The 2008 NACLO Competition
The 2008 NACLO Competition
The 2008 NACLO Competition
The Second
Annual
North American
Computational
Linguistics
Olympiad
2008
www.naclo.cs.cmu.edu
INVITATIONAL ROUND
March 11, 2008
Contest Booklet
________________________________
Please also make sure to write your registration number on each page that you turn in. Each problem
will be graded by a different judge and pages with no registration numbers will not be graded.
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
( 10 points )
asagiri
hoshizora
flower arranging
morning fog
starry sky
ike
hana
asa
kiri
hoshi
sora
arrange
flower
morning
fog
star
sky
Compound words can then be compounded again, creating compounds with three or more
members. Study the diagrams below carefully. Youll notice that the order in which the compound is built affects both the meaning and the final form of the word.
nurihashibako
nuribashibako
hashibako
nuribashi
lacquered chopsticks
nuri
hashi
hako
nuri
hashi
hako
lacquered
chopsticks
box
lacquered
chopsticks
box
F1. The following is a list of several Japanese words with their English meanings. Use this
word bank to write definitions of the Japanese compounds (a)-(f). Be very specific with how
you phrase your definition. If your definition is ambiguous (has two meanings), it will not be
counted.
sakura
cherry blossom
kami
paper
nise
fake
shiru
soup
tana
shelf
tsukuri
maker
iro
color(ed)
tanuki
raccoon
hako
box
(a) nisetanukijiru
(b) nisedanukijiru
(c) irogamibako
(d) irokamibako
(e) nisezakuradana
(f) nisesakuradana
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
(A) nisegamidanadzukuri
(B) nisekamitanadzukuri
(C) nisegamitanadzukuri
(D) nisekamidanadzukuri
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
( 10 points )
N
5,928 ft.
Onkau
Mombwa
Kulu
E
Below, a Manam islander describes the relative locations of the houses above.
1. Onkau pera kana auta ieno, Kulu pera kana ilau ieno.
2. Mombwa pera kana ata ieno, Kulu pera kana awa ieno.
3. Tola pera kana auta ieno, Sala pera kana ilau ieno.
4. Sulung pera kana awa ieno, Tola pera kana ata ieno.
5. Sala pera kana awa ieno, Mombwa pera kana ata ieno.
6. Pita pera kana ilau ieno, Sulung pera kana auta ieno.
7. Sala pera kana awa ilau ieno, Onkau pera kana ata auta ieno.
8. Butokang pera kana awa auta ieno, Pita pera kana ata ilau ieno.
G1. Onkaus, Mombwas, and Kulus houses have already been located on the map above.
Who lives in the other five houses?
A: __________
B: __________
C: __________
D: __________
E: __________
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
( 10 points )
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
VERBS
word
stem
word
stem
backs
back
cried
cry
books
book
cries
cry
chiefs
chief
dished
dish
companies
company
flies
fly
duties
duty
married
marry
dwarves
dwarf
killed
kill
grass
grass
listened
listen
moss
moss
ordered
order
potatoes
potato
resorts
resort
presidents
president
sailing
sail
roses
rose
tailing
tail
shelves
shelf
tell
tell
stores
store
stapler
stapler
times
time
toe
toe
tomatoes
tomato
wives
wife
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
with
with
with
with
with
with
with
with
with
with
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
( 15 points )
a,e,i,
o,u
p,t,k,v,r,g
p,t,k,
v,r,g
a,e,i,
o,u
Start
An FSA works like a board game. Choose a word, and place your pencil on the space marked
Start. Going through the letters of the word one at a time, move your pencil along the path
marked with that letter. If the word ends and youre at a space marked with a thicker circle,
the word succeeds: its a possible Rotokas word! If the word ends and youre not at a thicker
circle, or youre midway through the word and theres no path corresponding to the next letter,
the word fails: its not a possible Rotokas word!
Try it out with these possible and impossible words; the automaton should accept all the possible words and reject the impossible ones.
Possible Rotokas words
tauo
kareveiepa
puraveva
ovokirovuia
avaopa
ouragaveva
I1. Now, using the automaton above, put a check mark next to each possible Rotokas word:
___ iu
___ idau
___ oire
___ uente
___ urioo
___ raorao
___ voav
___ uaia
___ oratreopaveiepa
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
Start
a,e,i,o,u
a,e,i,o,u
a,e,o,u
p,k,v,r,g
Replace the path labels so that exactly half of the words below succeed and the other half fail.
oisio
uasau
puapuata
tiravau
utsa
sisigarue
saiuu
sioparoia
porouativeve
kotoe
parauos
aasiia
I3. Why do T and S get their own paths? What is special about these letters?
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
( 20 points )
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
English
Glenamuckaduff
Clonamully
Buncurry
Curraghmore
Annaghanoon
Dunard
Bunagortbaun
Gortnakilly
Binbane
Ballyknock
Ballynaparka
Kilcarn
Killeshil
Clashbane
Bunbeg
Irish
Gleann na Muice Duibhe
Cluain an Mhullaigh
Bun an Churraigh
An Currach Mr
Eanach an Uain
An Dn Ard
Bun an Ghoirt Bhin
Gort na Cille
An Bhinn Bhn
Baile an Chnoic
Baile na Pirce
Cill an Chairn
An Choill seal
An Chlais Bhn
An Bun Beag
Sometimes the English name is no more than a translation of the Irish one:
16
17
Blackabbey
Bigpark
An Mhainistir Dhubh
An Phirc Mhr
18
Castlepark
Pirc an Chaislein
19
Woodland
Talamh na Coille
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
English
Mullaghbane
Killananny
Knocknakillardy
Gortnabinna
Clashgortmore
Killbeg
Blackcastle
Irish
Black castle
J2. Explain your reasoning and provide any additional observations about this problem.
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
( 15 points )
b.
K2. Where on the calendar would the following days fall? Write a c and a d on the appropriate days on the following page.
c.
d.
K3. The two months shown are completely representative of the workings of the tzolkin;
there are no special sub-cycles, leap days, periods with fewer days than other periods, etc.
Knowing that, how often does the following day occur?
e.
_______________________________
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
August
SEPTEMBER
September
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
( 20 points )
The last four spectrograms each show one of the following eight words:
louse, lass, lease, lice, pass, ash, sheep, lack
Problems
L1. What words are shown in the last four spectrograms? You may give up to two answers on
each; if you give two, you will be given half credit if either of them is correct.
(13) ______________ (14) ______________ (15) ______________ (16) ______________
L2. For each of the three most significant sounds in ``sash,'' mark an interval corresponding to
the duration of that sound. You should mark each interval by a horizontal line drawn above the
spectrogram over all parts of the spectrogram affected by that sound. If you make other markings on the spectrogram, clearly indicate where each of the three requested intervals starts and
ends.
L3. Do the same for ``lamb.''
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
L5. Discuss the correspondence between the English spellings of the given 12 words and their
spectrograms. In particular, some letters' sounds affect longer intervals in the spectrograms
than others do. Which letters and sounds affect the longest intervals? Do adjacent sounds' affected intervals overlap, and if so, how? Are there any letters that correspond to no interval at
all, and which letters? Conversely, are there any distinct sounds on the spectrograms that correspond to no English letters, and where are those sounds?
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
5000
Frequency (Hz)
5000
0
0
0
0
0.56
Time (s)
0.41
Time (s)
Spectrogram 1: Sash
Spectrogram 2: Lamb
5000
Frequency (Hz)
Frequency (Hz)
5000
0
0
0
0
0.69
Spectrogram 3: Knee
Spectrogram 4: Sheesh
5000
Frequency (Hz)
Frequency (Hz)
5000
0.55
Time (s)
Time (s)
0
0
0
0
0.48
Time (s)
Spectrogram 5: Soup
Spectrogram 6: Pang
5000
Frequency (Hz)
Frequency (Hz)
5000
0.45
Time (s)
0
0
0.49
Time (s)
Spectrogram 7: Loose
0
0
0.4
Time (s)
YOUR NAME:
REGISTRATION #:
5000
Frequency (Hz)
5000
0
0
0
0
0.54
Time (s)
0.38
Time (s)
Spectrogram 9: Mice
Frequency (Hz)
5000
Frequency (Hz)
5000
0
0
0
0
0.44
Time (s)
5000
Frequency (Hz)
Frequency (Hz)
5000
0.67
Time (s)
0
0
0
0
0.7
Time (s)
Spectrogram 13
Spectrogram 14
5000
Frequency (Hz)
Frequency (Hz)
5000
0.64
Time (s)
0
0
0.38
Time (s)
Spectrogram 15
0
0
0.63
Time (s)
Spectrogram 16
Administrative assistant:
Mary Jo Bensasi, Carnegie Mellon University
School liaison:
Amy Troyani, Taylor Allderdice High School
Web site and registration:
Justin Brown, Carnegie Mellon University
Problem credits (invitational round only):
Problem F: Willie Costello
Problem G: Patrick Littell
Problem H: Eric Breck
Problem I: Patrick Littell
Problem J: Todor Tchervenkov
Problem K: Patrick Littell and Erin Donnelly
Problem L: Adam Hesterberg
Additional thanks to:
Tanya Korelsky, NSF
Paula Chesley, U. Minnesota
Alina Johnson, U. Michigan
Patti Kardia, U. Michigfan
Jennifer Wofford, Cornell U.
Cindy Robinson, Cornell U.
More than 65 high school teachers from 28 states,
provinces, and the District of Columbia
Site coordinators:
Brandeis University: James Pustejovsky
Carnegie Mellon University: Lori Levin
Columbia University: Kathy McKeown and Barry Schiffman
Cornell University: Claire Cardie and Lillian Lee
Middle Tennessee State University: Aleka Blackwell
San Jos State University: Roula Svorou
University of Illinois: Roxana Girju and Richard Sproat
University of Michigan: Steve Abney and Sally Thomason
University of Oregon: Thomas Payne
University of Ottawa: Diana Inkpen and Stan Szpakowicz
University of Pennsylvania: Mitch Marcus
University of Toronto: Elaine Gold
University of Wisconsin: Catherine Arnott Smith
Online (high school sites): Dragomir Radev
All material in this booklet Copyright 2008, North American Computational Linguistics Olympiad, unless otherwise
indicated. Please do not copy or distribute without permission.
as well as more than 65 high schools throughout the USA and Canada