We present a corpus-based analysis of the Afrikaans, English, Xhosa and Zulu languages, comparing these in terms of phonetic content, diversity and mutual overlap. Our aim is to shed light on the fundamental phonetic interrelationships between these languages, with a view to furthering progress in multilingual automatic speech recognition in general, and in the South African region in particular.Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies 2005, 23(4): 459–47
Includes bibliography.MOTIVATION: The object of this investigation is to record and describe various...
There are currently two distinct but not necessarily mutually exclusive approaches to the retrieval ...
D.Phil. (African Languages)This study attempts to fill a gap in the available research on language u...
We present a comparison between four South African languages, based on annotated speech databases ga...
This paper describes past, ongoing and planned work on the collection and transcription of spoken la...
This paper describes past, ongoing and planned work on the collection and transcription of spoken la...
In this contribution, the design, collection, annotation and planned distribution of a new spoken la...
In this contribution, the design, collection, annotation and planned distribution of a new spoken la...
This work was supported by the Department of Arts and Culture.The NCHLT speech corpus contains wide-...
This paper describes the proposed structure and design for a corpus of Xhosa English, which should u...
There is consensus among scholars that there is not just one English language but a family of “World...
Abstract—We present our process for the development and analysis of a multilingual names corpus, cal...
In this paper we give an outline of a corpus planning project which aims to develop linguistic resou...
We present our process for the development and analysis of a multilingual names corpus, called Multi...
M.A. (African Languages)The phonological system of Zulu does not tolerate consecutive vowels in one ...
Includes bibliography.MOTIVATION: The object of this investigation is to record and describe various...
There are currently two distinct but not necessarily mutually exclusive approaches to the retrieval ...
D.Phil. (African Languages)This study attempts to fill a gap in the available research on language u...
We present a comparison between four South African languages, based on annotated speech databases ga...
This paper describes past, ongoing and planned work on the collection and transcription of spoken la...
This paper describes past, ongoing and planned work on the collection and transcription of spoken la...
In this contribution, the design, collection, annotation and planned distribution of a new spoken la...
In this contribution, the design, collection, annotation and planned distribution of a new spoken la...
This work was supported by the Department of Arts and Culture.The NCHLT speech corpus contains wide-...
This paper describes the proposed structure and design for a corpus of Xhosa English, which should u...
There is consensus among scholars that there is not just one English language but a family of “World...
Abstract—We present our process for the development and analysis of a multilingual names corpus, cal...
In this paper we give an outline of a corpus planning project which aims to develop linguistic resou...
We present our process for the development and analysis of a multilingual names corpus, called Multi...
M.A. (African Languages)The phonological system of Zulu does not tolerate consecutive vowels in one ...
Includes bibliography.MOTIVATION: The object of this investigation is to record and describe various...
There are currently two distinct but not necessarily mutually exclusive approaches to the retrieval ...
D.Phil. (African Languages)This study attempts to fill a gap in the available research on language u...