From HubeyH at mail.montclair.edu Fri Apr 2 03:52:06 1999 From: HubeyH at mail.montclair.edu (H. Mark Hubey) Date: Thu, 1 Apr 1999 22:52:06 -0500 Subject: Lass: Part 3 of 3: Electronic Review Message-ID: <><><><><><><><><><><><>--This is the Language List--<><><><><><><><><><><><><> There are serious typos in the posts from Lass. I was trying out Dragon Naturally Speaking and IBM ViaVoice at the time, and I forgot to make the corrections. In any case, it could be considered to be an amusement or a PhD thesis for a linguist to check what kinds of errors automatic speech-recognition systems running on commodity grade computers circa 2000 CE make. I will have to look at Lass's original before I do anything else. -- Best Regards, Mark -==-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= hubeyh at montclair.edu =-=-=-= http://www.csam.montclair.edu/~hubey =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= <><><><><><><><><><><><><><>----Language----<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> Copyrights and "Fair Use": http://www.templetions.com/brad//copyright.html "This means that if you are doing things like comment on a copyrighted work, making fun of it, teaching about it or researching it, you can make some limited use of the work without permission. For example you can quote excerpts to show how poor the writing quality is. You can teach a course about T.S. Eliot and quote lines from his poems to the class to do so. Some people think fair use is a wholesale licence to copy if you don't charge or if you are in education, and it isn't. If you want to republish other stuff without permission and think you have a fair use defence, you should read the more detailed discussions of the subject you will find through the links above." From IrishWord at aol.com Sun Apr 25 13:03:57 1999 From: IrishWord at aol.com (IrishWord at aol.com) Date: Sun, 25 Apr 1999 09:03:57 EDT Subject: Celtic & Fenno-Ugric Languages Appear To Be Related Message-ID: <><><><><><><><><><><><>--This is the Language List--<><><><><><><><><><><><><> Hello Language Listmembers, We have written a paper entitled 2,650+ SIMILAR IRISH AND FINNISH WORDS WITH AN IRISH TIE-IN TO URALIC. You may read it in section 1. (A.) of our AOL Web page at http://members.aol.com/IrishWord/page/index.htm.This paper shows that Irish and Finnish language and culture are related. It also shows that Irish initial mutation and Finnish consonantal gradation & Hungarian consonantal alteration appear to be related, so that Irish initial mutation appears to be a very old part of the language, and not a development of Medieval times. We have shown that there appears to be a connection between the KALEVALA and the Fenian cycle. In a second paper entitled SIMILAR URALIC, FENNO-UGRIC, AND INDO-EUROPEAN ROOTS, we have supported our Finnish-Irish linguistic relationship. It is in section 1. (B.) of our Web page. Thanks for your interest. Best regards, David O'Keefe Houston, Texas <><><><><><><><><><><><><><>----Language----<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> Copyrights and "Fair Use": http://www.templetions.com/brad//copyright.html "This means that if you are doing things like comment on a copyrighted work, making fun of it, teaching about it or researching it, you can make some limited use of the work without permission. For example you can quote excerpts to show how poor the writing quality is. You can teach a course about T.S. Eliot and quote lines from his poems to the class to do so. Some people think fair use is a wholesale licence to copy if you don't charge or if you are in education, and it isn't. If you want to republish other stuff without permission and think you have a fair use defence, you should read the more detailed discussions of the subject you will find through the links above." From HubeyH at mail.montclair.edu Fri Apr 2 03:52:06 1999 From: HubeyH at mail.montclair.edu (H. Mark Hubey) Date: Thu, 1 Apr 1999 22:52:06 -0500 Subject: Lass: Part 3 of 3: Electronic Review Message-ID: <><><><><><><><><><><><>--This is the Language List--<><><><><><><><><><><><><> There are serious typos in the posts from Lass. I was trying out Dragon Naturally Speaking and IBM ViaVoice at the time, and I forgot to make the corrections. In any case, it could be considered to be an amusement or a PhD thesis for a linguist to check what kinds of errors automatic speech-recognition systems running on commodity grade computers circa 2000 CE make. I will have to look at Lass's original before I do anything else. -- Best Regards, Mark -==-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= hubeyh at montclair.edu =-=-=-= http://www.csam.montclair.edu/~hubey =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= <><><><><><><><><><><><><><>----Language----<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> Copyrights and "Fair Use": http://www.templetions.com/brad//copyright.html "This means that if you are doing things like comment on a copyrighted work, making fun of it, teaching about it or researching it, you can make some limited use of the work without permission. For example you can quote excerpts to show how poor the writing quality is. You can teach a course about T.S. Eliot and quote lines from his poems to the class to do so. Some people think fair use is a wholesale licence to copy if you don't charge or if you are in education, and it isn't. If you want to republish other stuff without permission and think you have a fair use defence, you should read the more detailed discussions of the subject you will find through the links above." From IrishWord at aol.com Sun Apr 25 13:03:57 1999 From: IrishWord at aol.com (IrishWord at aol.com) Date: Sun, 25 Apr 1999 09:03:57 EDT Subject: Celtic & Fenno-Ugric Languages Appear To Be Related Message-ID: <><><><><><><><><><><><>--This is the Language List--<><><><><><><><><><><><><> Hello Language Listmembers, We have written a paper entitled 2,650+ SIMILAR IRISH AND FINNISH WORDS WITH AN IRISH TIE-IN TO URALIC. You may read it in section 1. (A.) of our AOL Web page at http://members.aol.com/IrishWord/page/index.htm.This paper shows that Irish and Finnish language and culture are related. It also shows that Irish initial mutation and Finnish consonantal gradation & Hungarian consonantal alteration appear to be related, so that Irish initial mutation appears to be a very old part of the language, and not a development of Medieval times. We have shown that there appears to be a connection between the KALEVALA and the Fenian cycle. In a second paper entitled SIMILAR URALIC, FENNO-UGRIC, AND INDO-EUROPEAN ROOTS, we have supported our Finnish-Irish linguistic relationship. It is in section 1. (B.) of our Web page. Thanks for your interest. Best regards, David O'Keefe Houston, Texas <><><><><><><><><><><><><><>----Language----<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> Copyrights and "Fair Use": http://www.templetions.com/brad//copyright.html "This means that if you are doing things like comment on a copyrighted work, making fun of it, teaching about it or researching it, you can make some limited use of the work without permission. For example you can quote excerpts to show how poor the writing quality is. You can teach a course about T.S. Eliot and quote lines from his poems to the class to do so. Some people think fair use is a wholesale licence to copy if you don't charge or if you are in education, and it isn't. If you want to republish other stuff without permission and think you have a fair use defence, you should read the more detailed discussions of the subject you will find through the links above."