Language modelling for Turkish as an agglutinative language

Author(s):  
T. Ciloglu ◽  
M. Comez ◽  
S. Sahin
2018 ◽  
Vol 69 (3) ◽  
pp. 497-501
Author(s):  
Oldřich Uličný

Abstract In the contemporary Czech, in both spoken and especially in written form, possessive adjectives are replaced by possessive genitives, which are originally colloquial constructions only. In the last stage of this development, the postpositive genitive changes into prepositive: Klárčina maminka, maminka Klárky, Klárky maminka (‘Klárka’s mother’). The Czech language thus loses another means of inflection and gets closer to an agglutinative language type. This change (deflective tendency) is also supported by the loss of introflexion, i.e. the loss of morphophonological alternations, in our example k – č, in other cases r – ř, g – ž, ch – š, etc. (Klárčin – Klárky [‘Klárka’s’], sestra – sestřin [‘sister’s’], Olga – Olžin [‘Olga’s’] etc.).


Author(s):  
Saad Irtza ◽  
Vidhyasaharan Sethu ◽  
Sarith Fernando ◽  
Eliathamby Ambikairajah ◽  
Haizhou Li

PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. e0229963 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ignat Drozdov ◽  
Daniel Forbes ◽  
Benjamin Szubert ◽  
Mark Hall ◽  
Chris Carlin ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
X Ray ◽  

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 181-199
Author(s):  
László Kovács ◽  
András Bóta ◽  
László Hajdu ◽  
Miklós Krész

Abstract The mental lexicon stores words and information about words. The lexicon is seen by many researchers as a network, where lexical units are nodes and the different links between the units are connections. Based on the analysis of a word association network, in this article we show that different kinds of associative connections exist in the mental lexicon. Our analysis is based on a word association database from the agglutinative language Hungarian. We use communities – closely knit groups – of the lexicon to provide evidence for the existence and coexistence of different connections. We search for communities in the database using two different algorithms, enabling us to see the overlapping (a word belongs to multiple communities) and non-overlapping (a word belongs to only one community) community structures. Our results show that the network of the lexicon is organized by semantic, phonetic, syntactic and grammatical connections, but encyclopedic knowledge and individual experiences are also shaping the associative structure. We also show that words may be connected not just by one, but more types of connections at the same time.


Author(s):  
Sarah Samson Juan ◽  
Muhamad Fikri Che Ismail ◽  
Hamimah Ujir ◽  
Irwandi Hipiny

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