I'm doing something which requires me to understand how many syllables are in a word I've retrieved.
Anyone have any experience figuring this out in newLisp?
Syllables
Syllables
. Kanen Flowers http://kanen.me .
Re: Syllables
Kanen,
To answer your question, no. But, assuming you mean English words and you want a purely algorithmic approach, it looks like the best you can do it is by heuristic. The first (highest voted answer) on this stackoverflow post has a link to the TeX hyphenation algorithm. That looks pretty promising.
Also, maybe there is an on-line dictionary of English words that are already hyphenated to which you could appeal (i.e. have a lookup table).
Good luck, man!
To answer your question, no. But, assuming you mean English words and you want a purely algorithmic approach, it looks like the best you can do it is by heuristic. The first (highest voted answer) on this stackoverflow post has a link to the TeX hyphenation algorithm. That looks pretty promising.
Also, maybe there is an on-line dictionary of English words that are already hyphenated to which you could appeal (i.e. have a lookup table).
Good luck, man!
(λx. x x) (λx. x x)
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Re: Syllables
If you are looking at syllables in terms of sound (rather than the hyphenation problem), you might do something fun with
http://svn.code.sf.net/p/cmusphinx/code ... udict.0.7a
which is an english phonetic dictionary (copyright CMU). You'll probably need to compound certain phoneme series into syllables before counting.
http://svn.code.sf.net/p/cmusphinx/code ... udict.0.7a
which is an english phonetic dictionary (copyright CMU). You'll probably need to compound certain phoneme series into syllables before counting.
Re: Syllables
Looks like that could be made into a nice lookup table. It's easy to see the pronounced vowel sounds (in the code) and count them. That count should equal the syllable count. Nice find, Ralph!
(λx. x x) (λx. x x)
Re: Syllables
You guys are very helpful. With a little training and some newLisp magic, I figured it out and created a giant table from my results.
Code: Select all
(set 'phonetics '(
("AABERG" 2)
("AACHEN" 2)
("AACHENER" 3)
("AAKER" 2)
("AALSETH" 2)
("AAMODT" 2)
("AANCOR" 2)
("AARDEMA" 3)
("AARDVARK" 2) ... )
. Kanen Flowers http://kanen.me .
Re: Syllables
… now with the phonetics association list, you can quickly create a context for lookup:
see also here: http://www.newlisp.org/downloads/newlis ... .html#hash
Code: Select all
> (new Tree 'Syllables)
Syllables
> (Syllables phonetics)
Syllables
> (Syllables "AARDEMA")
3
>