Symposia & Conferences

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    Acoustic similarities between Sinhala language and Assamese
    (Centre for Asian Studies, University of Kelaniya, 2015) Goswami, G.
    The study of specific languages which are linked to certain areas of research has become increasingly common and essential to the understanding of the language as a whole. This paper aims to study, analyze and compare two languages – Sinhala and Assamese and find out the similarities in them. The researcher came in close contact with the aboriginal Sri Lankan people who speak Sinhala language and found surprising similarities between Assamese and Sinhalese language. Seeing this similarity, the researcher got in touch with more people, went through research journals and related books and found that the roots of both the languages are same as they trace their history to the Indo Aryan language which itself is a fallout of the Indo European family. About fifty percent of the world’s population speaks a language belonging to the Indo European family. Languages of this family are spoken on all continents, but are predominantly seen in Europe, Russia, Australia and parts of South Eastern Asia and India.
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    Culture in Translation: Shyam Selvadurei’s Funny Boy in Sinhala and French
    (Staff Development Center, University of Kelaniya, 2015) Jayawardena, H.S.M.M.
    Shyam Selvadurei is one of the better known writers in English of the Sri Lankan Diaspora. Funny Boy, his first novel was translated in to French by Frédéric Limare and Susan Fox-Limare in 1998. The Sinhala translation was published later in 2002, translated by Sugathapala de Silva. Selvadurei’s style of writing is heavily influenced by the variety of English spoken in Sri Lanka, his mother tongue Tamil, Sinhala and Sri Lankan culture which explains the necessity of the glossary included in the novel. The object of the present paper is to examine how these cultural elements are translated in to two different languages. Both translations were analyzed to identify strategies and techniques used by the translators. The French translators targeted an audience who are familiar neither with the Sri Lankan context nor its languages where as the Sinhala translator has translated a novel, though written in English is placed in a more familiar context. The translators have chosen different strategies in their respective translations. The French translators have attempted to make certain cultural elements explicit to its target audience, by including a glossary, footnotes, and strategies such as adaptation. Equivalence was a strategy used in both translations, especially in translating idiomatic expressions and proverbs. The Sinhala translator has not provided footnotes, glossary or explanations. Many terms were not translated but were given in English in the Sinhala translation. The translation reflects the bilingualism practiced by Sri Lankans. As a strategy, it also highlights the dominance of the English language and the Western culture in the Sri Lankan context. The French and the Sinhala translators ‘domesticate’ their work and however, their strategies vary depending on the chosen target audience and its linguistic context.
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    A Study of Sinhala Spelling Error Patterns for Spelling Error Correction
    (Staff Development Center, University of Kelaniya, 2015) Wijekoon, H.
    Spelling error detection & correction techniques are used widely by word processing, machine translation, information retrieval and natural language processing systems. Even though it is straight forward to verify a misspelled word by looking up in a word dictionary, it is very hard to suggest the best correction. For a morphologically rich and a complex Indic language like Sinhala a probabilistic method is the best approach for qualifying the best correction for a detected misspelled word over the other existing methods. This research intends to identify & analyze non-word spelling error patterns in Sinhala. A word dictionary will be used to identify the errors and a special software tool will be developed in order to record statistical data regarding the spelling errors of Sinhala documents. This tool will be used by a Sinhala language expert to record data related to spelling errors in a selected sample of documents. Errors will be categorized into different types along with statistical results and will be analyzed. The reasons of language specific error patterns will be discussed and a weight based decision tree format will be derived as an outcome which can be used to find the best correction from a word dictionary to replace a misspelled word.