The term natural language is used to distinguish languages spoken and signed (by hand signals and facial expressions) by humans for general-purpose communication from constructs such as writing, computer-programming languages or the "languages" used in the study of formal logic, especially mathematical logic.
In the philosophy of language, the term ordinary language is sometimes used as synonymous with natural (as opposed to mathematical or logical) language. The term has been adopted to describe computer input terms and language modeled after or based on natural human languages; rather than the artificial syntax and terms involved with computer languages. Natural Language Processing is considered a sub-field of artificial intelligence and linguistics. Natural language issues hold applicability, particularly in the areas of text mining, search engines, automatic summarization, information retrieval, speech synthesis, and algorithms employed to determine the content of text streams in computational linguistics (e.g. viterbi algorithm).
Additionally, the indigenous signed languages of the world merit inclusion as natural languages owing to extensive linguistic analysis in the latter 20th century confirming their unique and consistent grammar, syntax, rules and visual logic dramatically unlike the spoken languages of the nations or geographic regions in which they arose. American, French, and British Sign Languages are the best documented examples in the literature.
While grammarians, writers of dictionaries, and language policy-makers all have a certain influence on the evolution of language, their ability to influence what people think they 'ought' to say is distinct from what people actually say. Natural language applies to the latter, and is thus a 'descriptive' term. Thus non-standard language varieties (such as African American Vernacular English) are as natural as standard language varieties (such as Standard American English).
Written language should be distinguished from natural language. Until very recently, it was not uncommon for many people to be fluent in spoken or signed languages and yet remain illiterate. Furthermore, natural language acquisition during childhood is largely spontaneous, while literacy must usually be intentionally acquired.
Linguistics | Natural language processing | Formal languages
Yezh naturel | Natürliche Sprache | Lenguaje natural | Natura lingvo | Langue naturelle | 자연어 | שפה טבעית | Lugha asilia | Természetes nyelv | 自然言語 | Línguas naturais | Естественный язык | Природни језици | ภาษาธรรมชาติ | 自然语言
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