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In a special index the meaning of a homograph may be obvious by its location within a given subject.
Many signs can be written the same way (homograph).
In this example the pronunciations of the homograph "bass" are shown.
Interlingual homograph recognition: Effects of task demands and language intermixing.
A homograph is one of a group of words that have the same spelling but have different meanings.
It is a sort of homograph.
A homography matrix is sometimes known as a 'homograph'.
In normal usage (as opposed to index usage) the meaning of a homograph is established by its context.
The correct meaning is presumably determined by using the semantic context of the sentence containing the homograph, but problems can still arise.
The current project will extend previous work by presenting the homograph primes so briefly that the subjects are not consciously aware of them.
A further example of a homonym, which is both a homophone and a homograph, is fluke.
No homograph effects were found, but less proficient bilinguals made more naming errors, especially in low-constraint sentences.
Spoofing attacks based on these similarities are known as homograph spoofing attacks.
But they have different writing in Hanja that makes Young-gam as homograph.
The cognate or interlingual homograph words are often used as a marker inserted in test sentences with following tasks:
This is known as an IDN homograph attack.
Young-gam is a homograph.
If one word is used out of context as an index heading, plainly it will be difficult to establish the interpretation to be placed on the homograph.
In English, accuracy at the coarse-grained (homograph) level is routinely above 90%, with some methods on particular homographs achieving over 96%.
A capitonym is a form of homograph and - when the two forms are pronounced differently - also of heteronym.
Dove Dove: Funny Homograph Riddles (1988)
One problem with displaying IDNs in Punycode is that then, effectively, every such address is "a homograph" of every other.
His name, Nin-kilim, means "Lord Rodent," where rodent, pronounced šikku but rendered nin-ka, is a homograph.
In 2002, Gabrilovich published a research paper documenting the possibility of an IDN homograph attack, with fellow researcher Alex Gontmakher.
Unfortunately, this does not protect against homograph attacks involving two non-Latin alphabets having letters often represented by similar glyphs, such as the Cyrillic and Greek alphabets for example.