💡 Words with a Similar Meaning to "Language technology"
Found via reverse dictionary — words that share a conceptual meaning.
| Word | Definition |
|---|---|
| languagenoun | (countable) A body of words, and set of methods of combining them (called a grammar), understood by a community and used as a form of communication. |
| computer languagenoun | (programming) A language that is used internally by computers, including programming languages, machine languages, query languages, markup languages, etc. |
| intermediate languagenoun | (computing) A language of an abstract machine designed as an aid in the analysis of computer programs. |
| artificial languagenoun | (linguistics) A constructed language. |
| object languagenoun | (lexicography) the language of the headwords in a dictionary (in a French-to-English translation dictionary, French is the object language) |
| machine languagenoun | (programming) The set of instructions that a particular computer is designed to execute; generated from an assembly language by an assembler, or from a high-level language by a compiler or interpreter. |
| dynamic languagenoun | (computer languages) A programming language that analyses code also when executing the code itself. |
| computing languagenoun | (computing) computer language, programming language |
| systems languagenoun | (computing) A programming language used for systems programming. |
| language servernoun | (programming) A server, implemented in software, that provides language-related services to client applications such as source code editors, based on the text being edited and the actions taken by the human editor. |
| large language modelnoun | (machine learning) A type of neural network specialized in language, typically including billions of parameters. |
| high-level languagenoun | (programming) A programming language requiring a compiler to translate it into a form that a particular machine understands, focusing on user-friendly code development by automating core tasks such as accessing memory. |
| target languagenoun | (applied linguistics) The language a learner is attempting to acquire. |
| l10nnoun | (software engineering) Abbreviation of localization. [The act of localizing.] |
| loglangnoun | A language designed to allow (or enforce) unambiguous statements; a logical language. |
| matrix languagenoun | (linguistics) The dominant language in code-switching, into which elements of a secondary language are embedded, as opposed to the embedded language. |
| literate programmingnoun | (programming) A programming paradigm in which a program is given as an explanation of the program logic in a natural language (such as English), interspersed with snippets of macros and traditional source code, from which compilable representation can be generated. |
| metalanguagenoun | (linguistics, translation studies, critical theory) Any language or vocabulary of terms used to describe or analyze a language or linguistic process. |
| machine translationnoun | (translation studies) The act of translating something from one language to another by means of a machine, especially a computer. |
| high level languagenoun | Misspelling of high-level language. [(programming) A programming language requiring a compiler to translate it into a form that a particular machine understands, focusing on user-friendly code development by automating core tasks such as accessing memory.] |
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