Today, most of us write in manners that we cannot peruse or ever would like to fathom; of course, composting is transposed into indescribable, encoded passages of "secure" data. However, on this research paper, I would like to touch upon the history of machine translation, indicating how its sources are to be found in the development of cryptanalysis or code cracking. Everything is starting with the letter of theologian, philosopher, and mathematician Marin Mersenne and René Descartes about creating an artificial universal language for making translation among the languages. Then these histories discover their epitome in Warren Weaver’s persuasive memorandum. In this memorandum, Weaver built up a “cryptographic and translation” thought, dra...