Rule-Based Machine Translation: An Interface between Formal and Natural Language Syntax A Violation of Case Filter Principle

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Date

2016

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West African Linguistics Society

Abstract

The principles which govern ways words can be combined together to form phrases and sentences in natural language is known as syntax while formal syntax is not a matter of experience (unlike natural language), but stipulations in order to provide a specified set of strings in a computer programming language. The focus of this paper therefore, is to explore linguistics as the dual planes of theory and practice, by interrogating how PROLOG was used to capture English/Yoruba natural language syntax in a rule-based machine translation. The study reveals that the machine was able to generate sentences, break sentences into phrases and words in a bid to translate them in both languages

Description

In: Taiwo, O. and Yuka, L.C. (eds) New Findings in West African Languages and Literature: In commemoration of the 50th Anniversary of West African Linguistic Society (WALS) pp. 342- 349

Keywords

PROLOG, Natural Language, Formal Language, Syntax, Machine Translation

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