jordbrukarna, liksom också livsmedelsindustrin, har satsat väldigt mycket på kvalitet.
- Both European industry and the taxpayer have already invested huge sums of money in these projects and, as European lawmakers, we must continue to push forward well balanced, cost-effective and structural reforms.
- Både EU:s flygbransch och skattebetalarna har redan satsat enorma belopp på dessa projekt och som unionens lagstiftare måste vi fortsätta att driva fram välavvägda och kostnadseffektiva strukturreformer.
show query
SET search_path TO f9miniensv;
WITH
list AS (SELECT
t11.token_id AS t11,
t12.token_id AS t12,
t21.token_id AS t21,
t22.token_id AS t22,
r1.dep_id AS dep1,
r2.dep_id AS dep2
FROM
deprel r1
JOIN depstr s1 ON s1.dep_id = r1.dep_id
JOIN word_align a1 ON a1.wsource = r1.head AND a1.wsource < a1.wtarget
JOIN word_align a2 ON a2.wsource = r1.dependent
JOIN deprel r2 ON r2.head = a1.wtarget AND r2.dependent = a2.wtarget
JOIN depstr s2 ON s2.dep_id = r2.dep_id
JOIN token t11 ON t11.token_id = r1.head
JOIN token t21 ON t21.token_id = r2.head
JOIN token t12 ON t12.token_id = r1.dependent
JOIN token t22 ON t22.token_id = r2.dependent
WHERE
s1.val = 'prep' AND
t11.ctag = 'VERB' AND
t21.ctag = 'VERB' AND
t12.ctag = 'ADP' AND
t22.ctag = 'ADP' AND
t11.lemma_id = 60102 AND
t12.lemma_id = 8748 AND
t21.lemma_id = 21094 AND
t22.lemma_id = 40192),
stats AS (SELECT
sentence_id,
count(DISTINCT token_id) AS c,
count(*) AS c_aligned,
count(DISTINCT wtarget) AS c_target
FROM
token
LEFT JOIN word_align ON wsource = token_id
WHERE
sentence_id IN (
SELECT sentence_id
FROM
list
JOIN token ON token_id IN(t11, t21)
)
GROUP BY sentence_id),
numbered AS (SELECT row_number() OVER () AS i, *
FROM
list),
sentences AS (SELECT *, .2 * (1 / (1 + exp(max(c) OVER (PARTITION BY i) - min(c) OVER (PARTITION BY i)))) +
.8 * (1 / log(avg(c) OVER (PARTITION BY i))) AS w
FROM
(
SELECT i, 1 AS n, sentence_id, ARRAY[t11,t12] AS tokens
FROM
numbered
JOIN token ON token_id = t11
UNION SELECT i, 2 AS n, sentence_id, ARRAY[t21,t22] AS tokens
FROM
numbered
JOIN token ON token_id = t21
) x
JOIN stats USING (sentence_id)
ORDER BY i, n)
SELECT
i,
n,
w,
c,
c_aligned,
c_target,
sentence_id,
string_agg(CASE WHEN lpad THEN ' ' ELSE '' END || '<span class="token' ||
CASE WHEN ARRAY[token_id] <@ tokens THEN ' hl' ELSE '' END || '">' || val || '</span>',
'' ORDER BY token_id ASC) AS s
FROM
sentences
JOIN token USING (sentence_id)
JOIN typestr USING (type_id)
GROUP BY i, n, w, c, c_aligned, c_target, sentence_id
ORDER BY w DESC, i, n;
;