--- language: - aa - ab - ace - ach - ady - aeb - aii - ak - alz - apc - apd - ar - arn - arz - as - av - awa - ay - ayl - ba - bal - ban - bbc - bci - bem - ber - bew - bho - bik - bjn - bo - br - brx - bts - btx - bua - bug - ce - cgg - ch - chk - chm - ckb - cnh - cpf - crh - crs - ctg - cv - din - doi - dov - dv - dyu - dz - ee - efi - fa - ff - fj - fo - fon - fr - fur - gaa - gn - gom - gv - hi - hil - hne - hrx - iba - ilo - iso - iu - kaa - kac - kbd - kek - kg - kha - ki - kl - kr - kri - ks - ktu - kv - lg - li - lij - lmo - ln - ltg - lu - luo - lus - mad - mag - mai - mak - mam - meo - mfe - mh - min - mos - ms - mwr - nd - ndc - new - nhe - nr - nso - nus - nv - oc - om - os - pa - pag - pam - pap - pcm - qu - quc - rhg - rn - rom - sa - sah - sat - scn - se - sg - shn - skr - ss - sus - syl - szl - tcy - tet - ti - tiv - tn - to - tpi - trp - ts - tum - ty - tyv - udm - ve - vec - war - wo - yua - yue - zap - zza multilinguality: - multili viewer: false license: cc-by-4.0 --- > [!NOTE] > Dataset origin: https://github.com/google-research/url-nlp/tree/main/gatitos # GATITOS Multilingual Lexicon The GATITOS (Google's Additional Translations Into Tail-languages: Often Short) dataset is a high-quality, multi-way parallel dataset of tokens and short phrases, intended for training and improving machine translation models. Experiments on this dataset and Panlex focusing on unsupervised translation in a 208-language model can be found in [BiLex Rx: Lexical Data Augmentation for Massively Multilingual Machine Translation](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2303.15265.pdf). ### About the Data and Data Collection This dataset consists in 4,000 English segments (4,500 tokens) that have been translated into each of 173 languages, 170 of which are low-resource, and three of which are mid-high resource (es, fr, hi). All translations were made directly from English, with the exception of Aymara, which was translated from the Spanish. This dataset contains primarily short segments: 93% single tokens, and only 23 sentences (0.6%) have over 5 tokens. As such it is best thought of as a multilingual lexicon, rather than a parallel training corpus. The source text is frequent words in the English Language, along with some common phrases and short sentences. Care has been taken to ensure that they include good coverage of numbers, months, days of the week, swadesh words, and names of the languages themselves (including the endonym). Single tokens are remarkably fickle to translate because of the common issue of polysemy. Some languages in this dataset only provide one translation per source token; others provide multiple translations. When multiple translations are given, they are broken up into multiple lines. Therefore, you can get the average number of translations per token by looking at the number of lines in the file versus the number of deduplicated English lines in the file. The three languages with the most average translations per English token are Betawi, Kachin, and Occitan, each with over 1.5 on average. Sometimes translators have left annotations like "pike (verb)", "او (مونث)", "фамили(я)", "أسوأ(repeated)" etc.. Wolof is particularly noticeable in this regard, with notes like "xont (verb) which means to feed an animal". Several languages also give definitions instead of translations for some words, e.g. Tok Pisin translation of mole" to "wanpela liklik animal we i save stap long hol long graun". | BCP-47 code | Language Name | Endonym | Alternate names | script | | ----------- | ------------- | ------------ | --------------------- | ------ | | aa | Afar | Qafar | | Latn | ab | Abkhaz | Аҧсуа | | Cyrl | | ace | Achenese | Aceh | Achinese | Latn | ach | Acholi | Acholi | | Latn | ady | Adyghe | Черкес | West Circassian | Cyrl | aeb | Tunisian Arabic | اللغة العربيّة التونسيّة | | Arab | aii | Assyrian | ܣܘܪܝܬ | | Syrc | | ak | Twi | Twi | Akan (See note below) | Latn | | alz | Alur | Lur | | Latn | | apc | North Levantine Arabic | شامي‎ | | Arab | | apd-SD | Sudanese Arabic | عربي سوداني | | Arab | ar-MA | Darija | الدارجة | | Arab | | arn | Mapudungun | Mapudungun | Mapuche | Latn | arz | Egyptian Arabic | اللهجة المصرية | Masri | Arab | as | Assamese | অসমীয়া | Asamiya, Asomiya | Beng | | av | Avar | магӏарул мацӏ | Avaric | Cyrl | | awa | Awadhi | अवधी | | Deva | ay | Aymara | Aymar aru | | Latn | | ayl | Libyan Arabic | العربية الليبية | | Arab | ba | Bashkir | Башҡорт | | Cyrl | bal | Baluchi | بلوچی | Balochi | Arab | ban | Balinese | Basa Bali | | Latn | bbc | Batak Toba | Batak Toba | Toba Batak | Latn | bci | Baoulé | wawle | | Latn | | bem | Bemba (Zambia) | Ichibemba | | Latn | | ber | Tamazight (Tifinagh script) | ⵜⴰⵎⴰⵣⵉⵖⵜ | Berber Languages | Tfng | ber-Latn | Tamazight (Latin Script) | Tamaziɣt | the Berber languages | Latn | bew | Betawi | Betawi | Betawi Malay, Jakartan Malay, Batavian Malay | Latn | bho | Bhojpuri | भोजपुरी | | Deva | | bik | Central Bikol | Sentral Bikol | Bikol Naga; Bikol | Latn | bjn | Banjar | Banjar | | Latn | | bjn-Arab | Banjar | بنجر; ڤندير بنجر | | Arab | | bm | Bambara | Bámánánkán | | Latn | | bm-Nkoo | Bambara (N'Ko Script) | ߓߡߊߣߊ߲ߞߊ߲ | | Nkoo | | bo | Tibetan | བོད་མི།; བོད་ཀྱི།; བོད་སྐད།; བོད་ཡིག། | Lhasa Tibetan, Standard Tibetan | Tibt | br | Breton | brezhoneg | | Latn | brx | Bodo | बोडो | Boro | Deva | bts | Batak Simalungun | Bahasa Simalungun | Simalungun | Latn | btx | Batak Karo | Batak Karo | | Latn | | bua | Buryat | Буряад | | Cyrl | | bug | Buginese | basa Ugi | Bugis | Latn | ce | Chechen | Нохчийн | | Cyrl | cgg | Chiga | Kiga | Kiga | Latn | | ch | Chamorro | Finuʼ Chamoru | | Latn | | chk | Chuukese | Trukese | Trukese | Latn | chm | Meadow Mari | олык марий | Eastern Mari | Cyrl | ckb | Kurdish (Sorani) | سۆرانی | Central Kurdish | Arab | | cnh | Hakha Chin | Laica | Laiholh | Latn | cpf | Unknown French Creole | | | Latn | crh | Crimean Tatar | Крымскотатарский | | Cyrl | | crh-Latn | Crimean Tatar | qırımtatar tili | | Latn | | crs | Seselwa Creole French | kreol seselwa | Seychellois Creole, kreol| Latn | ctg | Chittagonian | Chittagonian | | Beng | cv | Chuvash | Чăваш | | Cyrl | din | Dinka | Thuɔŋjäŋ | | Latn | | doi | Dogri | डोगरी | | Deva | | dov | Dombe | ChiDombe | Zambezi, Tonga | Latn | | dv | Dhivehi | ދިވެހި | Maldivian, Divehi | Thaa | | dyu | Dyula | Julakan | Dioula, Jula| Latn | dz | Dzongkha | རྫོང་ཁ | | Tibt | ee | Ewe | Eʋegbe | Eve, Anlo, Anwona | Latn | | efi | Efik | Usem mbom Efik; Ikɔ-efik | | Latn | | es | Spanish | español, castellano | Castilian | Latn | | fa-AF | Dari | دری | | Arab | ff | Fulfulde | [many] | Fula, Fulah, Fulbe, Fulani, Pular, Pulaar | Latn | | fj | Fijian | Fiji; Fijian | | Latn | | fo | Faroese | Føroysk | | Latn | fon | Fon | fongbē | | Latn | | fr | French | français | | Latn | | fur | Friulian | Furlan | | Latn | | gaa | Ga | Gã | | Latn | gn | Guarani | avañeʼẽ | Guaraní | Latn | | gom | Konkani | कोंकणी | | Deva | | gv | Manx | Gaelg | | Latn | | hi | Hindi | हिन्दी | | Deva | | hil | Hiligaynon | Hiligaynon | | Latn | hne | Chhattisgarhi | छत्तीसगढ़ी | | Deva | | hrx | Hunsrik | Hunsrik | | Latn | | iba | Iban | Iban | | Latn | ilo | Ilocano | Iloko | Iloko, Iluko, Ilokano | Latn | | iso | Isoko | Isoko | | Latn | | iu | Inuktitut | ᐃᓄᒃᑎᑐᑦ | Eastern Canadian Inuktitut | Cans | kaa | Kara-Kalpak | Қарақалпақ; Қарақалпақша | Qaraqalpaq | Cyrl | kac | Kachin | Jinghpaw | Jingpho | Latn | kbd | Kabardian | Къэбэрдей; Адыгэ | East Circassian | Cyrl | kek | Kekchí | Qʼeqchiʼ | Q'eqchi' | Latn | | kg | Kongo | Kikongo | | Latn | | kha | Khasi | khasi | | Latn | ki | Kikuyu | Gĩgĩkũyũ | Gikuyu | Latn | | kl | Kalaallisut | Kalaallisut | Greenlandic | Latn | | kr | Kanuri | Kànùrí | | Latn | | kri | Krio | Krio | Sierra Leonean Creole | Latn | | ks | Kashmiri | كٲشُر | Koshur | Arab | | ks-Deva | Kashmiri | कॉशुर | | Deva | | ktu | Kituba | Kituba | | Latn | kv | Komi | Коми | | Cyrl | | lg | Luganda | Oluganda | Ganda | Latn | | li | Limburgan | Limburgs | | Latn | | lij | Ligurian | Ligure | | Latn | | lmo | Lombard | lombard | | Latn | | ln | Lingala | Lingála | Ngala | Latn | | ltg | Latgalian | latgalīšu | | Latn | | lu | Luba-Katanga | Tshiluba | | Latn | | luo | Luo | Luo | Dholuo | Latn | | lus | Mizo | Mizo ṭawng | Lushai, Duhlian | Latn | | mad | Madurese | Madurâ | | Latn | mag | Magahi | मगही | | Deva | | mai | Maithili | मैथिली | | Deva | | mak | Makasar | Mangkasara | Makassarese, Makassar, Macassar | Latn | mam | Mam | Ta yol Mam | | Latn | | meo | Kedah Malay | Siti | | Latn | mfe | Morisien | Morisien | Mauritian Creole | Latn | mh | Marshallese | Majol | Ebon | Latn | min | Minangkabau | Minangkabau | | Latn | mni-Mtei | Meiteilon (Manipuri) | ꯃꯤꯇꯩꯂꯣꯟ | Meitei, Meetei, Meitheilon, Meeteilon | Mtei | | mos | Mooré | Moaaga; Mòoré | Mossé, Mossi | Latn | | ms-Arab | Malay (Jawi script) | ملايو | | Arab | mwr | Marwari | मारवाड़ी | Marwadi; Merwari, Mewari (usually ref. dialects) | Deva | nd | North Ndebele | IsiNdebele | Ndebele, isiNdebele saseNyakatho, Zimbabwean Ndebele | Latn | ndc-ZW | Ndau | Cindawu | | Latn | | new | Newari | नेवाः | Nepal Bhasa, Newar| Deva | nhe | Eastern Huasteca Nahuatl | Nahuatlajtoli Kuextekan ikisayo | | Latn | nr | South Ndebele | Isindebele | Transvaal Ndebele | Latn | nso | Sepedi | Sepedi | Pedi, Northern Sotho | Latn | | nus | Nuer | Thok Naath | | Latn | | nv | Navajo | Diné; Naabeehó | Navaho | Latn | oc | Occitan | Occitan | Provençal | Latn | om | Oromo | Afaan Oromoo | Oromiffa, Oromigna, Afaan Oromoo | Latn | | os | Ossetian | Ирон | Iron, Ossetic| Cyrl | pa-Arab | Lahnda Punjabi (Pakistan) | لہندا پنجابی | | Arab | pag | Pangasinan | Pangasinan | | Latn | | pam | Pampanga | Kapampangan | Kapampangan | Latn | pap | Papiamento | Papiamentu | | Latn | | pcm | Nigerian Pidgin | Naijá, Pidgin for Nigerian | Naijá, Pijin, Broken| Latn | qu | Quechua | Runa Simi | | Latn | | quc | K'iche' | K'iche' | Quiché | Latn | rhg-Latn | Rohingya | Ruháingga | | Latn | rn | Rundi | Ikirundi | | Latn | | rom | Romani | Rromani ćhib | Romany, Romanes, Roma | Latn | sa | Sanskrit | संस्कृतम् | | Deva | | sah | Yakut | Саха | Yakutian, Sakha, Saqa, Saxa | Cyrl | sat-Latn | Santali, Santhali | Santali | Santhali | Latn | | scn | Sicilian | Sicilianu | | Latn | se | Northern Sami | davvisámegiella | | Latn | sg | Sango | Sango | | Latn | | shn | Shan | တႆး; လိၵ်ႈတႆး | | Mymr | skr | Saraiki | سرائیکی |Multani | Arab | ss | Swati | Siswati | | Latn | | sus | Susu | Sosokhui | | Latn | | syl | Sylheti | সিলেটি | | Beng | | szl | Silesian | Ślůnski | | Latn | | tcy | Tulu | ತುಳು | | Knda | tet | Tetum | Tetun | | Latn | ti | Tigrinya | ትግርኛ | Tigrigna | Ethi | | tiv | Tiv | Tiv | | Latn | | tn | Tswana | Setswana |Setswana | Latn | to | Tongan | Tonga | | Latn | tpi | Tok Pisin | Tok Pisin | New Guinea Pidgin | Latn | trp | Kok Borok | Kok Borok | | Latn | | ts | Tsonga | Xitsonga | Xitsonga | Latn | | tum | Tumbuka | Chitumbuka | | Latn | | ty | Tahitian | Reo Tahiti; Tahiti | | Latn | | tyv | Tuvinian | тувинский | | Cyrl | | udm | Udmurt | Удмурт кыл | | Cyrl | ve | Venda | Tshivenḓa | Tshivenda, Setswetla | Latn | vec | Venetian | Veneto | | Latn | war | Waray | Waray | Waray-Waray | Latn | wo | Wolof | Wolof | | Latn | yua | Yucateco | Maayat'aan | Yucatec Maya | Latn | yue | Cantonese | 廣東話 | Yue Chinese (technically a superset) | Hant | zap | Zapotec | Diidxazá | | Latn | zza | Zaza | Zazakî | Dimli | Latn Please note that the language name can be a point of considerable tension, and there is rarely a "right" name for a language! This said, here are some non-exhaustive notes that went into the names in the second column above, based on conversations with speakers. We welcome more comments from the community: * **ak:** Calling this language "Twi" instead of "Akan" here is reflective of the corresponding translation models active on Google Translate. These are likely to mix different Akan dialects, including Twi proper, Fante, Akuapem Twi, etc.. Therefore, from a linguistic perspective, one would call this "Akan" and use the corresponding code "ak". However, this is a more academic word for the language; according to native speaker consultants, "Akan" is usually used to describe the ethnic group rather than the language, so they suggested simply calling this "Twi", which is most likely accurate for the large majority of model outputs. * **ckb:** *Central Kurdish* is a more academic name that may not be as widely known to speakers of the language, so *Sorani* is preferred -- though they are both acceptable. * **dv:** There is not a consistent romanization of this language, and both *Divehi* and *Dhivehi* are common. The first consonant in this language is a dental, non-aspirated *d*. When transliterating Indian language names there is no standard about how to represent this sound. In the south, "dh" usually refers to the dental consonant; in the North, it just as often refers to the aspirated one. However, in both cases, it is common that "d" alone would represent the retroflex consonant, so it is possible that *Divehi* would be mispronounced more often. * **gom:** Technically, `gom` is the code for *Goan* Konkani only. Other varieties of Konkani, like Mangalore Konkani (which oddly enough does not have an ISO code), are mutually unintelligible! There is certainly dispute about whether to treat Konkani as one language or not. * **ilo:** Native speakers give a variety of different answers around the correct name. Some say that *Ilocano* is more formal, whereas *Ilokano* is more informal; some say that both of these actually refer to the people, and that *Iloko* is the only correct term for the language. * **lg:** Speakers usually refer to this language as "Luganda"; linguists sometimes call it "Ganda", but like Sepedi, this is not usually used by people familiar with the language. * **lus:** There is agreement that *Lushai* is an obsolete colonial name and should not be used. *Mizo* is the preferred name. * **mni-Mtei:** The conventional and most common name for this language is *Manipuri*. However, in reality, this is only the language of one of the many ethnicities in Manipur, so that name can be seen as offensive to some. Therefore, we use the endonym *Meiteilon*, with the conventional name (Manipuri) in parentheses. * **nso:** Although a linguist might say that Sepedi is a dialect of Northern Sotho, speakers often say that they call the whole language Sepedi, and that *Northern Sotho* has offensive colonial overtones. Others, however, may disagree with this. The endonym *Sesotho sa Leboa* is not uncommon. There is agreement that no-one uses *Pedi*. * **qu:** These translations are technically in *Southern* Quechua. However, this is a point of some contention. Some will opine that "Quechua" is not a language but a family of languages. Others, however, say that they all feel like one language, and that the regional differences are slight, and it's easy for Peruvians, Bolivians, and even Ecuadorians to understand each other. The majority opinion among the naive speakers we talked to seemed to be closer to the latter, so we have opted for the name "Quechua". * **ti:** In Tigray *Tigrigna* is the most common Romanization, and in Eritrea *Tigrinya* is. * **zap:** Linguists usually talk about the Zapotec *languages*, rather than considering Zapotec a single language. However, just as with Quechua above, conversations with a native speaker indicated that they perceived Zapotec as one language, with a variety of local variants that are all easy enough to understand (excepting one or two). A broader survey would help resolve this question. * Those languages in this dataset that are not on Google Translate have yet to undergo a more careful name review; if you see a name in the list above that you want to correct, please contact us! Note on language codes: * we use `chm` for Meadow Mari, although `chm` is properly the superset, and `mhr` is the individual code for Meadow Mari. * Similarly, we use `rom` for all Romani dialects, `ak` for Twi (see note above), and `ff` for all Fulfulde dialects. * We use `fa-AF` and `ar-MA` for Dari and Darija respectively. The specific codes `prs` and `ary` are probably more precise. * `apd-SD` and `ndc-ZW` are probably redundant; `apd` and `ndc` alone refer to Sudanese Arabic and Ndau resp. Special note on Bantu languages: Bantu language names have a special noun-class prefix for languages, like xiTsonga, sePedi, kiSwahili, isiZulu, luGanda, siSwati, isiNdebele, tshiVenda, and so on. However, there is no pattern as to whether this prefix is used in the conventional English form of the name. For instance, Xhosa usually leaves off the isi- in English, whereas Lingala almost never leaves off the li-. Others, like (xi)Tsonga, seem to be frequently used in both forms. Linguistic resources occasionally strip the prefixes, yielding names like "Ganda", "Pedi" and so on, perhaps out of a desire for consistent handling of the noun class prefix. (Even the *ba* in *Bantu* is such a prefix, so these languages are sometimes called the *Ntu* languages!) Disclaimer: This is not an officially supported Google product. ### Contact We welcome contributions, corrections, and suggestions, especially from speakers of these languages. Please file bugs on this repo or contact icaswell꩜google.com if you have suggestions or corrections. This repository may be updated sporadically with corrections or additional translations. ## License This data is released with the `CC-BY-4.0` license. ## Citation ``` @misc{jones2023bilexrxlexicaldata, title={Bilex Rx: Lexical Data Augmentation for Massively Multilingual Machine Translation}, author={Alex Jones and Isaac Caswell and Ishank Saxena and Orhan Firat}, year={2023}, eprint={2303.15265}, archivePrefix={arXiv}, primaryClass={cs.CL}, url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2303.15265}, } ```