Results 211 to 220 of about 1,719,333 (269)
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Challenging the Transformer-based models with a Classical Arabic dataset: Quran and Hadith

International Conference on Language Resources and Evaluation, 2022
Transformer-based models showed near-perfect results on several downstream tasks. However, their performance on classical Arabic texts is largely unexplored.
S. Altammami, E. Atwell
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Classical Arabic Detective

Arabica, 1988
ETECTIVE fiction, which has long entertained readers, has also spawned a rapidly growing critical literature of its own. The questions addressed include the paternity of the detective genre, the nature of the characters exploited in detective fiction, and the implications of that literature, social or otherwise.
openaire   +1 more source

Speech Translation From Darija to Classical Arabic: Performance Analysis of Whisper, SeamlessM4T, and S2T Models

IEEE Access
This study evaluates the performance of advanced speech-to-text translation models—Whisper large-v3, SeamlessM4T, and S2T—fine-tuned on the Darija-C corpus to translate Darija speech into Classical Arabic text.
Maria Labied, A. Belangour, M. Banane
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Classification Arabic language (Classical Arabic Poetry, Al-Hur Arabic Poetry and Prose) Using Machine Learning

EDRAAK
Many languages globally have made significant advances in electronically studying and classifying texts. Making electronic text a great alternative to manual classification by saving time, cost, and effort.
M. A. Ahmed   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Is There Really Root-and-Pattern Morphology? Evidence from Classical Arabic

Catalan Journal of Linguistics
The morphologies of Semitic languages have most often been described as a system of roots and patterns suggesting a pluri-consonantal root. For example, the putative Arabic root √qbr has the derived forms qabara ‘he buried’, qubira ‘he was buried ...
Dominique Bobeck
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Analyzing the seventh vowel of classical Arabic

2009 International Conference on Natural Language Processing and Knowledge Engineering, 2009
In general, any language sounds are classified into two categories: vowels that contain no major air restriction through the vocal tract, and consonants that involve a significant restriction and are therefore weaker in amplitude and often "noisier" than vowels.
Mubark Obaid AlQahtany   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Contribution of al-'Ilm Sharaf To the Development of Understanding Classical Arabic Grammar at Islamic Educational Institutions

Jurnal Al-Fikrah
This study examines the contribution of al-'Ilm Sharaf to the development of understanding classical Arabic grammar in Islamic educational institutions.
Nurbaiti Nurbaiti
semanticscholar   +1 more source

ATHAR: A High-Quality and Diverse Dataset for Classical Arabic to English Translation

Proceedings of The Third Arabic Natural Language Processing Conference
Classical Arabic represents a significant era that encompasses the golden age of Arab culture, philosophy, and scientific literature. With a broad consensus on the importance of translating these literatures to enrich knowledge dissemination across ...
Mohammed Khalil, Mohammed Sabry
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Classical Arabic Poetry: Classification based on Era

ACS/IEEE International Conference on Computer Systems and Applications, 2020
This paper proposes a CNN-based deep learning model that classifies Arabic poems based on its era, which is not reported before. To build this model, constructing a dataset is the first step, so we propose an updated Arabic Poetry Dataset (2020).
Mariam Orabi   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Homoeroticism in Classical Arabic Literature

South Atlantic Review, 1999
This text examines the importance of masculine homosexual allusion in classical Arabic literature. It explores the underlying meanings of masculine motifs in classical texts. The fawn, for example, was often a symbol for the ethereally beautiful male youth, while the stallion represented masculine bravery and valour.
Seth Ward   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

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