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| | Encyclopedia: Romance languages |
 | | Judeo-Portuguese is the extinct Jewish language of the Jews of Portugal. |  | | Hebrew is a Semitic language of the Afro-Asiatic language family spoken by 6 million people mainly in Israel, parts of the Palestinian territories, the United States and by Jewish communities around the world. |  | | Zarphatic or Judæo-French (Zarphatic: Tsarfatit) is an extinct Jewish language, formerly spoken among the Jewish communities of northern France and in parts of what is now west-central Germany, in such cities as Mainz, Frankfurt-am-Main, and Aachen. |
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http://www.nationmaster.com/encyclopedia/Romance-languages
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| | Fabulous Adventures In Coding : Anthimeria weirds languages |
 | | # re: Anthimeria weirds languages @ Monday, October 04, 2004 5:37 PM |  | | # re: Anthimeria weirds languages @ Monday, October 04, 2004 6:13 PM |  | | # re: Anthimeria weirds languages @ Monday, October 04, 2004 6:15 PM |
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http://blogs.msdn.com/ericlippert/archive/2004/10/01/236740.aspx
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| | Question for those who speak highly inflected languages [Archive] - BeyondUnreal Forums |
 | | In addition, we would be able to make the case that letting a government decide which language or languages people will learn is dangerous, since that would mean that their government dictated their view of the world for them. |  | | in case anyone's wondering why I'm asking this, lately I've been trying to form the rough outlines of a fictional language in my head and the question of how the language's native civilization would interpret killing with a projectile weapon (as opposed to a knife or bare hands) suddenly came to mind... |  | | You might find some usefull things in there... |
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http://forums.beyondunreal.com/archive/index.php/t-103029
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| | Steve's place - Languages |
 | | The thing describing the topic is called the comment, just as the predicate describes the subject. |  | | However, due to extensive creolisation with French during the Middle Ages, it has lost many of the inflectional features of Indoeuropean. |  | | This is the case for adjectives in some languages. |
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http://www.steve.gb.com/science/languages.html
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| | InfoHub Forums - Comparing languages... |
 | | Now, for those who don't think articles would be interesting...Have you ever thought that in some languages we put the article in the end of the word, and not before it? |  | | Show 40 posts from this thread on one page |  | | This is particularly applicable to native speakers of languages in which vowels are very frequently present in words (e.g.: Italian, French, Russian). |
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http://www.infohub.com/forums/printthread.php?s=b34ab5bd3ed2b497ebd0e585f8bb4ca7&t=3648
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| | Chinese Translation Services - translate Chinese Translator |
 | | The U. government, many scholarly publications, and newspapers such as the New York Times have also adopted the Pinyin system, as has the Funk and Wagnall's New Encyclopedia. |  | | This is a discussion of the language of the Chinese, or Han, people, the majority ethnic group of China, including both the People's Republic of China and Taiwan. |  | | The fact is, however, that most Chinese speak the same dialect, which Westerners call Mandarin; its standard of pronunciation is the speech of Peking. |
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http://www.chinesetranslationusa.com
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| | Inflection - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Newer languages such as English and French have lost much of their historical inflection. |  | | This means that these languages will have inflectional paradigms involving adpositions. |  | | Languages are broadly classified morphologically into analytic and synthetic categories, or more realistically along a continuum between the two extremes. |
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http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflected_language
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| | Linguistic typology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Another common classification is according to whether a language is accusative or ergative. |  | | All we can do for such languages is find out which word order is the most frequent. |  | | Research in typology—in the ways in which languages vary—often overlaps with research in linguistic universals—in the ways in which they don't vary. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linguistic_typology
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| | Celtic languages -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article |
 | | There are legitimate scholarly arguments in favour of both the Insular Celtic hypothesis and the P-Celtic hypothesis. |  | | Within the (The family of languages that by 1000 BC were spoken throughout Europe and in parts of southwestern and southern Asia) Indo-European family, the Celtic languages have sometimes been placed with the (A branch of the Indo-European languages of which Latin is the chief representative) Italic languages in a common Celto-Italic (or Italo-Celtic) subfamily. |  | | Celtic languages are a branch of the (The family of languages that by 1000 BC were spoken throughout Europe and in parts of southwestern and southern Asia) Indo-European languages. |
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http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/C/Ce/Celtic_languages.htm
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| | Statistical language model for inflected languages - Patent 5835888 |
 | | The method of claim 1, wherein the possible endings in a language are contained in a precompiled list. |  | | The method of claim 18, wherein the possible endings in a language are identified using a known vocabulary set for the language. |  | | This can be done with a vocabulary for the language in question. |
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http://www.freepatentsonline.com/5835888.html
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| | eLibrary Project : Declension |
 | | In inflected languages, are said to ''decline'' into different forms, "morphological cases". |  | | The following are systems that some languages use to mark case instead of, in addition to, Nouns are not inflected for case; the position of a noun in the sentence expresses its case. |  | | This is seen, example, Latin, language,German, language,Russian, many other languages. |
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http://elibraryproject.com/info/declension.html
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| | Re: SUO: Re: Logic & Programming Languages |
 | | NTL could with equal justification be considered an acronym for a Neoaristotelian Theory of Language. |  | | I don't claim that humans and other animals use some version of those tools in their heads -- it just means that the result of what they do has the same patterning as that produced by the tools. |  | | Its major weakness is its tendency to exclude other perspectives, such as Aristotle's, which can accommodate both formal logic and a theory of embodied mind. |
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http://0-suo.ieee.org.csulib.ctstateu.edu/email/msg05788.html
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| | EN World - Morrus' D&D / d20 News & Reviews Site - Non Human Languages (was inflected languages) |
 | | Japanese isn't a language that doesn't use intonations, since people are people, but I think that it could use no intonations and, without changing the language at all, still be as useful a language as it is now. |  | | I originally asked simply, if there were languages that did not use inlfection, or as I quickly learned intonation. |  | | Japanese being theonly example of a real world language that does not necesaruily require it, but still uses it regualrly. |
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http://www.enworld.org/archive/index.php/t-45647.html
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| | Inflected Languages |
 | | It's best to speak of languages not as inflected or uninflected, but according to the degree of their inflection. |  | | In other languages, though, nouns and pronouns can be declined many other ways -- to show whether they're the subject, direct object, or indirect object of the sentence, for instance. |  | | Old English, though, was more thoroughly inflected, with far more forms than survived into Middle English. |
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http://www.english.upenn.edu/~jlynch/Terms/Temp/inflected.html
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| | AllRefer.com - case (Language And Linguistics) - Encyclopedia |
 | | Old English also inflected for accusative, dative, and sometimes instrumental, cases. |  | | The Altaic and Finno-Ugric language families also use case-marking systems. |  | | case, in language, one of the several possible forms of a given noun, pronoun, or adjective that indicates its grammatical function (see inflection); in inflected languages it is usually indicated by a series of suffixes attached to a stem, as in Latin amicus, "friend" (nominative); amicum (accusative); amici (genitive); and amico (ablative and dative). |
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http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/C/case-lang.html
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| | Computers and Foreign Languages |
 | | This aspect is particularly important in the case of inflected languages such as German, in which a mistake in a case ending can change the meaning of a sentence completely. |  | | Increasingly, however, material for foreign languages is becoming available on the World Wide Web, an international computer network supporting both text and graphics. |  | | This DOS-based program was developed at Duke University's Humanities Computing Facility with funds made available by the National Security Agency and other government agencies concerned directly or indirectly with foreign language instruction. |
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http://www.nku.edu/~philos/et/springx95/lang.html
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| | Search Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Persian language Persian language, member of the Iranian group of the Indo-Iranian subfamily of the Indo-European family of languages (see Indo-Iranian languages). |  | | The official language of Iran, it has about 38 million speakers in Iran and another 8 million in Afghanistan. |  | | In many languages, words or parts of words are arranged in formally similar sets consisting of a root, or base, and various affixes. |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/searchpool.asp?target=%22inflection%22
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| | [No title] |
 | | Both Latin and Greek are highly inflected languages, unlike modern English which has lost most of its inflection since the Middle Ages. |  | | Verbs are the most elaborately inflected part of speech in both the Latin and Greek languages and are inflected according to person, number, tense (or "time-aspect") mood (or "mode"), and voice. |  | | German and Russian, which are also Indo-European languages (like Latin, Greek, and English) still have a considerable degree of inflection; modern Greek too, although less inflected than its ancient counterpart, still has a large measure of inflection. |
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http://ace.acadiau.ca/arts/classics/COURSES/2233/Lati-Gre/lati-gre.htm
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| | Inflected language - Wikipedia |
 | | This page was last modified 04:43, 15 January 2005. |  | | Contrast isolating languages, which present the same information with word order and helper words more often than highly inflected languages do; however, distinguishing helper words from prefixes or suffixes in some languages (such as Japanese) can bring difficulty. |  | | Examples of inflected languages include Latin, Greek and Russian. |
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http://nostalgia.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflected_language
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| | Engl401 Lessons Inflection in Old English |
 | | A language is said to be "inflected" when changes in the form of the language's words alter their meaning. |  | | Old English verbs, nouns, pronouns and adjectives are all inflected, and change their forms according to their position or meaning in a sentence. |  | | The first of these is not possible in any language I know, but you may be surprised to hear that the second, third, and fourth examples have word orders that could well make sensible sentences in Old English. |
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http://www.ucalgary.ca/UofC/eduweb/engl401/lessons/inflect.htm
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| | Re: Is Python the Esperanto of programming languages? |
 | | For those who learnt an inflected language from the first year of their |  | | The contextual information is still there in inflected languages, so the |  | | But why the speaker has to know there is one or there |
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http://marc.free.net.ph/message/20030321.175002.bf39cfc3.en.html
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| | LINGUIST List 15.2837: Historical Ling/Syntax, Romance: Scida |
 | | This book investigates two prominent issues with regard to the inflected |  | | of the inflected infinitive, the second section examines the theories |  | | This study presents a detailed comparison of the |
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http://www.ling.ed.ac.uk/linguist/issues/15/15-2837.html
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| | HalGal: Languages of the Records |
 | | Published in 1998 by the Polish Genealogical Society of America. |  | | There I describe some various spellings one could use when searching for relatives in Passenger Lists (or any other English language resource). |  | | However, one need not be fluent in these languages to understand the basics of these various word endings as they pertain to reading vital records. |
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http://www.halgal.com/langofrecord.html
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| | Order of cases in inflected languages |
 | | I am a retired high school teacher (but not of foreign languages) who is re-acquainting himself with both these languages. |  | | Can some one tell me (a)when the change happened and (b)why it happened. |
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http://www.learnalanguage.org/ofltadiscuss2/_disc10/0000002d.htm
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| | Comparative Greek and Latin Syntax - R. W. Moore |
 | | Modern students' lack of formal training in the grammar even of their own language leads to an impatience with the jargon and rules of syntax in their study of the ancient inflected languages. |  | | It has three main thrusts: the first critical - to explain usages and the labels and theories attached to them; the second historical - to explain the process by which the languages developed and changed; the third psychological - how did the working of speakers' or writers' thoughts make them express themselves? |  | | This comparative approach to Greek and Latin (first published in 1934) serves to introduce students to the syntax of both languages side by side. |
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http://www.libreriauniversitaria.it/BUS/1853995983/Comparative_Greek_and_Latin_Syntax.htm
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| | Oxford University Press: The World's Major Languages: Bernard Comrie |
 | | "This is the most thorough survey of languages and language families that I have seen which is suitable for undergraduate courses. |  | | "A compelling new view of language and its place in the natural world." |  | | From English, French, Spanish and Russian to Pashto, Tagalog, and Swahili, this is the first comprehensive reference work to provide detailed information about the world's forty major languages. |
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http://www.oup.com/us/catalog/24375/subject/Language/~~/cHI9MTAmcGY9MCZzcz1hdXRob3IuYXNjJnNmPWFsbCZzZD1hc2Mmdmlldz11c2EmY2k9MDE5NTA2NTExNQ==
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| | phorum - Bad Movies - Re: Movies in foreign languages |
 | | Italian is the coolest when spoken by a woman, German when spoken by a man. Any inflected East Asian language is the most irritating, to me at least. |  | | Inflected languages rely on the way you say a syllable (a rising or declining, or up-then-down tone etc) to convey its meaning. |  | | You may freely link to any page (.html or.php) on this website, but reproduction in any other form must be authorized by the copyright holder. |
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http://www.badmovies.org/bbs/read.php?f=2&i=54377&t=54075
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| | Indo-Iranian: Iranian Group |
 | | The third and last group of the Indo-Iranian subfamily consists of the Iranian languages, spoken by about 95 million people, mainly in Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and parts of Central Asia. |  | | Historically, the oldest Iranian forms of which there are any records are Avestan and Old Persian, both highly inflected languages. |  | | Today's Iranian languages are written in adaptations of the Arabic alphabet, except for Tajiki, which uses Cyrillic characters. |
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http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/society/A0858809.html
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| | English Dictionary and Thesaurus - Synset.com |
 | | a grammatical category in inflected languages governing the agreement between nouns and pronouns and adjectives; in some languages it is quite arbitrary but in Indo-European languages it is usually based on sex or animateness |
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http://www.synset.com/sense/n_communication/g/gender_grammatical_gender_33210.html
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| | Gender - definition of Gender in General |
 | | In the late 1900's, the term again became used to refer to the sex of people, as a euphemism for the term sex, especially in discussions of laws and policies on equal treatment of sexes. |  | | Embed a dictionary search in your own web page |  | | gender - a grammatical category in inflected languages governing the agreement between nouns and pronouns and adjectives; in some languages it is quite arbitrary but in Indo-European languages it is usually based on sex or animateness |
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http://dictionary.laborlawtalk.com/Gender
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| | DM4 §37: Names and messages in non-English languages |
 | | The fourth and final part of the language definition file is taken up with rules on printing out messages and object names in the new language. |  | | Inform uses the term contraction form to mean a textual feature of a noun which causes any article in front of it to inflect. |  | | In your language, verbs might also need to inflect in a sentence like the one above, which assumes that the infinitive and imperative are the same. |
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http://www.inform-fiction.org/manual/html/s37.html
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| | 23rd Internationalization and Unicode Conference - Abstract |
 | | This paper will look at the definition of a word and it will examine some examples in different languages where the word boundary is difficult to find. |  | | Highly inflected languages such as Finnish or Turkish which can represent almost an entire English sentence in one word |  | | Spontaneously generated compound words (commonly found in Germanic languages) |
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http://www.unicode.org/iuc/iuc23/a317.html
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| | Description of ARIES Natural Language Tools |
 | | It includes information about some derivative morphological processes (inflected adjectives from past participles and adverbs ended in "-mente" from adjectives). |  | | It is capable of generating/recognizing well formed inflected forms for verbs, nouns and adjectives. |  | | The ARIES Natural Language Tools make up a lexical platform for the Spanish language. |
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http://www.mat.upm.es/~aries/description.html
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| | UK TeX FAQ -- question label hyphenaccents |
 | | command; there are good reasons for this, but it means that quality typesetting in non-English languages can be difficult. |  | | TeX's algorithm for hyphenation gives up when it encounters an |  | | For TeX macro packages, you can avoiding the effect by using an appropriately encoded font (for example, a Cork-encoded font - see the EC fonts) which contains accented letters as single glyphs. |
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http://www.math.ua.edu/software/TEXHELP/html/faq/FAQ-hyphenaccents.html
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| | Tagset Design and Inflected Languages |
 | | For further information about this item go to: |  | | Home >> Journals and Conference Proceedings >> CoRR: Computation and Language |
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http://wotan.liu.edu/docis/dbl/xxcscl/9504002.html
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| | Corpus of Serbian Language |
 | | Corpus of Serbian Language - Choose the Language |  | | THIS SITE IS OPTIMIZED FOR 1024 X 768 SCREEN RESOLUTION |
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http://www.serbian-corpus.edu.yu/indexie.htm
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