释义 |
Definition of natural language in English: natural languagenoun A language that has developed naturally in use (as contrasted with an artificial language or computer code) polysemy is very common in natural languages Example sentencesExamples - Of course, natural languages are examples of symbol systems, but there are many other, non-linguistic systems: pictorial, gestural, diagrammatic, etc.
- But linguistics and natural language processing have not been feeding into the word processor industry at all.
- However as humans we make many mistakes when programming, especially given that we have to use a programming language to do the job and most programming languages differ drastically from natural languages.
- Understanding natural language allows computers to facilitate human problem solving and decision making.
- I'm not sure if there are any natural languages that don't use verbs, nouns, or adjectives, but as far as artificial ones go, it's not hard to eliminate one of them.
- What brains do when they process sentences of a natural language is to some extent independent of the language.
- Yet polysemy is endemic to natural languages, as a detailed analysis of just about any word will confirm.
- And, since natural languages like English are semantically closed, Tarski's theory also has the weakness of applying only to artificial languages.
- Just like real words in natural languages, they can be given different emotional connotations by their contexts.
- If this holds for computer programming languages, it surely holds much more for natural languages.
- Nothing written in a natural language is unambiguous.
- In real natural languages, looking at a larger quantity of data generally makes it clearer what the grammatical principles are.
- From another angle, the problem of meaning has involved questions about the mechanism of reference and the semantics of various terms in natural languages.
- Semantic analysis of blogs represents the next challenge in the quest for understanding natural language.
- Every normal human being acquires a natural language and that language is extraordinarily similar to that of the surrounding group.
- I'd want to see a lot of very detailed argument before I would be prepared to believe that there is a natural language with no nouns or verbs.
Definition of natural language in US English: natural languagenounˈnætʃ(ə)rəl ˈlæŋɡwɪdʒˈnaCH(ə)rəl ˈlaNGɡwij A language that has developed naturally in use (as contrasted with an artificial language or computer code) polysemy is very common in natural languages Example sentencesExamples - Yet polysemy is endemic to natural languages, as a detailed analysis of just about any word will confirm.
- But linguistics and natural language processing have not been feeding into the word processor industry at all.
- Just like real words in natural languages, they can be given different emotional connotations by their contexts.
- Understanding natural language allows computers to facilitate human problem solving and decision making.
- From another angle, the problem of meaning has involved questions about the mechanism of reference and the semantics of various terms in natural languages.
- I'm not sure if there are any natural languages that don't use verbs, nouns, or adjectives, but as far as artificial ones go, it's not hard to eliminate one of them.
- Nothing written in a natural language is unambiguous.
- However as humans we make many mistakes when programming, especially given that we have to use a programming language to do the job and most programming languages differ drastically from natural languages.
- In real natural languages, looking at a larger quantity of data generally makes it clearer what the grammatical principles are.
- Every normal human being acquires a natural language and that language is extraordinarily similar to that of the surrounding group.
- If this holds for computer programming languages, it surely holds much more for natural languages.
- I'd want to see a lot of very detailed argument before I would be prepared to believe that there is a natural language with no nouns or verbs.
- And, since natural languages like English are semantically closed, Tarski's theory also has the weakness of applying only to artificial languages.
- What brains do when they process sentences of a natural language is to some extent independent of the language.
- Semantic analysis of blogs represents the next challenge in the quest for understanding natural language.
- Of course, natural languages are examples of symbol systems, but there are many other, non-linguistic systems: pictorial, gestural, diagrammatic, etc.
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