Hi doubleclicking this link will take you to a page full of links connecting with language identifiers, morfological analizers, and morphological generators, many downlaodable for free, other demo.
Scroll up and down the page since the link directly takes to Language Identifiers section:
http://www.yourdictionary.com/morph.html#guessers
These are some of the links in the page:
· Arabic Morphological Analyzer.
· Shape Schematization in Assamese Classifiers by Jugal K. Kalita.
· Austronesian Language Comparison by Raymond Weisling.
· Allen and Greenough's New Latin Grammar. .
· A Brief Latin Grammatical Aid.
· Byron Bender's 'Morphological Paradoxes'.
· Bulgarian Morphological Analyzer.
· Comparative Slavic Morphosyntax: The State of the Art.
· Computational Morphology: Introduction to the ALE-RA System by Colin Matheson.
· English Neologisms.
· The Ergative State of Early Proto-Indo-European by Hans-Joachim Alscher.
· French Conjugation.
· French Morphological Analyzer.
· Introduction to German Grammar.
· GERTWOL German Morphological Analyzer.
· German Morphology Browser.
· Greek Morphological Analyzer.
· Hindi Morphological Analyzer (Tagger).
· Hindi-Marathi-Telugu Morphological Analyzers
· Other Indian Language Morphological Analyzers
· Indo-European Documentation Center.
· How Similar are Estonian and Finnish?
· International Phonetic Association
· Linguistic Typology (Language Variety)
· Italian Clitics.
· Latin Parser and Translator.
· Multilingual Verb Conjugator.
· Xerox Research Corporation's Morphological Analyzer for Arabic, English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Dutch, and German.
· Sanskrit Decliner and Conjugator by Gerard Huet.
· The Roots of Mambila: Convergence and divergence in the development of Mambila by Bruce Connell..
· Study Guide to Wheelock's Latin Grammar.
· Spanish Morphological Analyzer (Licensed).
· Conjugate Spanish Verbs
· Swahili Noun Classes.
· Tamil Case System
· Turkish Morphological Analyzer.
· Ural-Altaic Language Page
· Verbix Verb Conjugator
· Welsh Conjugational Endings and Irregular Forms.
· Word Manager..
· WordNet.
· Word Frequency Indexer.
· World Atlas of Language Structures
· XTAG Tree Adjoining Parser.
Hope it helps
Santiago
2007-07-16 22:37:41
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answer #1
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answered by San2 5
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Morphological analysis or General Morphological Analysis is a method developed by Fritz Zwicky (1967, 1969) for exploring all the possible solutions to a multi-dimensional, non-quantified problem complex.[1] As a problem-structuring and problem-solving technique, morphological analysis was designed for multi-dimensional, non-quantifiable problems where causal modeling and simulation do not function well or at all. Zwicky developed this approach to address seemingly non-reducible complexity. Using the technique of cross consistency assessment (CCA) (Ritchey, 1998), the system however does allow for reduction, not by reducing the number of variables involved, but by reducing the number of possible solutions through the elimination of the illogical solution combinations in a grid box. A detailed introduction to morphological modeling is given in Ritchey (2002, 2006). Morphology comes from the classical Greek concept morphé, meaning shape or form. Morphological Analysis (MA) concerns the arrangement of objects and how they conform to create a whole or Gestalt. The objects in question can be a physical system (e.g. anatomy), a social system (e.g. an organisation) or a logical system (e.g. word forms or a system of ideas).[1] General morphology was developed by Fritz Zwicky, the Swiss astrophysicist based at the California Institute of Technology. Zwicky applied MA inter alia to astronomical studies and the development of jet and rocket propulsion systems. [edit] Illustration of the need for Morphological Analysis Consider a complex real world problem, like those of marketing or making policies for a nation, where there are many governing factors, and most of them cannot be expressed as numerical time series data, as one would like to have for building mathematical models. The conventional approach here would be to break the system down into parts, isolate the vital parts (dropping the trivial components) for their contributions to the output and solve the simplified system for creating desired models or scenarios. The disadvantage of this approach is that real world scenarios do not behave rationally and more often than not a simplified model will break down when the contribution of trivial components becomes significant. Also significantly, the behaviour of many components will be governed by states of, and relations with other components, perhaps minor.
2016-05-19 22:21:25
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answer #2
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answered by josefina 3
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This is one of the more complex problems in computational linguistics. I programmed one for Hungarian verbs about 20 years ago in BASIC, but it was useless for irregular verbs. The biggest problem with morphology is the wide variety of irregular stuff. If you find a good one, I'd love to see it. Send me an email with the link if you don't mind.
EDIT: Many thanks to Santiago F
2007-07-16 16:34:26
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answer #3
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answered by Taivo 7
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