================ The Token Object ================ A Token represents a single word, punctuation or significant whitespace symbol. Integer IDs are provided for all string features. The (unicode) string is provided by an attribute of the same name followed by an underscore, e.g. token.orth is an integer ID, token.orth\_ is the unicode value. The only exception is the Token.string attribute, which is (unicode) string-typed. **String Features** :code:`string` The form of the word as it appears in the string, include trailing whitespace. This is useful when you need to use linguistic features to add inline mark-up to the string. :code:`orth` / :code:`orth_` The form of the word with no string normalization or processing, as it appears in the string, without trailing whitespace. :code:`lemma` / :code:`lemma_` The "base" of the word, with no inflectional suffixes, e.g. the lemma of "developing" is "develop", the lemma of "geese" is "goose", etc. Note that *derivational* suffixes are not stripped, e.g. the lemma of "instutitions" is "institution", not "institute". Lemmatization is performed using the WordNet data, but extended to also cover closed-class words such as pronouns. By default, the WN lemmatizer returns "hi" as the lemma of "his". We assign pronouns the lemma -PRON-. :code:`lower` / :code:`lower_` The form of the word, but forced to lower-case, i.e. lower = word.orth\_.lower() :code:`norm` / :code:`norm_` The form of the word, after language-specific normalizations have been applied. :code:`shape` / :code:`shape_` A transform of the word's string, to show orthographic features. The characters a-z are mapped to x, A-Z is mapped to X, 0-9 is mapped to d. After these mappings, sequences of 4 or more of the same character are truncated to length 4. Examples: C3Po --> XdXx, favorite --> xxxx, :) --> :) :code:`prefix` / :code:`prefix_` A length-N substring from the start of the word. Length may vary by language; currently for English n=1, i.e. prefix = word.orth\_[:1] :code:`suffix` / :code:`suffix_` A length-N substring from the end of the word. Length may vary by language; currently for English n=3, i.e. suffix = word.orth\_[-3:] **Distributional Features** :code:`prob` The unigram log-probability of the word, estimated from counts from a large corpus, smoothed using Simple Good Turing estimation. :code:`cluster` The Brown cluster ID of the word. These are often useful features for linear models. If you're using a non-linear model, particularly a neural net or random forest, consider using the real-valued word representation vector, in Token.repvec, instead. :code:`repvec` A "word embedding" representation: a dense real-valued vector that supports similarity queries between words. By default, spaCy currently loads vectors produced by the Levy and Goldberg (2014) dependency-based word2vec model. **Syntactic Features** :code:`tag` A morphosyntactic tag, e.g. NN, VBZ, DT, etc. These tags are language/corpus specific, and typically describe part-of-speech and some amount of morphological information. For instance, in the Penn Treebank tag set, VBZ is assigned to a present-tense singular verb. :code:`pos` A part-of-speech tag, from the Google Universal Tag Set, e.g. NOUN, VERB, ADV. Constants for the 17 tag values are provided in spacy.parts\_of\_speech. :code:`dep` The type of syntactic dependency relation between the word and its syntactic head. :code:`n_lefts` The number of immediate syntactic children preceding the word in the string. :code:`n_rights` The number of immediate syntactic children following the word in the string. **Navigating the Dependency Tree** :code:`head` The Token that is the immediate syntactic head of the word. If the word is the root of the dependency tree, the same word is returned. :code:`lefts` An iterator for the immediate leftward syntactic children of the word. :code:`rights` An iterator for the immediate rightward syntactic children of the word. :code:`children` An iterator that yields from lefts, and then yields from rights. :code:`subtree` An iterator for the part of the sentence syntactically governed by the word, including the word itself. **Named Entities** :code:`ent_type` If the token is part of an entity, its entity type :code:`ent_iob` The IOB (inside, outside, begin) entity recognition tag for the token