Results 211 to 220 of about 5,819 (264)
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The use of verbal inflections in Inuktitut child and child-directed speech
Journal of Monolingual and Bilingual Speech, 2023Inuktitut is a polysynthetic agglutinative language of the Inuit-Yupik-Unangan language family, with nearly 900 verbal inflections. Despite the complexity of its inflectional system, children acquiring Inuktitut as their native language start using ...
Hannah Lee, Olga Alice Johnson, S. Allen
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Uumajursiutik unaatuinnamut / Hunter with Harpoon / Chasseur au harpon, 2021
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Machine Translation for English–Inuktitut with Segmentation, Data Acquisition and Pre-Training
Conference on Machine Translation, 2020Translating to and from low-resource polysynthetic languages present numerous challenges for NMT. We present the results of our systems for the English–Inuktitut language pair for the WMT 2020 translation tasks.
Christian Roest +5 more
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Early passive acquisition in Inuktitut
Journal of Child Language, 1996ABSTRACTPassive structures are typically assumed to be one of the later acquired constructions in child language. English-speaking children have been shown to produce and comprehend their first simple passive structures productively by about age four and to master more complex structures by about age nine.
S E, Allen, M B, Crago
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CUNI Submission for the Inuktitut Language in WMT News 2020
Conference on Machine Translation, 2020This paper describes CUNI submission to the WMT 2020 News Translation Shared Task for the low-resource scenario Inuktitut–English in both translation directions.
Tom Kocmi
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Morphological Integration of English-Origin Loanwords in Inuktitut
International Journal of Linguistics and Indigenous CultureEnglish-origin loanwords in Inuktitut are integrated morphologically. As an example, the Inuktitut word guulu, from English “gold”, can undergo affixation with the bound morphemes siuq, meaning “to search for”, and vik, denoting a place where an action ...
Connor Mi
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