Difference between revisions of "Xhosa"
SlingKing7 (talk | contribs) |
SlingKing7 (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 44: | Line 44: | ||
The usage of uncommon consonants is dominant throughout the language in the version of clicks. The language uses 21 clicks (7 dental), however, the number of clicks varies based on each region (Namibia and Botswana primarily) |
The usage of uncommon consonants is dominant throughout the language in the version of clicks. The language uses 21 clicks (7 dental), however, the number of clicks varies based on each region (Namibia and Botswana primarily) |
||
*'''[apertium|Linguistic Grammar and Pronunciations of Xhosa] |
*'''([[apertium|Linguistic Grammar and Pronunciations of Xhosa]]) |
||
Revision as of 05:14, 7 January 2018
The Xhosa Language
Xhosa (Wikipedia: Xhosa language) is a (Wikipedia: Nguni Bantu) language spoken mainly in Africa. Its widespread use is not very common and only has a small number of individuals enacting the language (11 million)
- Zulu and Xhosa are relatably the most similar due to them both being Nguni transcripts (predominant in Southern Africa)
- Xhosa is also similar to the languages of Swati and Ndebele which are spoken among the Bantu people
Language Pairs
Currently, on Apertium, the language of Xhosa is recorded to have one language pair:
- Zulu-?-Xhosa (08 Nov 2010) (incubator)
Computational Linguistics
Xhosa Cross Linguistics
The Tone Analysis of Xhosa
Comparative Studies
Xhosa Literary + Academic Study (Rhodes University)
Comparative Study: Zulu - Xhosa
Linguistic Grammar
- "What is Xhosa?", a concept summary providing full context over Xhosan grammar
- "The Acquisition of Subject Agreement in Xhosa", the goal of the present paper is to describe the development of the system of subject agreement in children acquiring Xhosa as a first language.
- "Let’s Talk isiXhosa", the process of mastering a foreign tongue
- "Omniglot Writing Systems and Languages", a full context of the usage of grammar within the Xhosa language
Xhosa contains multiple prefixes and suffixes which are attached to root words. Thus, the language is declassified into fifteen morphological classes or genders. Furthermore, the language is unique based on its tones, the phonemic low, and high tones;
- they are a [à], á [á], â [áà], ä [àá]. Long vowels are phonemic but are usually not written, except for â and ä
The usage of uncommon consonants is dominant throughout the language in the version of clicks. The language uses 21 clicks (7 dental), however, the number of clicks varies based on each region (Namibia and Botswana primarily)
Bilingual/Monolingual Dictionaries
(most are mainly decoded within English subtexts and contexts)
- "Oxford Studies", The Oxford University has provided many studies with focus mainly on the translational dictionaries available
- "English to Xhosa Bilingual Dictionary", A full translational dictionary covering most aspects of the dual languages of Xhosa and Zulu
- "Xhosa to English Dictionary", A complete list of translated and Xhosa applicable words translated into English and vice versa
- "isiXhosa National Lexicography Unit", The National Lexicography Unit provides additional research of multi-syllable words of Xhosa as well as dictionary referendums
- "Xhosa-English Machine Translation: Working with a Low-Resource Language", an attempt to implement a phrase-based translation system for translating Xhosa text into English
Elaboration on Machine Translation:
- Machine translation is a sub-field of computational linguistics that investigates the use of software to translate text or speech from one language to another.
- The isiXhosa language is a low resource language for which there are not many morphological analyzers, so much of the research is compiled into putting together a parallel text for which a translation model can be trained
Monolingual/Parallel Corpora
- "Leipzig Corpora Dictionaries", The Leipzig Corpora Collection contains more than 250 comparable sources on languages and transcripts
- "Crawling Under-Resourced Languages", Transcribing underused dialects using corpora translators
- "English/Xhosa Parallel Corpus", Koliswa Moropa (2007) - The similarities between English and Xhosa corpora
- "Corpus Linguistics", An Analysis of Xhosa English
- "Developing Intonation Corpora for isiXhosa and isiZulu", Natasha Govender, Etienne Barnard, Marelie Davel - University of Pretoria's study upon isiZulu and isiXhosa traits/corpora
- "Corpus Linguistics and World Englishes", The analysis upon Xhosa English's abstract