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The Slavic Languages

2006
The Slavic group of languages - the fourth largest Indo-European sub-group - is one of the major language families of the modern world. With 297 million speakers, Slavic comprises 13 languages split into three groups: South Slavic, which includes Bosnian, Serbian and Croatian; East Slavic, which includes Russian and Ukrainian; and West Slavic, which ...
Sussex, Roland, Cubberley, Paul
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Experimental Syntax and Slavic Languages

2021
The chapter reviews a number of empirical domains that recently came into the focus of research in Slavic experimental syntax, including island phenomena, syntactic Superiority effects, various types of agreement, word order, and scope interaction, among others.
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Typology of Slavic languages

2021
The book provides with a description of the Slavic world: Slavic countries, Slavic peoples, systems of Slavic writing. A typological description of modern Slavic languages is presented: their lexical, phonetic, grammatical features are considered, including some categories of sentences and text.
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Using Deep Neural Networks for Identification of Slavic Languages from Acoustic Signal

Interspeech, 2018
This paper investigates the use of deep neural networks (DNNs) for the task of spoken language identification. Various feed-forward fully connected, convolutional and recurrent DNN architectures are adopted and compared against a baseline i-vector based ...
Lukás Mateju   +3 more
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VoiceXML for Slavic languages application development

2008 Conference on Human System Interactions, 2008
Since Croatian language, as well as other Slavic languages, is essentially very different from English, we are in the need of developing language specific tools and systems. In this paper we point out the benefits that speech applications have and describe our future platform. Furthermore, we create domain-specific dialogues using VoiceXML. VoiceXML is
Maja Matetic, Marija Brkić
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The Impact of Slavic Languages on Romani

2019
The chapter gives an overview of the impact the Slavic languages have had on the Romani dialects in Eastern, Southeastern and Central Europe. All Romani dialects in Europe have been in contact with South Slavic languages in the Balkans. Later contact-induced changes in Romani differ.
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A Romance Language Instructor Looks at the Slavic Languages

The Modern Language Journal, 1949
IT MAY be sheer presumption for me, a Romance language instructor, to address you on the subject of the Slavic languages. Yet, be it said, in self-defense, I have never been far removed from people and things Slavonic. My ancestors dwelled some two centuries in Poland and my parents immigrated here from Galicja.
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Grammaticalization in Slavic languages

2012
AbstractThis article examines the grammaticalisation developments in Slavic languages. The functions of the past tenses lost in northern Slavic are only partially covered by the younger opposition of perfective and imperfective aspect. The only new classes of morphemes that arose in some sub-areas of Slavic are the definite and the indefinite article ...
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Retroflex fricatives in Slavic languages

Journal of the International Phonetic Association, 2004
The present study explores the phonetic and phonological grounds on which postalveolar fricatives in Polish can be analysed as retroflex, and considers whether postalveolar fricatives in other Slavic languages are retroflex as well. Velarization and incompatibility with front vowels are introduced as articulatory criteria for retroflexion, based on ...
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Exponents of sonority in Slavic and Germanic languages

Speech Prosody 2018, 2018
The study of phonotactics has been largely based on the principle of sonority [19], which orders segments in the syllable according to their articulatory opening.
Paula Orzechowska
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