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A new tool has been developed that can reconstruct long-dead languages.
Researchers have created software that can rebuild protolanguages - the ancient tongues from which our modern languages evolved.
To test the system, the team took 637 languages currently spoken in Asia and the Pacific and recreated the early language from which they descended.
erm, is it magic or basically a specialized computer that just does one task? Copy /replicate or something?
Or is it interpretation what the languages "might" be I wonder if they put pig Latin into it what or how its "predecessors" look since its a fake/ fun pretend language,.
Anyways I guess what IM asking is it working of predefined set of circumstances "guidelines" or are we just putting languages into it and hoping they are correct.
I mean how do we even know that the human versions are correct?
Experts cannot be trusted upto certain extent (atleast in the intelligence community ). Softwares are much more reliable (when programmed correctly) for translation services.
Originally posted by CJCrawley
It doesn't do anything that the experts haven't been doing since language reconstruction started in the 19th century. Just does it a lot quicker.
Seems pretty cool. Any chance this could be/has been applied to the Voynich Manuscript? Its text follows the structure of a language, but none currently known.
Wait..... who is doing the programing again? oh would that be the "experts". Me thinks so. ( Taken from old english meaning I think this is true) Big LOL
Originally posted by hp1229
Experts cannot be trusted upto certain extent (atleast in the intelligence community ). Softwares are much more reliable (when programmed correctly) for translation services.
Originally posted by CJCrawley
It doesn't do anything that the experts haven't been doing since language reconstruction started in the 19th century. Just does it a lot quicker.
Originally posted by hisshadow
I'm gonna post a reply just because i'd be shocked if it could translate this one sentence into old english.