Learn Before
Example of an English-German Translation Pair
A demonstration of translation between English and German is the sentence pair where 'I have an apple' in English corresponds to 'Ich habe einen Apfel' in German. This illustrates a basic parallel corpus entry.
0
1
Tags
Ch.3 Prompting - Foundations of Large Language Models
Foundations of Large Language Models
Foundations of Large Language Models Course
Computing Sciences
Related
Why is language considered "universal"?
Language Comprehension
Language Acquisition
Language Representation
Components of Language
References on Language
Types of Language Interactions
Language Families
Speech Production
English
Telepractice versus Traditional Assessment of Language and Literacy Skills Study
Farsi
Which of the following best describes the concept of language?
Which of the following elements are essential for a system to be considered a language?
Which of the following statements about language is true?
Which of the following is a key characteristic of language?
Language Barriers in Psychological Care
Example of an English-German Translation Pair
Distinction Between Language and Communication
Uniqueness of Human Language
Expressive Power of Language
Relationship Between Language and Thinking
Learn After
Consider the following sentence pair from a dataset used to train a translation system: English: 'I have an apple.' is paired with German: 'Ich habe einen Apfel.'. Based solely on this example, which word-to-word translation is the most plausible?
Based on the translation pair where the English sentence 'I have an apple' corresponds to the German sentence 'Ich habe einen Apfel', one can confidently conclude that the German word for the English article 'an' is always 'einen'.
Error Analysis from a Single Training Example