Difference between revisions of "Category:Linguistics"
From Christoph's Personal Wiki
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* Spanish (college level) | * Spanish (college level) | ||
− | == | + | == Phrases == |
;hacks : ''ad hoc'' implementations | ;hacks : ''ad hoc'' implementations | ||
;Web 3.0 : semantic web | ;Web 3.0 : semantic web | ||
;screen scraping : a technique in which a computer program extracts text data from the display output of another program (see: "web scraping") | ;screen scraping : a technique in which a computer program extracts text data from the display output of another program (see: "web scraping") | ||
− | ;idempotent : (''adj'') describing an action which, when performed multiple times, has no further effect on its subject after the first time it is performed | + | ===Other=== |
+ | ;[[wikipedia:idempotent|idempotent]] : (''adj'') describing an action which, when performed multiple times, has no further effect on its subject after the first time it is performed | ||
+ | ;[[wikipedia:Outro|outro]] (sometimes "outtro" or "extro") : a literary term used to indicate the conclusion to a piece. It is the opposite of an intro. | ||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 04:18, 16 February 2007
Linguistics is the scientific study of human language, and someone who engages in this study is called a linguist or linguistician.
I am very interested in this field, but more of as a hobby than as a career. In any case, I will document what I learn about this field in this category.
I also speak a few languages and am learning more. Below is a list of the languages I speak either fluently or with a working knowledge (and continually improving):
- English (mother-tongue)
- German (college level)
- Spanish (college level)
Phrases
- hacks
- ad hoc implementations
- Web 3.0
- semantic web
- screen scraping
- a technique in which a computer program extracts text data from the display output of another program (see: "web scraping")
Other
- idempotent
- (adj) describing an action which, when performed multiple times, has no further effect on its subject after the first time it is performed
- outro (sometimes "outtro" or "extro")
- a literary term used to indicate the conclusion to a piece. It is the opposite of an intro.
External links
- AskOxford — a free online dictionary resource from OUP
- Linguistic Data Consortium
- The Link Grammar Parser — a syntactic parser of English, based on link grammar, an original theory of English syntax.
- The Latin Library
- Developing Linguistic Corpora: a Guide to Good Practice
- Wortschatz — Search in 17 Corpus-Based Monolingual Dictionaries (by the Universität Leipzig)
- UniLang Wiki — a database of language- and linguistic-related information
- WebCorp — The Web as a Corpus
- concordancer + utils — by Ralph Meyer of Princeton
Wikipedia articles on Linguistics
- Linguistics
- Oxford spelling
- N-gram
- Category:Latin_phrases
- List of Latin abbreviations
- Latin declension
- Category:English words spelled with diacritics or ligatures
- Concordancer
- KWIC
- AntConc — a freeware concordance program for Linux developed by Laurence Anthony.
UTF-8
- The Unicode Character Code Charts By Script
- Unicode (UTF-8) test
- UTF-8 encoded sample plain-text file — original by Markus Kuhn, adapted for HTML by Martin Dürst.
- test page for UNICODE UTF-8 encoding — no longer maintained.
- wikipedia:UTF-8
Pages in category "Linguistics"
The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.