Results 11 to 20 of about 1,202 (250)
Turkic Elements in the Floral Vocabulary of the Kalmyk Language
On the material of the Kalmyk language with reference to the Khalkha Mongolian, the Buryat languages and old Mongolian script, the article considers a thematic group of floral vocabulary to identify the Turkic-Mongolian parallels.
V. V. Kukanova, V. M. Trofimov
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Kinship terminology is a reflection of the kinship system in the language. Kinship is produced through marriage and family relationships. Terminology that refers to such kinship has gradually been refined over time.
WUYINGGA (UYANGA)
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A Study on Cross Transformation of Mongolian Language
This paper discusses a segmentation approach of Mongolian for Cyrillic text for machine translation. Using this method, the processing of one-to-one word permutation between the variations of Mongolian and other languages, especially Altaic family languages like Japanese, becomes easier.
Dawa, Idomucogiin, Nakamura, Satoshi
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Introduction. The article deals with the frequency use of nominal plurality markers in Kalmyk with comparative insights into Khalkha Mongolian and Buryat. Goals. The study aims at clarifying how different the parameter is in the Mongolic languages (given
Anna V. Mazarchuk
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Named Entity Recognition for Mongolian Language [PDF]
This paper presents a pioneering work on building a Named Entity Recognition system for the Mongolian language, with an agglutinative morphology and a subject-object-verb word order. Our work explores the fittest feature set from a wide range of features and a method that refines machine learning approach using gazetteers with approximate string ...
Zoljargal Munkhjargal +3 more
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Based on the “Unified Platform for Speech Acoustic Parameters of Chinese Minority Languages”, this paper calculates and compares the acoustic distribution of vowels in Mongolian, Uyghur, and Ewenki and proposes a hypothesis that the relevance between the
Huhe Harnud, Zhou Xuewen
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Reflexes of Proto-Mongolian Vowels in South Mongolian Languages
The Mongolian languages are a language family that includes several closely related languages of Mongolia, China, Russia and Afghanistan. According to lexicostatistics, they broke up around the 5th century AD. Dagur, Shira-Yugur, Dongxiang, Bao'an, Tu (Monguor) are commonly referred to as South Mongolian languages.
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Numerals in the Mongolian Language
This paper is devoted to the etymology of numerals and classification of numerals in the Buryat language. This paper reveals similarities and differences in the terms “numeral” and “number”. In the linguistic research it is established that numerals in the Mongolian languages have a specific set of grammatical properties which distinguishes them as a ...
Lhasaranova Bairma Bastuevna +4 more
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We present an integrated workflow that predicts activity‐enhancing mutation combinations from minimal experimental data. By proposing in vivo unit yield (yield/expression) as a surrogate for kcat/Km through causal inference, and visualizing local activity landscape, it effectively guides product yield improvement. ABSTRACT Designing enzyme sequences to
Lin Guo +15 more
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Names of Leather Packages and Containers in the Mongolic Languages
Though studied unevenly, the Mongolian languages have been long known both in Europe and Russia’s academic circles. The most investigated modern Mongolian languages are Khalkha Mongolian, Buryat and Kalmyk.
B. D. Balzhinimaeva
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