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  2. Language equation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Language_equation

    Language equations with concatenation and Boolean operations were first studied by Parikh, Chandra, Halpern and Meyer [9] who proved that the satisfiability problem for a given equation is undecidable, and that if a system of language equations has a unique solution, then that solution is recursive.

  3. Pseudotranslation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudotranslation

    The concept of a pseudotranslation was reinvented by Israeli scholar Gideon Toury in Descriptive Translation Studies–and Beyond (1995). [2] The technique allows authors to provide more insight into the culture of the work's setting by presupposing that the reader is unfamiliar with the work's cultural setting, opening the work to a wider ...

  4. Apertium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apertium

    Apertium originated as one of the machine translation engines in the project OpenTrad, which was funded by the Spanish government, and developed by the Transducens research group at the Universitat d'Alacant. It was originally designed to translate between closely related languages, although it has recently been expanded to treat more divergent ...

  5. OpenLogos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLogos

    Logos Corporation was founded by Bernard (Bud) Scott in 1970, who worked on its Logos Machine Translation System until the company's dissolution in 2000. The project began as an English-Vietnamese translation system, which became operational in 1972 (during the American- Vietnam War ), and later was developed as a multi-target translation ...

  6. Reverso (language tools) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reverso_(language_tools)

    Reverso's suite of online linguistic services has over 96 million users, and comprises various types of language web apps and tools for translation and language learning. [11] Its tools support many languages, including Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Hebrew, Spanish, Italian, Turkish, Ukrainian and Russian.

  7. Early Modern Spanish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_Modern_Spanish

    The phoneme /h/ (from Old Spanish initial /f/) progressively became silent in most areas, though it still exists for some words in varieties of Andalusia and Extremadura.In several modern dialects, the sound [h] is the realization of the phoneme /x/; additionally, in many dialects it exists as a result of the debuccalization of /s/ in syllabic coda (a process commonly termed aspiration in ...

  8. Help:Displaying a formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Displaying_a_formula

    This screenshot shows the formula E = mc 2 being edited using VisualEditor.The window is opened by typing "<math>" in VisualEditor. The visual editor shows a button that allows to choose one of three offered modes to display a formula.

  9. Spanish phonology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spanish_phonology

    Southern European Spanish (Andalusian Spanish, Murcian Spanish, etc.) and several lowland dialects in Latin America (such as those from the Caribbean, Panama, and the Atlantic coast of Colombia) exhibit more extreme forms of simplification of coda consonants: word-final dropping of /s/ (e.g. compás [komĖˆpa] 'musical beat' or 'compass')