Requirements
- Target platform
- OpenClaw
- Install method
- Manual import
- Extraction
- Extract archive
- Prerequisites
- OpenClaw
- Primary doc
- SKILL.md
Query the COCA (Corpus of Contemporary American English) linguistics API for word frequency, collocations, concordances, and historical usage trends. Use for...
Query the COCA (Corpus of Contemporary American English) linguistics API for word frequency, collocations, concordances, and historical usage trends. Use for...
Hand the extracted package to your coding agent with a concrete install brief instead of figuring it out manually.
I downloaded a skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder and install it by following the included instructions. Tell me what you changed and call out any manual steps you could not complete.
I downloaded an updated skill package from Yavira. Read SKILL.md from the extracted folder, compare it with my current installation, and upgrade it while preserving any custom configuration unless the package docs explicitly say otherwise. Summarize what changed and any follow-up checks I should run.
Access the COCA corpus API at https://api.dr.eamer.dev. COCA contains 1+ billion words of contemporary American English from spoken, fiction, magazine, newspaper, and academic sources.
export DREAMER_API_KEY=your_key_here
GET https://api.dr.eamer.dev/v1/corpus/search?word=serendipity&limit=20 Returns KWIC (keyword-in-context) examples showing the word in actual usage.
GET https://api.dr.eamer.dev/v1/corpus/collocations?word=run&pos=verb&limit=20 Returns words that statistically co-occur with the target word (MI score, frequency).
GET https://api.dr.eamer.dev/v1/corpus/frequency?word=algorithm&genre=academic Returns frequency per million words, with optional genre filter: spoken, fiction, magazine, newspaper, academic.
Checking how formal or common a word is in real American English Finding natural collocations for writing assistance Linguistic research on word usage patterns Historical frequency trends across decades
You need non-English corpora You need corpora other than contemporary American English (COCA is 1990-present)
Code helpers, APIs, CLIs, browser automation, testing, and developer operations.
Largest current source with strong distribution and engagement signals.