Define Language Group


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Groups, Languages and Geometry


Groups, Languages and Geometry

Author: Robert H. Gilman

language: en

Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.

Release Date: 1999


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This volume contains the proceedings of the AMS-IMS-SIAM Joint Summer Research Conference on Geometric Group Theory and Computer Science held at Mount Holyoke College (South Hadley, MA). The conference was devoted to computational aspects of geometric group theory, a relatively young area of research which has grown out of an influx of ideas from topology and computer science into combinatorial group theory. The book reflects recent progress in this interesting new field. Included are articles about insights from computer experiments, applications of formal language theory, decision problems, and complexity problems. There is also a survey of open questions in combinatorial group theory. The volume will interest group theorists, topologists, and experts in automata and language theory.

The Encyclopaedia Britannica


The Encyclopaedia Britannica

Author: Hugh Chisholm

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 1911


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Language-related Conflicts in Multinational and Multiethnic Settings


Language-related Conflicts in Multinational and Multiethnic Settings

Author: Barbora Moormann-Kimáková

language: en

Publisher: Springer

Release Date: 2015-11-18


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In this book, Barbora Moormann-Kimáková analyses the possibility of finding an optimal language regime in multinational and multiethnic countries – either by defining the contents of an optimal language regime, or with the help of a criterion enabling to evaluate whether a language regime is optimal or not. The process of the selection or change of a language regime often becomes a matter of a language-related conflict. These conflicts are mostly accompanied by other political or social conflicts, as for example in Ukraine or former Yugoslavia, which render solutions – and their evaluation – difficult. The author claims that language regimes can be evaluated based on the increase or lack of their legitimacy in the eyes of the relevant actors. This is demonstrated in four language regime studies on the European Union, Soviet Union, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and South Africa.