Difference between revisions of "User:Sushain/UralicLanguages"

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|| [[apertium-liv-fin]] ([[incubator]])
|| [[apertium-liv-fin]] ([[incubator]])
|| [[User:Francis_Tyers|Fran]], rblumber, jackrueter
|| [[User:Francis_Tyers|Fran]], rblumber, jackrueter
|-
| <code>[[apertium-kpv]]</code>
|| [[Komi-Zyrian]]
|| Коми кыв
|align="center"|<code>&ndash;</code>
|| <code>kpv</code>
|| [[HFST|HFST (lexc+twol)]]
|| prototype
|align="right"| {{#lst:Apertium-kpv-mhr/stats|kpv-stems}}
|align="center"|
|| [[apertium-kpv-mhr]]&nbsp;([[incubator]])
|| [[User:Francis_Tyers|Fran]], [[User:Trondtr|Trond]], Fedina, Andrei Chemyshev
|-
|-
| <code>[[apertium-mrj]]</code>
| <code>[[apertium-mrj]]</code>
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|| [[apertium-mrj-fin]] ([[incubator]])
|| [[apertium-mrj-fin]] ([[incubator]])
|| [[User:Francis_Tyers|Fran]], kuprina, jackrueter
|| [[User:Francis_Tyers|Fran]], kuprina, jackrueter

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Revision as of 19:40, 31 December 2013

The Celtic languages (cel) include Welsh (cy), Breton (br), Cornish (kw), Irish (ga) and Scottish Gaelic (gd). Most commonly spoken on the north-western edge of Europe, the languages are related with varying levels of mutual intelligibility.

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 Celtic 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". Coverage (Note: This is a naïve estimation (words for which an analysis is given / all words), "hidden unknown words" are not taken into account) is calculated over a general corpus of the language, followed by Wikipedia in parentheses.

name language native name ISO 639 formalism state stems paradigms coverage location primary authors
-2 -3
apertium-fin Finnish Suomen kieli fi fin lttoolbox production 408,216 1,526 ? apertium-fin (languages) mie, trondtr
apertium-olo Livvi-Karelian Livvi olo HFST (lexc+twol) development ? apertium-olo-fin (incubator) Fran, rantakau, jackrueter
apertium-hun Hungarian magyar hu hun lttoolbox prototype 138 50 ? apertium-hun (incubator) mie
apertium-fkv Kven Kainun kieli fkv HFST (lexc+twol) prototype ? apertium-fkv-fin (incubator) Fran, nikerabbit
apertium-liv Livonian līvõ kēļ liv HFST (lexc+twol) ? ? apertium-liv-fin (incubator) Fran, rblumber, jackrueter
apertium-kpv Komi-Zyrian Коми кыв kpv HFST (lexc+twol) prototype apertium-kpv-mhr (incubator) Fran, Trond, Fedina, Andrei Chemyshev
apertium-mrj Hill Mari Мары йӹлмӹ mrj HFST (lexc+twol) development ? apertium-mrj-fin (incubator) Fran, kuprina, jackrueter

Uralic languages by subgroup

All Uralic languages are thought to have descended, through independent processes of language change, from Proto-Uralic. The traditional classification is as follows:

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.

hun fin fkv liv olo mrj myv udm kpv sme sma
hun - fin-hun
153
fin fin-hun
153
- fkv-fin
217
liv-fin
1
olo-fin
197
mrj-fin
273
myv-fin
401
fin-udm
93
kpv-fin
1
sme-fin
7,157
fkv fkv-fin
217
-
liv liv-fin
1
-
olo olo-fin
197
-
mrj mrj-fin
273
-
myv myv-fin
401
-
udm fin-udm
93
-
kpv kpv-fin
1
-
sme sme-fin
7,157
- sme-sma
15,183
sma sme-sma
15,183
-
deu sme-deu
6
eng hun-eng
1,253
fin-eng
11,289
epo eo-hu
31,689
eo-fi
1,043
est fin-est
53
eus eu-hu
316
eus-sme
586
mhr kpv-mhr
127
nob sme-nob
65,073
rus udm-rus
148
smj sme-smj
39,525
spa sme-spa
1
hun fin fkv liv olo mrj myv udm kpv sme sma
hun - fin-hun
fin fin-hun
- fkv-fin
liv-fin
olo-fin
mrj-fin
myv-fin
fin-udm
kpv-fin
sme-fin
fkv fkv-fin
-
liv liv-fin
-
olo olo-fin
-
mrj mrj-fin
-
myv myv-fin
-
udm fin-udm
-
kpv kpv-fin
-
sme sme-fin
- sme-sma
sma sme-sma
-
deu sme-deu
eng hun-eng
fin-eng
epo eo-hu
eo-fi
est fin-est
eus eu-hu
eus-sme
mhr kpv-mhr
nob sme-nob
rus udm-rus
smj sme-smj
spa sme-spa

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
Hungarian Minden. emberi lény szabadon születik és egyenlő méltósága és joga van. Az emberek, ésszel és lelkiismerettel bírván, egymással szemben testvéri szellemben kell hogy viseltessenek.
Finnish Kaikki ihmiset syntyvät vapaina ja tasavertaisina arvoltaan ja oikeuksiltaan. Heille on annettu järki ja omatunto, ja heidän on toimittava toisiaan kohtaan veljeyden hengessä.
Saami, Northern Buot olbmot leat riegádan friddjan ja olmmošárvvu ja olmmošvuoigatvuoðaid dáfus dássásažžab, Sudhuude kea addib huervnu ha ianedivdym ha vyigjat gakget neabbydut gyunnuudeaset gyivdy vuekhakaš vuoiŋŋain.

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "Uralic languages", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0.