Results 91 to 100 of about 25,083 (203)
Neologism construction in Amharic by compounding various parts of speech
The Amharic language is the second most widely spoken Semitic language in the world, used by around 25 million speakers. Even though the Amharic language is successfully used in many domains, it still needs appropriate neologisms to give name to notions
Michał Kozicki
doaj
Efficient and adaptable document categorization systems are required due to the increasing expansion of Amharic electronic documents in order to manage and extract important insights from large amounts of data. Classical natural language processing (NLP)
Amlakie Aschale Alemu +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Given the Amharic language has a lot of perplexing terminology since it features duplicate homophone letters, fidel's ሀ, ሐ, and ኀ (three of which are pronounced as HA), ሠ and ሰ (both pronounced as SE), አ and ዐ (both pronounced as AE), and ጸ and ፀ (both ...
Mequanent Degu Belete +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Household Welfare and Education in Urban Ethiopia [PDF]
Welfare, Urban, Education ...
Kronlid, Karin
core
Natural Language Processing (NLP) is a sub-field of artificial intelligence (AI) that focuses on enabling machines to understand natural languages or engage in natural-like conversations.
Kindie Alebachew +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Building a new life in Australia: introducing the longitudinal study of humanitarian migrants [PDF]
Introduces a study aimed to shed light on the settlement pathways and outcomes of newly arrived humanitarian migrants, focusing particularly on the factors that promote or hinder a successful transition.
Diana Smart +3 more
core
Crowdsourcing for Speech: Economic, Legal and Ethical analysis
With respect to spoken language resource production, Crowdsourcing - the process of distributing tasks to an open, unspecified population via the internet - offers a wide range of opportunities: populations with specific skills are potentially ...
Adda, Gilles +3 more
core +2 more sources
International audienceThis article presents the data collected and ASR systems developped for 4 sub-saharan african languages (Swahili, Hausa, Amharic and Wolof). To illustrate our methodology, the focus is made on Wolof (a very under-resourced language)
Besacier, Laurent +4 more
core +1 more source
History of Events and Internal Developement [PDF]
Amborn, Hermann, Beyene, Taddese
core +1 more source
Introduction: An Overview of Event Integration Patterns in African Languages [PDF]
KAWACHI, Kazuhiro
core

