Search found 56 matches

by Glass Half Baked
Sun May 19, 2024 8:30 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang fluency thread
Replies: 2464
Views: 1483190

Re: Conlang fluency thread

Faz com los Scotes, e ecrív Z.
[fas̻ kɵ̃m los̺ ‘s̺kɵ.te e ek.’ɾiv s̻e]
Do like the Scots, and write Z.
by Glass Half Baked
Sun May 19, 2024 8:22 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3024
Views: 2852351

Re: Conlang Random Thread

Can you even be precise about how many registers a language has? I would have thought whether a language has, say, three or four registers is a matter of interpretation. This is especially true of a language like English which does not really have grammaticalized registers. 'snot true. Elipsis of f...
by Glass Half Baked
Sun May 19, 2024 8:20 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3024
Views: 2852351

Re: Conlang Random Thread

Well, of course it's a matter of interpretation. Joos interpreted the English data as falling into five categories based on a set of criteria. Different criteria would probably produce two registers, or a hundred. It's like asking how many colors there are. Just because it's a spectrum doesn't mean ...
by Glass Half Baked
Sun May 19, 2024 6:24 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: Prehistoric migrations from the Near East to North Africa?
Replies: 4
Views: 100

Re: Prehistoric migrations from the Near East to North Africa?

The migration of Y-DNA haplogroup I may be the earliest back-migration that leaves large-scale evidence in modern populations of North Africa. https://genome.cshlp.org/content/18/5/830.full.pdf https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1181996/ I haven't found anything specifically dating the mig...
by Glass Half Baked
Sat May 18, 2024 8:23 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3024
Views: 2852351

Re: Conlang Random Thread

How many distinct registers do you all build into your conlangs? I've done up to three, but most often zero. Martin Joos believed there were five registers in English, but I've never worked out that many for a conlang in any detail.
by Glass Half Baked
Mon May 13, 2024 8:06 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3024
Views: 2852351

Re: Conlang Random Thread

You're both right. The noun and the adposition together form a unit of meaning. One preposition can mean different things with different cases, and one case can mean different things with different prepositions. A good example is Latin in tabernā . The preposition means location in, not motion towar...
by Glass Half Baked
Mon May 13, 2024 6:08 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3024
Views: 2852351

Re: Conlang Random Thread

Europe does indeed have a paucity of examples to look to. Latin used few prepositions with the genitive and dative, and most modern languages in Western Europe don't have a separate dative anyway. The best example is probably German, which uses in differently for accusative and dative. We get more e...
by Glass Half Baked
Fri May 10, 2024 11:54 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang fluency thread
Replies: 2464
Views: 1483190

Re: Conlang fluency thread

Yet una lengua Romana de Uest, deisde las vessances de los Pirineos de nord. Cre que yet levemént avoreda. /jet `un.na `lɨ̃g.gwa ɾɵ.`man.na de wɨs̺t `deis̺.de las̺ vɨ.`s̺ã.s̻e de lɵs̺ pi.ɾi.`ne.o de nɵɾd... kɾe ke jet lɨ.vɨ.`mɨ̃t a.vɵ.`ɾɨd.da/ It's a Western Romance language, from the slopes of the...
by Glass Half Baked
Fri May 10, 2024 9:21 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Replies: 4692
Views: 2064146

Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread

OK, I have a question for any French experts out there: when and how did mathématiques become plural? And is it related in any way to the English phenomenon? As I understand it, the original word in Latinized Greek is mathematica, in the neuter plural. This neuter plural was then reanalyzed as a fem...
by Glass Half Baked
Thu May 09, 2024 11:55 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Replies: 909
Views: 1084083

Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel

Well, surely that's true for any version of any language? Whether PIE had uvulars or not, something came before it. PIE usually means the PIE that was spoken the moment before Annie Anatolia and Steve Steppe parted company. It could have lasted a day. If you're interested in internal reconstruction,...
by Glass Half Baked
Thu May 09, 2024 7:59 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Replies: 4692
Views: 2064146

Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread

If I had a precise enough laser that I could target individual neurons, I would delete the phrase "Celtic Substrate" from the minds of every linguist in the world.

EDIT: actually, "Celtic" is optional.
by Glass Half Baked
Thu May 09, 2024 7:39 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Replies: 909
Views: 1084083

Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel

"That argument pretty much can be summed up as "the less typologically plausible phonology should be favored specifically because we don't see it any daughters", TBH." I think a more fair paraphrase is that a stable situation like /k q/ would be more likely to survive, so it stra...
by Glass Half Baked
Tue May 07, 2024 10:08 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Challenge: American English as a separate language
Replies: 30
Views: 668

Re: Challenge: American English as a separate language

Otto, you know there is no such thing as "official status" in the US, right? As for the rest of it, I'm not sure who you think was coming across the Atlantic who didn't sound like a freak. I already mentioned Ulster Scots, who were an absolute majority of settler colonists in many areas. T...
by Glass Half Baked
Tue May 07, 2024 12:45 am
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Challenge: American English as a separate language
Replies: 30
Views: 668

Re: Challenge: American English as a separate language

Plenty of divergent dialects made it to North America in large numbers. Where I grew up, the largest ethnic group was "Scotch Irish," meaning there would have been a time when everyone in the Appalachians sounded like this child.
by Glass Half Baked
Tue May 07, 2024 12:35 am
Forum: Languages
Topic: Resources Thread
Replies: 88
Views: 70052

Re: Resources Thread

Try asking around computer hobby forums. He's known for being one of the first employees of Apple.
by Glass Half Baked
Mon May 06, 2024 4:24 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Replies: 909
Views: 1084083

Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel

The only sources Wikipedia cites are Iranian dictionaries, but the Iranian reconstruction given is muHs, so I doubt the author of this page knows something we don't know. Just typical overzealousness.
by Glass Half Baked
Mon Apr 29, 2024 6:08 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang fluency thread
Replies: 2464
Views: 1483190

Re: Conlang fluency thread

Pirenáj: Tent traducír a la Pirenáj, peróc tap mout de lo tempos.
[tə̃t tɾad.du.'s̻iɾ a la pi.ɾə.'naʒ pə.'ɾɵk tap mot de lo 'tə̃.po]
I try to translate into Pirenáj, but it takes a lot of time.
by Glass Half Baked
Sun Apr 28, 2024 11:11 pm
Forum: Almea
Topic: "Experiencer"
Replies: 40
Views: 4678

Re: "Experiencer"

I think you all have missed the main reason congrammars are written in plain terms. The conlanger is trying to communicate, while the linguist is trying to prove to their employer that they are on the cutting edge of their field. As for Zompist's use of "experiencer," I think this is an ac...
by Glass Half Baked
Sun Apr 28, 2024 10:28 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Kala updates etc.
Replies: 170
Views: 106195

Re: Kala updates etc.

masako wrote: Fri Mar 22, 2024 7:33 pm Kenamoya abugida – A decorative script for Kala centered on a circular design.
I second what others have said. I really like the look of this.
by Glass Half Baked
Sat Jan 23, 2021 2:10 pm
Forum: Ephemera
Topic: United States Politics Thread 46
Replies: 1424
Views: 445789

Re: United States Politics Thread 46

(snip)