Languages
in sentence
515 examples of Languages in a sentence
But to keep things consistent, the creators of Star Trek and other science-fiction worlds have introduced the concept of a universal translator, a portable device that can instantly translate between any
languages.
The syntax of some
languages
allows words to be arranged in any order, while in others, doing so could make the muffin eat the child.
Slovene distinguishes between two children and three or more using a dual suffix absent in many other languages, while Russian's lack of definite articles might leave you wondering whether the children are eating some particular muffins, or just eat muffins in general.
However, the quality of this type of translation depends on the size of the initial database and the availability of samples for certain
languages
or styles of writing.
But this is no easy task, and the sheer number of
languages
in the world, as well as the increasing interaction between the people who speak them, will only continue to spur greater advances in automatic translation.
There, they set fire to a medieval library of 30,000 manuscripts written in Arabic and several African
languages
and ranging in subject from astronomy to geography, history to medicine, including one book which records perhaps the first treatment for male erectile dysfunction.
Different
languages
have different patterns.
In English, the subject normally comes first, followed by the verb, and then the object, while in Japanese and many other languages, the order is subject, object, verb.
Some scholars have tried to identify patterns common to all languages, but apart from some basic features, like having nouns or verbs, few of these so-called linguistic universals have been found.
In many languages, this standard form came to be considered the only proper one, despite being derived from just one of many spoken varieties, usually that of the people in power.
Around the world, my shows air in 256 territories in 67
languages
for an audience of 30 million people.
"Pep rally" doesn't have a direct analog in a lot of
languages
and cultures, but can be approximated.
In many languages, the pronoun reflects these differences through what's known as the T–V distinction.
In
languages
like Hausa or Korana, the "you" form depends on the listener's gender.
And a few
languages
even have a specific form for addressing exactly two people, like Slovenian "vidva."
After all that, it may come as a relief that some
languages
often leave out the second person pronoun.
In
languages
like Romanian and Portuguese, the pronoun can be dropped from sentences because it's clearly implied by the way the verbs are conjugated.
And in
languages
like Korean, Thai, and Chinese, pronouns can be dropped without any grammatical hints.
And to the volunteer community who will be translating this video into multiple languages: Sorry about that!
Today's computers can beat us in complex board games, transcribe speech in dozens of languages, and instantly identify almost any object.
What makes it seem real is that in actual languages, letters and groups of letters appear with consistent frequencies, and the language in the Voynich manuscript has patterns you wouldn't find from a random letter generator.
We are constantly translating the book into different
languages
and collaborating with local organizations to make this book available in different countries.
And this is even more true if you happen to speak a language other than one of the world's major languages, and especially English.
People, volunteers and even companies that are translating materials into Asian
languages
like Chinese, Japanese and Thai, to spread the knowledge even further.
We're going to be providing content to them in a whole range of different
languages.
They talked to his teachers, they found that he had studied foreign
languages
in school, which clearly showed a desire to conspire with foreign governments later in life.
It's also hot, huge and unruly, made up of 17,000 islands, where people speak close to a thousand
languages.
And that is the idea that a language channels your thoughts, that the vocabulary and the grammar of different
languages
gives everybody a different kind of acid trip, so to speak.
It has been shown that if you are a speaker of one of those
languages
and you happen to be asked how you would imagine a table talking, then much more often than could possibly be an accident, a French or a Spanish speaker says that the table would talk with a high and feminine voice.
It's hard not to love data like that, and many people will tell you that that means that there's a worldview that you have if you speak one of those
languages.
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