Nazareth Amlesom Kifle
Also published as: Nazareth Amlesom Kifle
2025
UD Annotation of Experience Clauses in Tigrinya
Michael Gasser
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Nazareth Amlesom Kifle
Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on Dependency Linguistics (Depling, SyntaxFest 2025)
We are developing a treebank for Tigrinya within the Universal Dependency (UD) framework. UD proposes a set of universal grammatical relations to capture dependency relations between words in any language. However, for some classes of verbs it is not a straightforward matter to know what grammatical relations the verbs are categorized for. In this paper we discuss the decisions we have had to make for the annotation of arguments of experience verbs in the Semitic language Tigrinya, which exhibit a number of unusual morphosyntactic properties. We describe a classification of experience verb roots in the language, based on the various ways in which the core experiencer and stimulus arguments are realized syntactically and morphologically and on which valence-changing operations the roots permit. We supplement our analysis with data from a morphological analysis of a Tigrinya corpus.
2020
Character Alignment in Morphologically Complex Translation Sets for Related Languages
Michael Gasser
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Binyam Ephrem Seyoum
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Nazareth Amlesom Kifle
Proceedings of the 7th Workshop on NLP for Similar Languages, Varieties and Dialects
For languages with complex morphology, word-to-word translation is a task with various potential applications, for example, in information retrieval, language instruction, and dictionary creation, as well as in machine translation. In this paper, we confine ourselves to the subtask of character alignment for the particular case of families of related languages with very few resources for most or all members. There are many such families; we focus on the subgroup of Semitic languages spoken in Ethiopia and Eritrea. We begin with an adaptation of the familiar alignment algorithms behind statistical machine translation, modifying them as appropriate for our task. We show how character alignment can reveal morphological, phonological, and orthographic correspondences among related languages.