Apertium Turkic

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The Apertium Turkic working group includes everyone who works on Turkic-language resources as part of the Apertium project. Resources we develop include not just Machine Translation systems, but their underlying components which can be repurposed, including morphological transducers, disambiguators, and dictionaries.

Translation pairs

We have done quite a bit of work on Machine Translation systems involving Turkic languages. This section provides a short overview of some of them, roughly in order of how well they work.

Released

  • Our Kazakh-Tatar system was developed largely by Ilnar, who did the majority of work on it as his GSoC 2012 project. The project was overseen by Jonathan, who did a lot of work on the transducers (especially Kazakh), and Fran. The system was deemed production-ready and released during summer of 2013, and work is ongoing to increase its accuracy.

Near production quality

The following pairs are all near production quality, but have suffered from stalled development.

  • The Turkish-Kyrgyz pair was developed in the summer of 2011 by Mirlan Ipasov under the supervision of Jonathan, and was our first Turkic-Turkic pair using HFST. Mirlan and Jonathan's work on the Kyrgyz transducer paved the way for other Turkic pairs. The pair needs some work to be brought up to date to work with newer transducers.
  • The Kazakh-Kyrgyz pair was largely developed by Qantörö under the supervision of Jonathan, but is not yet production-ready.
  • The Uzbek-Turkish pair also needs work.

Under development

The following pairs are under active development, but are a ways from being production-ready:

  • The English-Kazakh pair is being worked on by Aida Sundetova under the supervision of Mikel Forcada.

Prototypes

The following pairs are prototypes that could blossom if given proper attention.

  • Tatar-Bashqort
  • Chuvash-Turkish
  • Khalkha-Kazakh
  • Chuvash-Tatar
  • Tatar-Turkish
  • Qaraqalpaq-Kazakh
  • The Azeri-Turkish pair was originally developed by Gianluca, but azmorph is obsolete.
  • The Turkmen-Turkish pair needs some attention.

Planned for the future

There are pairs that Apertium Turkic developers would like to see exist at some point.

  • Uzbek-Kyrgyz
  • Qaraqalpaq-Uzbek
  • Kazakh-Kumyk
  • Kazakh-Nogay

People

Active contributors

Photo Name IRC nick Turkic projects involved in (role) Other Turkic projects interested in
Spectie.260.jpg
Francis Morton Tyers
(wiki · email)
spectie, spectei, spectre
Jonathan in a Qyrgyz qalpaq.jpg
Jonathan North Washington
(wiki · email)
firespeaker, jonorthwash, kd5cfx

Pairs:

Transducers:

  • Kazakh (developed much of morphotactics and morphophonology)
  • Kyrgyz (developed almost entirety of morphotactics and morphophonology)
  • Tatar (helped develop morphotactics and morphophonology)
  • Bashqort (helped develop morphotactics and morphophonology)
  • Chuvash (helped develop morphotactics and morphophonology)
  • Turkmen (helped develop morphotactics and morphophonology)
  • Kumyk (helped develop morphotactics and morphophonology)
  • Nogay (helped develop morphotactics and morphophonology)
  • Uzbek-Kyrgyz
  • Qaraqalpaq-Uzbek
Ilnar Salimzyanov
(wiki) · email)
selimcan
  • Tatar-Bashqort
Zfe.jpg
Gianluca Grossi
(wiki)
zfe * Uzbek-Turkish (oversaw development)
Mlf-photo.jpg
Mikel Forcada
Aida Sundetova
Akın Dalkı

Contributors emeritus

Photo Name IRC nick Turkic projects involved in (role) Other Turkic projects interested in
Mirlan Ipasov
Hèctor Alòs i Font
Röstäm Batalov

Contact

To contact the Apertium Turkic team, you can find us on apertium's IRC channel, send one of us a message through the wiki, or send a message to ___PRaddresshere___.

We maintain a low-traffic mailing list (apertium-turkic@lists.sourceforge.net) where occasional discussion and announcements occur. See our archives or subscribe to join in on the fun!