//- 💫 DOCS > API > ANNOTATION > TEXT PROCESSING

+aside-code("Example").
    from spacy.lang.en import English
    nlp = English()
    tokens = nlp('Some\nspaces  and\ttab characters')
    tokens_text = [t.text for t in tokens]
    assert tokens_text == ['Some', '\n', 'spaces', ' ', 'and',
                        '\t', 'tab', 'characters']

p
    |  Tokenization standards are based on the
    |  #[+a("https://catalog.ldc.upenn.edu/LDC2013T19") OntoNotes 5] corpus.
    |  The tokenizer differs from most by including
    |  #[strong tokens for significant whitespace]. Any sequence of
    |  whitespace characters beyond a single space (#[code ' ']) is included
    |  as a token. The whitespace tokens are useful for much the same reason
    |  punctuation is – it's often an important delimiter in the text. By
    |  preserving it in the token output, we are able to maintain a simple
    |  alignment between the tokens and the original string, and we ensure
    |  that #[strong no information is lost] during processing.

+h(3, "lemmatization") Lemmatization

+aside("Examples")
    |   In English, this means:#[br]
    |  #[strong Adjectives]: happier, happiest → happy#[br]
    |  #[strong Adverbs]: worse, worst → badly#[br]
    |  #[strong Nouns]: dogs, children → dog, child#[br]
    |  #[strong Verbs]: writes, wirting, wrote, written → write


p
    |  A lemma is the uninflected form of a word. The English lemmatization
    |  data is taken from #[+a("https://wordnet.princeton.edu") WordNet].
    |  Lookup tables are taken from
    |  #[+a("http://www.lexiconista.com/datasets/lemmatization/") Lexiconista].
    |  spaCy also adds a #[strong special case for pronouns]: all pronouns
    |  are lemmatized to the special token #[code -PRON-].

+infobox("About spaCy's custom pronoun lemma", "⚠️")
    |  Unlike verbs and common nouns, there's no clear base form of a personal
    |  pronoun. Should the lemma of "me" be "I", or should we normalize person
    |  as well, giving "it" — or maybe "he"? spaCy's solution is to introduce a
    |  novel symbol, #[code -PRON-], which is used as the lemma for
    |  all personal pronouns.

+h(3, "sentence-boundary") Sentence boundary detection

p
    |  Sentence boundaries are calculated from the syntactic parse tree, so
    |  features such as punctuation and capitalisation play an important but
    |  non-decisive role in determining the sentence boundaries. Usually this
    |  means that the sentence boundaries will at least coincide with clause
    |  boundaries, even given poorly punctuated text.