@inproceedings{dougherty-1963-writing,
title = "Writing of {C}hinese recognition grammar for machine translation",
author = "Dougherty, Ching-yi",
booktitle = "Proceedings of the Annual meeting of the Association for Machine Translation and Computational Linguistics",
month = "25-26 " # aug,
year = "1963",
address = "Denver, Colorado",
url = "https://aclanthology.org/1963.earlymt-1.8",
abstract = "Our approach to this problem is based on the stratificational grammar outlined and the procedures proposed by Dr. Sydney Lamb. How the theory and the procedures can be applied to written Chinese is briefly discussed. For the time being our research is limited to the particular kind of written Chinese found in chemical and biochemical journals. First the Chinese lexes are classified by detailed syntactical analysis, then binary grammar rules are constructed for joining two primary or constitute classes. How a more and more refined classification can eliminate one by one the ambiguity resulting from all possible constructions arising from juxtaposition of two distributional classes is discussed in detail.",
}
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<abstract>Our approach to this problem is based on the stratificational grammar outlined and the procedures proposed by Dr. Sydney Lamb. How the theory and the procedures can be applied to written Chinese is briefly discussed. For the time being our research is limited to the particular kind of written Chinese found in chemical and biochemical journals. First the Chinese lexes are classified by detailed syntactical analysis, then binary grammar rules are constructed for joining two primary or constitute classes. How a more and more refined classification can eliminate one by one the ambiguity resulting from all possible constructions arising from juxtaposition of two distributional classes is discussed in detail.</abstract>
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%0 Conference Proceedings
%T Writing of Chinese recognition grammar for machine translation
%A Dougherty, Ching-yi
%S Proceedings of the Annual meeting of the Association for Machine Translation and Computational Linguistics
%D 1963
%8 25 26 aug
%C Denver, Colorado
%F dougherty-1963-writing
%X Our approach to this problem is based on the stratificational grammar outlined and the procedures proposed by Dr. Sydney Lamb. How the theory and the procedures can be applied to written Chinese is briefly discussed. For the time being our research is limited to the particular kind of written Chinese found in chemical and biochemical journals. First the Chinese lexes are classified by detailed syntactical analysis, then binary grammar rules are constructed for joining two primary or constitute classes. How a more and more refined classification can eliminate one by one the ambiguity resulting from all possible constructions arising from juxtaposition of two distributional classes is discussed in detail.
%U https://aclanthology.org/1963.earlymt-1.8
Markdown (Informal)
[Writing of Chinese recognition grammar for machine translation](https://aclanthology.org/1963.earlymt-1.8) (Dougherty, EarlyMT 1963)
ACL