Difference between revisions of "User:Sushain/SemeticLanguages"
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**Arabic languages: Classical Arabic, [[Arabic|Standard Arabic]], [[Maltese]], etc. |
**Arabic languages: Classical Arabic, [[Arabic|Standard Arabic]], [[Maltese]], etc. |
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*South Semitic languages |
*South Semitic languages |
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**Western: [[Ethiopic languages]] and Old South Arabian languages (Sabaean, Minaean, Qatabānian, Ḥaḑramitic, etc.) |
**Western: [[Ethiopic languages]] ([[Amharic]], [[Tigrinya]], etc.) and Old South Arabian languages (Sabaean, Minaean, Qatabānian, Ḥaḑramitic, etc.) |
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**Eastern: Modern South Arabian languages (Bathari, Harsusi, Hobyót, Mehri, Shehri, Soqotri) |
**Eastern: Modern South Arabian languages (Bathari, Harsusi, Hobyót, Mehri, Shehri, Soqotri) |
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Revision as of 20:02, 1 January 2014
The Uralic languages (urj
) constitute a language family of some three dozen related languages descended from a Proto-Uralic language and spoken by more than 25 million people throughout Europe and Northern Asia. Hungarian, Finnish, and Estonian are the Uralic languages with the most native speakers.
The master plan involves generating independent finite-state transducers for each language, and then making individual dictionaries and transfer rules for every pair. The current status of these goals is listed below.
Status
The ultimate goal is to have multi-purposable transducers for a variety of Uralic languages. These can then be paired for X→Y translation with the addition of a CG for language X and transfer rules / dictionary for the pair X→Y. Below is listed development progress for each language's transducers and dictionary pairs.
Transducers
Once a transducer has ~80% coverage on a range of medium-large corpora we can say it is "working". Over 90% and it can be considered to be "production".
name | language | native name | ISO 639 | formalism | state | stems | paradigms | coverage | location | primary authors | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
-2 | -3 | ||||||||||
apertium-ara
|
Arabic | العربية | ar
|
ara
|
? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | |
apertium-heb
|
Hebrew | עִבְרִית | he
|
heb
|
? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | |
apertium-mlt
|
Maltese | Malti | mt
|
mlt
|
? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
Semetic languages by subgroup
There are six fairly uncontroversial nodes within the Semitic languages:
- East Semitic languages: Akkadian, Eblaite (extinct)
- Central Semitic languages
- Northwest Semitic languages: Aramaic, Canaanite languages, Hebrew
- Arabic languages: Classical Arabic, Standard Arabic, Maltese, etc.
- South Semitic languages
- Western: Ethiopic languages (Amharic, Tigrinya, etc.) and Old South Arabian languages (Sabaean, Minaean, Qatabānian, Ḥaḑramitic, etc.)
- Eastern: Modern South Arabian languages (Bathari, Harsusi, Hobyót, Mehri, Shehri, Soqotri)
Existing language pairs
Text in italic denotes language pairs under development / in the incubator. Regular text denotes a functioning language pair in staging, while text in bold denotes a stable well-working language pair in trunk.
mlt | heb | ara | |
---|---|---|---|
mlt | - | mt-he 3,634 |
mt-ar 7,570 |
heb | mt-he 3,634 |
- | ara-heb 131 |
ara | mt-ar 7,570 |
ara-heb 131 |
- |
eng | en-mt 814 |
||
epo | eo-he 1,505 |
mlt | heb | ara | |
---|---|---|---|
mlt | - | mt-he |
mt-ar |
heb | mt-he |
- | ara-heb |
ara | mt-ar |
ara-heb |
- |
eng | en-mt |
||
epo | eo-he |
Samples
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are endowed with reason and conscience and should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood.
Language | Text |
---|---|
Maltese | Il-bnedmin kollha jitwieldu ħielsa u ugwali fid-dinjità u d-drittijiet. Huma mogħnija bir-raġuni u bil-kuxjenza u għandhom iġibu ruħhom ma’ xulxin bi spirtu ta’ aħwa. |
Hebrew | כל בני אדם נולדו בני חורין ושווים בערכם ובזכויותיהם. כולם חוננו בתבונה ובמצפון, לפיכך חובה עליהם לנהוג איש ברעהו ברוח של אחוה. |
Arabic | يولد جميع الناس أحرارًا متساوين في الكرامة والحقوق. وقد وهبوا عقلاً وضميرًا وعليهم أن يعامل بعضهم بعضًا بروح الإخاء. |
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Semetic languages", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.