W. P. Lehmann

Also published as: W.P. Lehmann


1997

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MT at Texas: The Early Years
W.P. Lehmann
Proceedings of Machine Translation Summit VI: Plenaries

1963


On redundancy in artificial languages
W. P. Lehmann
Proceedings of the Annual meeting of the Association for Machine Translation and Computational Linguistics

Artificial languages are one concern of work in computational linguistics, if only as a mnemonic device for interlinguas which will be developed. Even if it does not gain wider use, the structure of an artificial language is of general interest. In contrast to the artificial languages which have been widely proposed, linguistic principles underlying a welldesigned artificial language and its usefulness are wellestablished, particularly through Trubetzkoy’s article, TCLP 8.5-21. which indicates phonological limitations for such a language. Since Trubetzkoy’s specifications yield a total of approximately 11,000 morphemes, if an artificial language incorporated the degree of redundancy found in natural languages it would be severely handicapped by the size of its lexicon. The paper discusses the problem particularly with regard to suprasegmentals, which Trubetzkoy almost entirely ignored.

1957

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Discussion
Victor Oswald | Gilbert King | Leon Dostert | Jack Rabinow | Paul Garvin | Simon Newman | Clyde Heasly | W. P. Lehmann | Jesse Mann | William Austin
Research in Machine Translation

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Structure of Noun Phrases in German
W. P. Lehmann
Research in Machine Translation

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Discussion
Victor Oswald | Dan Belmore | Paul Garvin | Hugo Mueller | W. P. Lehmann | Richard Thomas | N. A. Kirsch | Herbert Paper | Michael Zarechnak | Leon Dostert | Martin Joos | Victor Yngve | Jane Pyne | R. A. Crossland | William Austin | Gilbert King
Research in Machine Translation