Search found 5496 matches

by bradrn
Wed Feb 20, 2019 3:54 am
Forum: Languages
Topic: Resources Thread
Replies: 99
Views: 73122

Re: Resources Thread

EDIT: Please don’t use this any more! If you want a highly multilingual keyboard, use Conkey , not this half-baked extension of Finnish Multilingual. If you really still want to use this one, expand the block below. Recently I've been looking for a keyboard layout which can type a large number of d...
by bradrn
Wed Feb 20, 2019 3:39 am
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3069
Views: 2938094

Re: Conlang Random Thread

Yes, I'm aware of direct-inverse - I quite like them, in fact - but that wasn't actually the system I'm talking about. Consider the following example morphemes: singular plural 1 -xa -xe 2 -si -se 3 -ko -ke . kode to see aman to hear yes to exist Then, in the system I'm describing, all actors (is th...
by bradrn
Wed Feb 20, 2019 1:37 am
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3069
Views: 2938094

Re: Conlang Random Thread

Would it be realistic to have a polypersonal agreement system where the same affixes are used for both agent and patient? If so, how would you know whether it is nominative-accusative or ergative-absolutive, since it's impossible to know whether an intransitive verb is agreeing with its experiencer ...
by bradrn
Tue Feb 19, 2019 12:04 am
Forum: Almea
Topic: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment
Replies: 57
Views: 59881

Re: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment

At this point I'm beginning to think it's simply a difference in opinion. You think letterforms will continue to change, because they always have; I think that they won't, because the prototypes haven't changed all that much since Roman times. There's no way to know who's right - no-one can predict...
by bradrn
Mon Feb 18, 2019 3:53 am
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3069
Views: 2938094

Re: Conlang Random Thread

Thanks for all the suggestions everyone - they've really helped! Looking back through them, it would appear that I have a few options: Simply preserve the irregularities (as in Seri or Welsh) Preserve the irregularities, but treat it as disfixation Semantics-based analogy Abandon the morphological p...
by bradrn
Sun Feb 17, 2019 9:51 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3069
Views: 2938094

Re: Conlang Random Thread

But it's just simple disfixation on a singular noun. I suppose it is, but disfixation is rather rare, isn't it... In this case, I think the final vowel on the plural will be treated as suffix. The vowel used is analogized by the semantics of the noun. For example I assign the meaning of each noun a...
by bradrn
Sun Feb 17, 2019 6:43 pm
Forum: Almea
Topic: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment
Replies: 57
Views: 59881

Re: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment

In the printing era, I think the prototype is arguably a printed character. You may not agree, but think again about China, where characters are drastically and idiosyncratically simplified when written by hand; the prototype is surely something more like the kaishu hand, which underlies the printe...
by bradrn
Sun Feb 17, 2019 6:36 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3069
Views: 2938094

Re: Conlang Random Thread

I doubt there's any languages where there's literally no identifiable patterns to plural formation at all. This is the problem - it is almost completely random. There are some vague, unhelpful patterns - for instance, words ending in geminates add a vowel to form the plural (but which vowel?), and ...
by bradrn
Sun Feb 17, 2019 6:12 pm
Forum: Almea
Topic: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment
Replies: 57
Views: 59881

Re: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment

I would say it is a valid definition though - it seems to work for most writing systems other than cuneiform. (Including hanzi - so-called 'Gothic' fonts use monolines.) On the other hand, if you have a better definition of the meaning of a 'letter prototype', I would be happy to use yours. Eh, jus...
by bradrn
Sun Feb 17, 2019 2:14 am
Forum: Almea
Topic: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment
Replies: 57
Views: 59881

Re: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment

Starting from this, I would define the prototype of a letter as being the form it takes when you try to handwrite it most legibly with a monoline pen. According to this definition, serifs never have consistently been part of the prototype; one effect of this is that most people don't write the seri...
by bradrn
Sat Feb 16, 2019 7:30 pm
Forum: Almea
Topic: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment
Replies: 57
Views: 59881

Re: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment

For comparison, serifs have been around since the Romans, and yet they still aren't part of the prototype. I can't agree, when before 1800 every printed font had serifs! Sans serif fonts seemed so odd when they were introduced that they were called "grotesque". (I don't mean people said t...
by bradrn
Sat Feb 16, 2019 4:56 pm
Forum: Almea
Topic: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment
Replies: 57
Views: 59881

Re: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment

But gestural interfaces don't have to be dominant to influence font design; really they only need to look cool to font designers. Is this how it works? I would have thought that - at least for body text - font designers would stick to generally-established letter forms for legibility, and would onl...
by bradrn
Sat Feb 16, 2019 6:33 am
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3069
Views: 2938094

Re: Conlang Random Thread

I'm deriving a daughter from a protolanguage, and decided to run a set of word/plural pairs through the sound changes to see what happens - and it is a mess ! There's not even one way of making a plural: depending on the word, you variously have no change, the end consonant being changed, or a rand...
by bradrn
Sat Feb 16, 2019 3:46 am
Forum: Almea
Topic: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment
Replies: 57
Views: 59881

Re: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment

Well, the dominant device was the keyboard; now it's the screen. Already we have near-universal gestures for selection, rejection ("swipe left"), movement, and zooming in/out. VR will likely produce a new vocabulary of gestures. Actually, I would say today that even though we use screens ...
by bradrn
Sat Feb 16, 2019 1:07 am
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang Random Thread
Replies: 3069
Views: 2938094

Re: Conlang Random Thread

I'm deriving a daughter from a protolanguage, and decided to run a set of word/plural pairs through the sound changes to see what happens - and it is a mess ! There's not even one way of making a plural: depending on the word, you variously have no change, the end consonant being changed, or a rando...
by bradrn
Sat Feb 16, 2019 12:56 am
Forum: Almea
Topic: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment
Replies: 57
Views: 59881

Re: On Hanying and Creole Adjustment

It could be several things... but hey, sometimes you gotta drive the authorial fiat. So... At some point, probably in the late Douane era, some devices took gestural (or hand-drawn) input. For speed and to simplify the input space, letters had to be single strokes. The look caught on, helped by the...
by bradrn
Thu Jan 24, 2019 5:04 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Phonotactics Help
Replies: 8
Views: 4461

Re: Phonotactics Help

There's a few things in the romanization and orthography which jump out for me immediately. In no particular order: Using <c> for /s/ and <s> for /ʃ/ seems very unusual. I would swap these. Using <q> for /ʒ/ is also fairly odd - I would use <j>. <q> is used for many odd things though - up to and inc...
by bradrn
Tue Jan 15, 2019 3:05 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: English weirdness according to WALS
Replies: 21
Views: 16895

Re: English weirdness according to WALS

I use WALS to learn about strategies I might not know about That was basically what I was saying as well. I interpreted your post more as looking at popularity of ideas you already know.... Well, that too. I suppose I use WALS for both in equal measure. (EDIT: Sorry about the duplicated post. I thi...
by bradrn
Tue Jan 15, 2019 3:05 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: English weirdness according to WALS
Replies: 21
Views: 16895

Re: English weirdness according to WALS

gestaltist wrote: Tue Jan 15, 2019 9:36 am
bradrn wrote: Tue Jan 15, 2019 3:38 am
gestaltist wrote: Tue Jan 15, 2019 2:41 am I use WALS to learn about strategies I might not know about
That was basically what I was saying as well.
I interpreted your post more as looking at popularity of ideas you already know....
Well, that too. I suppose I use WALS for both of those in equal measure.
by bradrn
Tue Jan 15, 2019 3:38 am
Forum: Languages
Topic: English weirdness according to WALS
Replies: 21
Views: 16895

Re: English weirdness according to WALS

gestaltist wrote: Tue Jan 15, 2019 2:41 am I use WALS to learn about strategies I might not know about
That was basically what I was saying as well.