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Call in french google translate
Call in french google translate











call in french google translate

Well, no "bravo!" for Google.“From sheep to Doggy Style traceability of milk chain in Tuscany.”Ĭonfused? Well, you are not the only one.

call in french google translate

Thus the databases thought the most likely translation for "hear" was "bravo" until it was "taught" that one "hear" alone means one things, but "hear, hear" something else. The French-speaking members, meanwhile, say, "bravo, bravo," both responses duly recorded in the minutes. In the early tests, there were surprised to find the word "hear" translated by the software into "bravo." What gives? Well, it turns out, when a member says something that others approve of, they call, "hear, hear!" in that British fashion. This glitch is reminiscent of the early days of statistically-based machine translation, when researchers from IBM were using the Hansard - the minutes of the Canadian Parliament, recorded in both English and French - as their database. Thus I would think "happy new year" would be an easy one, being such a common phrase. I know Google Translate isn't perfect, but this one surprised me, because Google uses a statistically-based algorithm, searching though its massive online database for all occurrences of the phrase to be translated, then choosing the translation (done by humans) that comes up the most frequently.

call in french google translate

I was pretty sure it was simply Bonne Ann ée, but went to Google Translate to be sure, which inexplicably gave me the mouthful, heureuse nouvelle année! Yes, that's the literal translation, but not what French people typically say to each other on January 1 (or, as they know it, 1 January). With the some students staying with us for New Year's Eve, I wanted to make sure I knew how to say "Happy New Year" in French.













Call in french google translate