Results 201 to 210 of about 92,814 (252)
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Ancient Sanskrit Line-level OCR using OpenNMT Architecture

International Conference on Intelligent Information Processing, 2021
There have been several Optical Character Recognition (OCR) related works happened for Indian languages like Hindi, Marathi, Bangla, etc. But there is very little OCR-related work done for the Sanskrit language of Devanagari script.
Ronak Shah, M. Gupta, Ajai Kumar
semanticscholar   +1 more source

One Model is All You Need: ByT5-Sanskrit, a Unified Model for Sanskrit NLP Tasks

Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing
Morphologically rich languages are notoriously challenging to process for downstream NLP applications. This paper presents a new pretrained language model, ByT5-Sanskrit, designed for NLP applications involving the morphologically rich language Sanskrit.
Sebastian Nehrdich   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sanskrit

2020
The chapter begins with a discussion of Sanskrit’s place in the Indo-European family tree, showing how both the roots of individual words and the patterns seen in grammatical endings have close correspondences to Greek, Latin, and English. It also considers some of the features that are especially characteristic of Sanskrit, such as the voiced aspirate
openaire   +2 more sources

Sanskrit Parsing Following Indian Theories of Verbal Cognition

ACM Trans. Asian Low Resour. Lang. Inf. Process., 2021
Pāṇini’s grammar is an important milestone in the Indian grammatical tradition. Unlike grammars of other languages, it is almost exhaustive and together with the theories of śābdabodha (verbal cognition), this grammar provides a system for language ...
Amba P. Kulkarni
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sanskrit and Sanskritization

The Journal of Asian Studies, 1963
Language, culture, and society can be studied from various points of view. Classical Indology and Indian anthropology have different points of departure, but deal sometimes with the same material; the difference in background has generally prevented close collaboration. Classical Indologists tend to look upon Indian anthropologists as mainly interested
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Sanskrit

2015
The name Sanskrit for the language—especially known for its rich heritage of ancient Indian literary, scientific, philosophical, and religious texts—is derived from saṁskṛta, past passive participle from sam + kṛ that means “to prepare (well),” “to make perfect,” “to polish.” Sanskrit or saṁskṛam (viz.: bhāṣaṇam or vacaḥ) thus means “well-prepared ...
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Culture of Encounters: Sanskrit at the Mughal Court

Iran studies, 2019
It is becoming increasingly clear that our understanding of the Mughal Empire, and early modern empires in general, is benefiting greatly from work dedicated to overcoming preconceptions of power, authority and imperial culture.
A. Fani
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Buddhism and the Sanskrit of Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1965
IN THE DECADE SINCE the publication of Franklin Edgerton's Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit Grammar and Dictionary and Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit Reader (New Haven, 1953) scholars have certainly profited by this monumental accomplishment. The present writer, for one, made much use of the Dictionary in a work Analysis of the 6rivakabhiimi Manuscript (Berkeley ...
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Automatic Speech Recognition for Sanskrit

2019 2nd International Conference on Intelligent Computing, Instrumentation and Control Technologies (ICICICT), 2019
This paper presents our work on building a speaker independent, large vocabulary continuous speech recognition system for Sanskrit using HMM Toolkit (HTK). To our knowledge, this is the maiden attempt on a Sanskrit automatic speech recognizer. A Sanskrit
C. Anoop, A. Ramakrishnan
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sanskritization

Abstract This chapter examines M.N. Srinivas’ conceptualization of Sanskritization, which he defined as the emulation of the beliefs and practices of upper castes, particularly those of Brahmins, by lower castes in order to raise their status in the caste hierarchy.
openaire   +1 more source

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