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Unsolved problems in linguistics

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Unsolved problems

This article discusses currently unsolved problems in linguistics.

Some of the issues below are commonly recognized as problems per se, i.e., it is general agreement that the solution is unknown. Others may be described as controversies, i.e., while there is no common agreement about the answer, there are established schools of thought that believe they have a correct answer.

Contents

[edit] Languages

"Virtually every generative linguist has had the following experience: a given linguistic entity (sentence, novel word, pronunciation) is presented to a native speaker and judged to be neither fully well-formed nor fully unacceptable. In such instances, consultants often say things like "I guess I could say that," "It's all right but not perfect," "It's pretty bad but not completely out," and the like"</ref>, referring to intermediate linguistic phenomena falling between complete well-formedness and complete ill-formedness.

[edit] Psycholinguistics

[edit] Translation

  • An objective gauge for the quality of translation.<ref>Robert Spence, "A Functional Approach to Translation Studies. New systemic linguistic challenges in empirically informed didactics", 2004, ISBN 3-89825-777-0, thesis. A pdf file</ref>
    • Machine translation, despite successes, is a source of a large number of unsolved problems
      • Pronoun resolution, Anaphora (linguistics) <ref>Jeffrey C. Reynar, "Topic Segmentation: Algorithms and Applications" (1998), Ph.D thesis, citation. </ref>
      • Nominal compound analysis <ref>Pierre Isabelle, "Another Look at Nominal Compounds", In Proc. of the 10th International Conference on Computational Linguistics (pdf)</ref>

[edit] References

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