68 relations: Afrikaans, Alexa Internet, Apertium, Basic English, CJK characters, Collaborative editing, DBpedia, Dictionary, Dictionnaire de l'Académie française, Domain name, Dutch language, English language, Finite-state transducer, Free content, French language, German language, Grammatical conjugation, Grammatical person, Han unification, International Phonetic Alphabet, Internet bot, Jimmy Wales, Keir Graff, Language, Larry Sanger, Latin, Lexicon, List of Wiktionaries, Machine-readable data, Machine-readable dictionary, Mari Ostendorf, MediaWiki, Multilingualism, Muscogee language, Natural language processing, Ontology alignment, Ontology engineering, Oxford English Dictionary, Parsing, Part of speech, Part-of-speech tagging, PC Magazine, Polish language, Portmanteau, Readability, Regular expression, Rule-based machine translation, Russian language, Semantic network, Semi-structured data, ..., Sentiment analysis, Simple English Wikipedia, Speech recognition, Speech synthesis, Springer Science+Business Media, Text simplification, The Telegraph (Nashua), Thesaurus, VerbNet, Vietnamese language, Volunteering, Web scraping, Wiki, Wiki software, Wikimedia Foundation, Wikipedia, WordNet, World Wide Web. Expand index (18 more) »
Afrikaans
Afrikaans is a West Germanic language spoken in South Africa, Namibia and, to a lesser extent, Botswana and Zimbabwe.
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Alexa Internet
Alexa Internet, Inc. is an American company based in California that provides commercial web traffic data and analytics.
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Apertium
Apertium is a free/open-source rule-based machine translation platform.
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Basic English
Basic English is an English-based controlled language created by linguist and philosopher Charles Kay Ogden as an international auxiliary language, and as an aid for teaching English as a second language.
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CJK characters
In internationalization, CJK is a collective term for the Chinese, Japanese, and Korean languages, all of which include Chinese characters and derivatives (collectively, CJK characters) in their writing systems.
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Collaborative editing
Collaborative editing is the editing of groups producing works together through individual contributions.
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DBpedia
DBpedia (from "DB" for "database") is a project aiming to extract structured content from the information created in the Wikipedia project.
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Dictionary
A dictionary, sometimes known as a wordbook, is a collection of words in one or more specific languages, often arranged alphabetically (or by radical and stroke for ideographic languages), which may include information on definitions, usage, etymologies, pronunciations, translation, etc.
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Dictionnaire de l'Académie française
The Dictionnaire de l'Académie française is the official dictionary of the French language.
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Domain name
A domain name is an identification string that defines a realm of administrative autonomy, authority or control within the Internet.
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Dutch language
The Dutch language is a West Germanic language, spoken by around 23 million people as a first language (including the population of the Netherlands where it is the official language, and about sixty percent of Belgium where it is one of the three official languages) and by another 5 million as a second language.
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English language
English is a West Germanic language that was first spoken in early medieval England and is now a global lingua franca.
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Finite-state transducer
A finite-state transducer (FST) is a finite-state machine with two memory tapes, following the terminology for Turing machines: an input tape and an output tape.
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Free content
Free content, libre content, or free information, is any kind of functional work, work of art, or other creative content that meets the definition of a free cultural work.
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French language
French (le français or la langue française) is a Romance language of the Indo-European family.
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German language
German (Deutsch) is a West Germanic language that is mainly spoken in Central Europe.
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Grammatical conjugation
In linguistics, conjugation is the creation of derived forms of a verb from its principal parts by inflection (alteration of form according to rules of grammar).
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Grammatical person
Grammatical person, in linguistics, is the grammatical distinction between deictic references to participant(s) in an event; typically the distinction is between the speaker (first person), the addressee (second person), and others (third person).
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Han unification
Han unification is an effort by the authors of Unicode and the Universal Character Set to map multiple character sets of the so-called CJK languages into a single set of unified characters.
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International Phonetic Alphabet
The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is an alphabetic system of phonetic notation based primarily on the Latin alphabet.
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Internet bot
An Internet Bot, also known as web robot, WWW robot or simply -bot-, is a software application that runs automated tasks (scripts) over the Internet.
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Jimmy Wales
Jimmy Donal Wales (born August 7, 1966), also known by the online moniker Jimbo, is an American Internet entrepreneur, best known as the co-founder of the online non-profit encyclopedia Wikipedia, and the for-profit web hosting company Wikia.
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Keir Graff
Keir Graff (born 1969) is an American novelist and literary editor.
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Language
Language is a system that consists of the development, acquisition, maintenance and use of complex systems of communication, particularly the human ability to do so; and a language is any specific example of such a system.
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Larry Sanger
Lawrence Mark Sanger (born) is an American Internet project developer, co-founder of Wikipedia, and the founder of Citizendium.
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Latin
Latin (Latin: lingua latīna) is a classical language belonging to the Italic branch of the Indo-European languages.
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Lexicon
A lexicon, word-hoard, wordbook, or word-stock is the vocabulary of a person, language, or branch of knowledge (such as nautical or medical).
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List of Wiktionaries
Wiktionary is a multilingual, web-based dictionary project, edited as a wiki.
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Machine-readable data
Machine-readable data is data (or metadata) in a format that can be easily processed by a computer.
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Machine-readable dictionary
Machine-readable dictionary (MRD) is a dictionary stored as machine (computer) data instead of being printed on paper.
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Mari Ostendorf
Mari Ostendorf is a professor of electrical engineering in the area of speech and language technology.
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MediaWiki
MediaWiki is a free and open-source wiki software.
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Multilingualism
Multilingualism is the use of more than one language, either by an individual speaker or by a community of speakers.
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Muscogee language
The Muscogee language (Mvskoke in Muscogee), also known as Creek, Seminole, Maskókî or Muskogee, is a Muskogean language spoken by Muscogee (Creek) and Seminole people, primarily in the U.S. states of Oklahoma and Florida.
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Natural language processing
Natural language processing (NLP) is an area of computer science and artificial intelligence concerned with the interactions between computers and human (natural) languages, in particular how to program computers to process and analyze large amounts of natural language data.
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Ontology alignment
Ontology alignment, or ontology matching, is the process of determining correspondences between concepts in ontologies.
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Ontology engineering
Ontology engineering in computer science, information science and systems engineering is a field which studies the methods and methodologies for building ontologies: formal representations of a set of concepts within a domain and the relationships between those concepts.
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Oxford English Dictionary
The Oxford English Dictionary (OED) is the main historical dictionary of the English language, published by the Oxford University Press.
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Parsing
Parsing, syntax analysis or syntactic analysis is the process of analysing a string of symbols, either in natural language, computer languages or data structures, conforming to the rules of a formal grammar.
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Part of speech
In traditional grammar, a part of speech (abbreviated form: PoS or POS) is a category of words (or, more generally, of lexical items) which have similar grammatical properties.
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Part-of-speech tagging
In corpus linguistics, part-of-speech tagging (POS tagging or PoS tagging or POST), also called grammatical tagging or word-category disambiguation, is the process of marking up a word in a text (corpus) as corresponding to a particular part of speech, based on both its definition and its context—i.e., its relationship with adjacent and related words in a phrase, sentence, or paragraph.
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PC Magazine
PC Magazine (shortened as PCMag) is an American computer magazine published by Ziff Davis.
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Polish language
Polish (język polski or simply polski) is a West Slavic language spoken primarily in Poland and is the native language of the Poles.
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Portmanteau
A portmanteau or portmanteau word is a linguistic blend of words,, p. 644 in which parts of multiple words or their phones (sounds) are combined into a new word, as in smog, coined by blending smoke and fog, or motel, from motor and hotel.
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Readability
Readability is the ease with which a reader can understand a written text.
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Regular expression
A regular expression, regex or regexp (sometimes called a rational expression) is, in theoretical computer science and formal language theory, a sequence of characters that define a search pattern.
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Rule-based machine translation
Rule-based machine translation (RBMT; "Classical Approach" of MT) is machine translation systems based on linguistic information about source and target languages basically retrieved from (unilingual, bilingual or multilingual) dictionaries and grammars covering the main semantic, morphological, and syntactic regularities of each language respectively.
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Russian language
Russian (rússkiy yazýk) is an East Slavic language, which is official in Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan, as well as being widely spoken throughout Eastern Europe, the Baltic states, the Caucasus and Central Asia.
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Semantic network
A semantic network, or frame network is a knowledge base that represents semantic relations between concepts in a network.
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Semi-structured data
Semi-structured data is a form of structured data that does not conform with the formal structure of data models associated with relational databases or other forms of data tables, but nonetheless contains tags or other markers to separate semantic elements and enforce hierarchies of records and fields within the data.
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Sentiment analysis
Opinion mining (sometimes known as sentiment analysis or emotion AI) refers to the use of natural language processing, text analysis, computational linguistics, and biometrics to systematically identify, extract, quantify, and study affective states and subjective information.
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Simple English Wikipedia
The is an English-language edition of the online encyclopedia, Wikipedia, primarily written in basic English and special English.
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Speech recognition
Speech recognition is the inter-disciplinary sub-field of computational linguistics that develops methodologies and technologies that enables the recognition and translation of spoken language into text by computers.
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Speech synthesis
Speech synthesis is the artificial production of human speech.
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Springer Science+Business Media
Springer Science+Business Media or Springer, part of Springer Nature since 2015, is a global publishing company that publishes books, e-books and peer-reviewed journals in science, humanities, technical and medical (STM) publishing.
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Text simplification
Text simplification is an operation used in natural language processing to modify, enhance, classify or otherwise process an existing corpus of human-readable text in such a way that the grammar and structure of the prose is greatly simplified, while the underlying meaning and information remains the same.
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The Telegraph (Nashua)
The Telegraph, for most of its existence known as the Nashua Telegraph, is a daily newspaper in Nashua, New Hampshire.
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Thesaurus
In general usage, a thesaurus is a reference work that lists words grouped together according to similarity of meaning (containing synonyms and sometimes antonyms), in contrast to a dictionary, which provides definitions for words, and generally lists them in alphabetical order.
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VerbNet
The VerbNet project maps PropBank verb types to their corresponding Levin classes.
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Vietnamese language
Vietnamese (Tiếng Việt) is an Austroasiatic language that originated in Vietnam, where it is the national and official language.
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Volunteering
Volunteering is generally considered an altruistic activity where an individual or group provides services for no financial or social gain "to benefit another person, group or organization".
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Web scraping
Web scraping, web harvesting, or web data extraction is data scraping used for extracting data from websites.
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Wiki
A wiki is a website on which users collaboratively modify content and structure directly from the web browser.
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Wiki software
Wiki software (also known as a wiki engine or wiki application) is a collaborative software that runs a wiki, which allows users to create and collaboratively edit "pages" or entries via a web browser.
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Wikimedia Foundation
The Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. (WMF, or simply Wikimedia) is an American non-profit and charitable organization headquartered in San Francisco, California.
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Wikipedia
Wikipedia is a multilingual, web-based, free encyclopedia that is based on a model of openly editable content.
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WordNet
WordNet is a lexical database for the English language.
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World Wide Web
The World Wide Web (abbreviated WWW or the Web) is an information space where documents and other web resources are identified by Uniform Resource Locators (URLs), interlinked by hypertext links, and accessible via the Internet.
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Redirects here:
English Wiktionary, French Wiktionary, Irish Wiktionary, Kurdish Wiktionary, Malagasy Wiktionary, Simple English Wiktionary, Tamil Wiktionary, Vikisoezluek, Vikisozluk, Vikisözlük, Wicktionary, Wictionary, Wikcionario, Wiki dictionary, WikiSaurus, WikiWoordenboek, Wikibolana, Wikictionary, Wikidictionary, Wikiferheng, Wikisaurus, Wikitionary, Wikt, Wiktionarian, Wiktionary the free dictionary, Wiktionary, the free dictionary, Wiktionary.org, Wiktionnaire, Wiktionry, Wîkîferheng, 위키낱말사전.
References
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiktionary