Latejami
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Latejami ([ləˈtʰeɪ̯d͡ʒəmi]; natively [laˈted͡ʒami]Template:Ref 'speech-system') is an engineered language intended as a speakable machine-translation interlanguage. It was developed by Rick Morneau in his 1995 paper The Lexical Semantics of a Machine Translation Interlingua.
Background
Name
Previous names
Author
Aims
History
Influences
Design
Phonology
Phonemic inventory and orthography
Syllable structure
Stress
Morphology
Agglutination
Morpheme classes
Word-structure requirements
Proper names, etc.
Syntax
Semantics
Verbs
State and action verbs
Grammatical voice
Causation
Focus
Nouns
Noun classes
Case tags
Case-role semantics
Primary and secondary case roles
Modifiers
Polarity
Deixis
Articles
Comparatives
Tense and aspect
Modality
Anaphora
Relative clauses
Interrogatives
Abstract relationships
Conjunctions
Topicalization
Literalness and metaphor
Lexicon
Reception
Samples
Notes
- 1.Template:NoteStress placement in Latejami depends on word-internal syntax. Here stress goes on the syllable te because te is a 'modifier' morpheme. See Template:Section:Stress.