تعريف a-language في الإنجليزية الإنجليزية القاموس.
- Adamorobe Sign Language
- An indigenous sign language used in Adamorobe, a village of Ghana
- Algerian Sign Language
- A sign language used in Algeria
- American Sign Language
- a language that uses hands, facial expressions, and other bodily behavior to communicate both concrete and abstract ideas; some signs are based on English words, but ASL syntax and grammar are not based on English
- Argentine Sign Language
- A sign language used in Argentina
- Assembly Language
- The assembly language of a particular system or machine
I've programmed a TRS-80 using BASIC and Assembly Language.
- Bolivian Sign Language
- A sign language used in Bolivia
- Brazilian Sign Language
- A sign language used in Brazil
- British Sign Language
- a language that uses hands, facial expressions, and other bodily behavior to communicate both concrete and abstract ideas; some signs are based on English words, but BSL syntax and grammar are not based on English
- Chilean Sign Language
- A sign language used in Chile
- Clean Language
- A questioning technique based on discovery and development of personal symbols and metaphors of the person questioned
- Colombian Sign Language
- A sign language used in Colombia
- French Sign Language
- A dactylological sign language used in seven different countries, based on Old French Sign Language
- Hausa Sign Language
- A sign language used in Nigeria
- Honduras Sign Language
- A sign language used in Honduras
- Hypertext Markup Language
- A set of tags and rules used in developing hypertext documents to be presented on web browsers, allowing incorporation of text, graphics, sound, video and hyperlinks
- I don't speak American Sign Language
- Indicates that the speaker is unable to speak the American Sign Language
- International Auxiliary Language Association
- An association founded in 1924 to study the establishment of an international auxiliary language. In 1951, IALA presented Interlingua to the public by publishing the Interlingua-English Dictionary and Interlingua Grammar. Abbreviated IALA
- Kenyan Sign Language
- A particular sign language, used in Kenya
- Martha's Vineyard Sign Language
- A sign language, now extinct, which developed on Martha's Vineyard (an island in Massachusetts)
- Mongolic language
- Any of a group thirteen of languages spoken in Central Asia
- Romance language
- a European language descended from Latin
- South African Sign Language
- A sign language used in South Africa
- abstract language
- Words that represent concepts rather than physical things
- artificial language
- computer language
- artificial language
- formal language
- artificial language
- constructed language
- assembly language
- A programming language in which the source code of programs is composed of mnemonic instructions, each of which corresponds directly to a machine instruction for a particular processor
A skilled programmer can write very fast code in assembly language.
- attested language
- A language for which evidence has survived to the present day, either in the form of inscriptions or literature, or because the language is still spoken
- body language
- Nonverbal communication by means of facial expressions, eye behavior, gestures, posture, and the like; often thought to be involuntary
- child language
- The language spoken by a child that doesn't have full control over it yet
- child-language
- Attributive form of child language, noun
He spoke with a child-language tone of voice but with a full vocabulary.
- computer language
- programming language
- computer language
- A language that is used in association with computers, including programming languages, machine languages, query languages, markup languages etc
- computer language
- machine language
- computer-language
- Attributive form of computer language, noun
a computer-language terp.
- computing language
- programming language; computer language
- conditional assembly language
- that part of an assembly language used to write macros
- constructed language
- A human language that has been consciously devised by an individual or a small group, as opposed to having naturally evolved as part of a culture like a natural language
- constructed language
- Any language used by people, as opposed to less civilized means of communication, such as the socialization between animals
- constructed language
- Any language, whether a human language, a programming language or markup language, that is not a natural language
- contact language
- a pidgin language
- daughter language
- A language which genetically descends from earlier, parent language
French, Spanish, Italian and Portuguese are daughter languages of Latin.
- dead language
- a language which no longer has any native speakers
- domain-specific language
- A programming / specification language that is dedicated to a particular problem domain, a particular problem representation/solution technique
- expressive language
- The ability to produce language in any of a number of different modalities such as speech, sign or writing
Receptive language is the phrases and vocabulary that we understand, whereas expressive language is what we actually use.
- first language
- the first language one is taught to speak; one's native language
- first language
- the language one feels most comfortable and capable with
- foreign language
- Any language other than that spoken by the people of a specific place
- formal language
- A set of finite strings (called sentences) over a specified finite alphabet
- foul language
- Profane or inappropriate and unacceptable words
- high level language
- Common misspelling of high-level language
- high-level language
- A programming language, requiring a compiler to translate into a form a particular machine understands, focusing on user-friendly code development by automating core tasks such as accessing memory
- imperative language
- Any programming language that consists (mostly) of a series of commands, typically assigning values to objects; a procedural language
- international auxiliary language
- A language intended to be used by people who do not share a common language
- language
- The particular words used in speech or a passage of text
The language used in the law does not permit any other interpretation.
- language
- The ability to communicate using words
the gift of language.
- language
- Profanity
- language
- Nonverbal communication
body language.
- language
- A computer language
- language
- The vocabulary and usage used in a particular specialist field
legal language.
- language
- A form of communication using words either spoken or gestured with the hands and structured with grammar, often with a writing system
sign language.
- language barrier
- A figurative phrase for the difficulties faced when people who have no language in common attempt to communicate with each other
- language barriers
- plural form of language barrier
- language code
- Any of several systems that assign short letter codes to languages
- language codes
- plural form of language code
- language continuum
- A situation where two or more languages in the same geographic region merge together without a definable boundary
- language exchange
- A method of language learning based on mutual language practicing by learning partners who speak different languages
- language exchanges
- plural form of language exchange
- language families
- plural form of language family
- language family
- A set of languages which have evolved from a common ancestor
- language isolate
- A natural language with no proven relationship with another living language
- language isolates
- plural form of language isolate
- language lab
- A schoolroom equipped with audio equipment so that students may hear and practice speaking a language they are learning
- language labs
- plural form of language lab
- language maven
- A self-appointed authority on language usage
- language police
- Any person or group crusading for a particular usage or omission within a language; also called language cops, tongue troopers
- language swap
- A method of language learning based on mutual language practicing by learning partners who speak different languages
- language-code
- Attributive form of language code
language-code table.
- literary language
- A register of a language that is used in literary writing
- living language
- a language which is still spoken in the contemporary period, as opposed to a dead language
- low-level language
- A computer language who's source code is a somewhat user-friendly version of a particular computer architecture's assembly language, containing no provisions for portability between architectures
- machine language
- The set of instructions that a particular computer is designed to execute; generated from a high-level language by an assembler, compiler or interpreter
Though machine language is efficient for computers, it is inefficient for programmers.
- markup language
- computer language using markups
- mathematical markup language
- A method of representing mathematical symbols and formulae using XML
- mixed language
- A language formed by combining two languages, keeping elements of the grammar of both
- moon language
- Text written in an incomprehensible script, especially Japanese or Chinese
- native language
- One's first language, learned in early childhood
Mary Katharine, one of the things in California, kids apparently who speak English as a second language have a year in which they can take classes that are taught in their native language in addition to English, and some people would say that that should help them really get established and after that, you're on your own, go take all the tests in English.
- native language
- The language of a Native or Aboriginal people (often capitalized)
Additional Alaska Native language programs have been offered by the Goldbelt Corporation and Sealaska Corporation. Elementary, intermediate, and advanced Tlingit, as well as elementary Haida, have been taught at the University of Alaska Southeast by Native speakers who are fluent and also understand the worldview expressed by the languages, as reflected in their syntax and grammar and their cultural references.
- natural language
- natural languages (sense 1) considered collectively
It'll be a long time before computers understand natural language.
- natural language
- a human language which has evolved naturally in a community, usually in contrast to computer programming languages or to artificially constructed languages such as Esperanto
- object language
- A language or a part of a language that is used to speak about objects but not about sentences or propositions
- people-first language
- politically correct language referring to disabilities by avoiding adjectives or the copula
people first language, which refers to the person first and the disability second: Americans with disabilities, for example, rather than disabled Americans, letter to the editor of BusinessWeek, published in Issue 3059 (1988).
- planned language
- constructed language
- programming language
- Code of reserved words and symbols used in computer programs, which give instructions to the computer on how to accomplish certain computing tasks
- proto-language
- A language which is reconstructed by examining similarities in existing languages to try to deduce what a common ancestor language, no longer known, would have been like
- query language
- Any of several generalized computer languages in which users may extract data from selected records in a database
- receptive language
- The ability to comprehend information and understand spoken language (or sign language). It may include understanding of the vocabulary and concepts presented, short-term memory and sequencing information
- reconstructed language
- A hypothetical, usually unattested language formed by making comparisons between the similarities of actual languages
- scripting language
- A computer language designed to be used as part of a larger application
It's a great application, but the scripting language is cheesy.
- sign language
- The sign language (sense 1) that is used locally or that is mistakenly believed to be the only one
I'm taking night classes to learn sign language.
- sign language
- Communication through gestures used when speech is impossible, for example, between monks under a vow of silence or people speaking different languages
Even Maxwell the trader, who has been most among them, is compelled to resort to the curious sign language common to most of the prairie tribes.
- sign language
- Sign languages (sense 1) considered collectively
There are some unique properties found in sign language compared to spoken language.
- sign language
- One of several natural languages, typically used by the deaf, where the words and phrases consist of hand shapes, motions, positions, and facial expressions
It is safe to say that the academic world is now convinced that sign languages are real languages in every sense of the term.
- source language
- The language from which a translation is done
- source language
- The language of the source code to be compiled
- standard language
- A particular variety of a language that is regarded as the most correct way of writing or speaking the language
- strong language
- The use of language considered offensive or taboo especially in movies and films
- strong-language
- Attributive form of strong language, noun
- target language
- The language into which a translation is done
- target language
- The machine language into which source code is to be compiled
- unparliamentary language
- Language considered to be inappropriate to be used during a parliamentary session; especially profanity or suggestions of dishonesty
- whole language
- Used to describe a method of teaching literacy that emphasises the recognition of words in an everyday context; often contrasted with phonics
- accessible language
- The language that doesn’t exclude anyone
- language
- {n} all human speech, a tongue, a style
- language acquisition
- (Dilbilim) Language acquisition is the process by which the language capability develops in a human
- mind your language
- to make sure using words that will not offend people