Difference between revisions of "Starting a new language with HFST"

From Apertium
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 18: Line 18:
==The language==
==The language==


The language we're going to model today — well, start to model — is Turkmen, a Turkic language spoken in Turkmenistan. We're going to try and model the basic inflection of the category of nouns.
The language we're going to model today — well, start to model — is Turkmen, a Turkic language spoken in Turkmenistan. We're going to try and model the basic inflection of the category of nouns. The basic inflection for Turkmen nouns is: Six cases, two numbers, and possessive. Suffixes can have different forms depending on if they are attached to a vowel ending stem, or a consonant ending stem.


===Number===
The basic inflection for Turkmen nouns is: Six cases, two numbers, and possessive.

===Case===


{|class=wikitable
{|class=wikitable
! Case !! Suffix !! Usage
! Case !!colspan=2| Suffix !! Usage !!colspan=2| Example
|-
|-
! !! V !! C !! !! V !! C
| Nominative || || Indicates the subject of the sentence
|-
|-
| Genitive || || Indicates possession
| Nominative || || || Indicates the subject of the sentence || pagta || gazan
|-
| Genitive || -n{y,i,u,ü}ň || -{y,i,u,ü}ň || Indicates possession || pagta<u>nyň</u> || gaza<u>nyň</u>
|-
|-
| Dative || || Indirect object (directed action)
| Dative || -{a,ä} , -n{a,e} || -{a,e} || Indirect object (directed action) || pagta || gazan<u>a</u>
|-
| Accusative || -n{y,i} || -{y,i} || Direct object || pagta<u>ny</u> || gaza<u>ny</u>
|-
|-
| Accusative || || Direct object
| Inessive || -(n)d{a,e} || -d{a,e} || Time/place || pagta<u>da</u> || gazan<u>da</u>
|-
|-
| Inessive || || Time/place
| Instrumental || -(n)d{a,e}n || -d{a,e}n || Origin || pagta<u>dan</u> || gazan<u>dan</u>
|-
| Instrumental || || Origin
|-
|-
|}
|}

===Possession===


==Lexicon==
==Lexicon==

Revision as of 19:51, 31 March 2011

For information on how to install HFST, see HFST

This page is going to describe how to start a new language with HFST. There are some great references out there to the lexc and twol formalisms, for example the FSMBook, but a lot of them deal with the proprietary Xerox implementations, not the free HFST implementation.

While the actual formalisms are more or less identical, the commands used to compile them are not necessarily the same. HFST has a much more Unix-compatible philosophy. So we're going to take advantage of this. As most Indo-European languages, and isolating languages can be dealt with fairly easily in lttoolbox, we're going to deal with a language that is not from this family, and one that has more complex morphology that isn't easily dealt with in lttoolbox.

Preliminaries

A morphological transducer in HFST has two principle files, one is a lexc file. This defines how morphemes in the language are joined together, morphotactics. The other file can be a twol (two-level rules) or xfst (sequential rewrite rules) file. These describe what changes happen when these morphemes are joined together, morphographemics (or morphophonology). For example,

Morphotactics: wolf<n><pl>wolf + s
Morphographemics: wolf + swolves

Here we're going to deal with twol, the two-level rules. If you're interested in xfst, there is a nice tutorial on the Foma site.

In the next sections we're going to start with the lexicon (lexc file) then progress onto the morphographemics (twol file).

The language

The language we're going to model today — well, start to model — is Turkmen, a Turkic language spoken in Turkmenistan. We're going to try and model the basic inflection of the category of nouns. The basic inflection for Turkmen nouns is: Six cases, two numbers, and possessive. Suffixes can have different forms depending on if they are attached to a vowel ending stem, or a consonant ending stem.

Number

Case

Case Suffix Usage Example
V C V C
Nominative Indicates the subject of the sentence pagta gazan
Genitive -n{y,i,u,ü}ň -{y,i,u,ü}ň Indicates possession pagtanyň gazanyň
Dative -{a,ä} , -n{a,e} -{a,e} Indirect object (directed action) pagta gazana
Accusative -n{y,i} -{y,i} Direct object pagtany gazany
Inessive -(n)d{a,e} -d{a,e} Time/place pagtada gazanda
Instrumental -(n)d{a,e}n -d{a,e}n Origin pagtadan gazandan

Possession

Lexicon