Oh, that makes sense! I really like that example of reanalysis — thanks for explaining it!Richard W wrote: ↑Sun Jul 21, 2019 8:44 pmThe 'joke' lies in the etymology of tugeta. Allegedly it derives from English together, with the first syllable being misanalysed as the numeral tu. It's not sure as there doesn't seem to be a second person pronoun *yutugeta, and the phonetics are a bit odd. I'm not aware of Tok Pisin having a pronoun *tugeta, so it's not quite the same thing.bradrn wrote: ↑Sun Jul 21, 2019 7:08 pmI did see that, actually, but didn’t see it as being a joke. Tok Pisin has the same thing as well:
3s: em (< “him”)
3d: tupela (< “two-fellow”)
3t: tripela (< “three-fellow”)
3p: ol (< “all”)
It has the same thing in all it’s other pronouns as well; Wikipedia has a nice chart.
If natlangs were conlangs
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Conlangs: Scratchpad | Texts | antilanguage
Software: See http://bradrn.com/projects.html
Other: Ergativity for Novices
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Software: See http://bradrn.com/projects.html
Other: Ergativity for Novices
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Re: If natlangs were conlangs
So… Dahalo. Repeat after me: I will not make kitchen-sinks. I will not make kitchen-sinks. I will not make kitchen-sinks…
Anyway, the grammar looks fine, but your consonants are a mess. It looks like you’ve just taken all your favourite sounds and lumped them next to each other. Which would be fine if you had bothered to arrange them in some semblance of an order like Ubykh did. But no, you just had to arrange them as irregularly as you could, with lots of gaps in the non-alveolar series. And I see that you were so busy putting in epiglottals, ejectives, implosives, clicks, labialisation, prenasalisation, pitch accent, and a laminal/apical contrast, that you completely forgot to put in normal sounds like /z/ and /j/. So you pulled in a bunch of loanwords with /z/, and added one word with /j/, and thought I wouldn’t notice. I think that’s very sloppy. And no, don’t attempt to justify all this by muttering something about substrates and superstrates; I know a bad excuse when I see one.
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(While proofreading the above I started to wonder if it might even be too ironic to post here… but I like Dahalo’s phonology too much to leave it off this thread.)
Anyway, the grammar looks fine, but your consonants are a mess. It looks like you’ve just taken all your favourite sounds and lumped them next to each other. Which would be fine if you had bothered to arrange them in some semblance of an order like Ubykh did. But no, you just had to arrange them as irregularly as you could, with lots of gaps in the non-alveolar series. And I see that you were so busy putting in epiglottals, ejectives, implosives, clicks, labialisation, prenasalisation, pitch accent, and a laminal/apical contrast, that you completely forgot to put in normal sounds like /z/ and /j/. So you pulled in a bunch of loanwords with /z/, and added one word with /j/, and thought I wouldn’t notice. I think that’s very sloppy. And no, don’t attempt to justify all this by muttering something about substrates and superstrates; I know a bad excuse when I see one.
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(While proofreading the above I started to wonder if it might even be too ironic to post here… but I like Dahalo’s phonology too much to leave it off this thread.)
Conlangs: Scratchpad | Texts | antilanguage
Software: See http://bradrn.com/projects.html
Other: Ergativity for Novices
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Software: See http://bradrn.com/projects.html
Other: Ergativity for Novices
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Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Rotokas is a jokelang made to fool outsiders and their real language is more akin to Ubykh.
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Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Could you elaborate?
Conlangs: Scratchpad | Texts | antilanguage
Software: See http://bradrn.com/projects.html
Other: Ergativity for Novices
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Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Why do these have -t-?
Loss of nasals in Central Rotokas might be due to influence from the related language Konua, which also doesn't have nasals. (/p t k β r g s h/ - and because there's a Konua wordlist that was taken down with Roviana orthography, which distinguishes between /g/ <q> and /ɣ/ <g>, we can guess that /g/ isn't fricated, unlike in Rotokas)
The problem is that Rotokas isn't spoken immediately adjacent to Konua (there's a mountain in the middle that can be crossed but isn't inhabited, IIRC), and Keriaka or Austronesian influence would be more probable - but the Austronesian languages of Bougainville Island all have nasals (I think - the adjacent ones do) and Keriaka isn't documented because the Keriaka ransacked the mission and destroyed its materials.
Duaj teibohnggoe kyoe' quaqtoeq lucj lhaj k'yoejdej noeyn tucj.
K'yoejdaq fohm q'ujdoe duaj teibohnggoen dlehq lucj.
Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq.
K'yoejdaq fohm q'ujdoe duaj teibohnggoen dlehq lucj.
Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq.
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
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Last edited by mae on Wed Oct 16, 2019 10:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Dear creator of Japanese, what the heck's going one with your vowel devoicing process? Everyone else just uses it on all vowels regardless of quality, but you've linked it to height of all things! What on earth is it about high vowels that makes them more prone to voicelessness than other vowels I ask you! I certainly can't think of anything.
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
High vowel is shorter than low vowel (I don't know particularly about Japanese, but this tends to be true cross-linguistically).Frislander wrote: ↑Tue Jul 23, 2019 3:58 am Dear creator of Japanese, what the heck's going one with your vowel devoicing process? Everyone else just uses it on all vowels regardless of quality, but you've linked it to height of all things! What on earth is it about high vowels that makes them more prone to voicelessness than other vowels I ask you! I certainly can't think of anything.
IPA of my name: [xʷtɛ̀k]
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
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Re: If natlangs were conlangs
But why was the voiced /D/ borrowed as the voiceless /t/, instead of /d/ or a (voiced) sonorant?mae wrote: ↑Mon Jul 22, 2019 11:04 pm The correspondence of English intervocalic dental obstruents to Neo-Melanesian /r/ is generally inconsistent. The collective plurals are less commonly used than the normal plurals so it may be that flapping occurred generally in the earliest layer of the Melanesian Pidgin lexicon and -geta forms in the Bislama variety were a later development (this seems plausible to me at least).
And MidJ/EMJ /u/ was probably consonantalized (cf. Nuosu) - which would explain its use as an epenthetic vowel in Chinese loan adaptations, the development of /mu/ into a moraic nasal, 'palatalization' of /t d/ to [ts dz], and attestations of forms like mume (probably [m.me]) for ume. Raising and consonantalization of high vowels is a common development in Japonic languages; for the development of 'super-close' vowels into high central vowels, see the Grassfields languages of Cameroon. So the devoicing process could parallel the high vowel devoicing in Oogami that produced moraic /s f/ - which is from Proto-Japonic *i *u between voiceless consonants. (The developments are complex, but the default outcome is merger as /ɯ/.)
Duaj teibohnggoe kyoe' quaqtoeq lucj lhaj k'yoejdej noeyn tucj.
K'yoejdaq fohm q'ujdoe duaj teibohnggoen dlehq lucj.
Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq.
K'yoejdaq fohm q'ujdoe duaj teibohnggoen dlehq lucj.
Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq. Teijp'vq.
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Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Basically exactly what you described.
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Halkomelem, /kʼ/ is not something you use for baby talk.
IPA of my name: [xʷtɛ̀k]
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Baby talk is pretty unrealistic in general, though (i.e. the way adults talk to babies is not really an approximation of how babies actually talk even when it's intended to be).
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Re: If natlangs were conlangs
I remember doing a lot of /! !ʷ ! !ʷ/ clicking when I was a child. Onomatopoeia for a clock, I suppose. But it doesn't seem that far from there to glottalised sounds.
High Lulani and its descendants at Tinellb.com.
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
I don't know who named the lannguage like nasal, geez and anus, but that person must be smartass.
IPA of my name: [xʷtɛ̀k]
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
I'm furious about the fact the Austronesian Trigger System exists, while the simpler Conlang Trigger System doesn't. It's even diachronically simpler:
Initially, the word order is
V nom S acc O pp N
Later, one of the preposition is fused with the verb. That noun is then focused and put on the front:
S V-nom acc O pp N
O V-acc nom S pp N
It doesn't even requires any reanalysis, compared with the Austronesian Trigger System.
Initially, the word order is
V nom S acc O pp N
Later, one of the preposition is fused with the verb. That noun is then focused and put on the front:
S V-nom acc O pp N
O V-acc nom S pp N
It doesn't even requires any reanalysis, compared with the Austronesian Trigger System.
IPA of my name: [xʷtɛ̀k]
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
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Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Hah! That's beautiful, yes.Akangka wrote: ↑Thu Aug 29, 2019 9:33 amI'm furious about the fact the Austronesian Trigger System exists, while the simpler Conlang Trigger System doesn't. It's even diachronically simpler:
Initially, the word order is
V nom S acc O pp N
Later, one of the preposition is fused with the verb. That noun is then focused and put on the front:
S V-nom acc O pp N
O V-acc nom S pp N
It doesn't even requires any reanalysis, compared with the Austronesian Trigger System.
Do you, or anyone else, know about current speculation or theories of how the Austronesian Trigger System came into being? I mean, I look at it, and my first suspicion is that historically it might have involved a reinterpretation of nouns (in a nominalized construction) as predicate verbs.
The real Austronesian alignment is basically:
V-agt gen O trig S pp N
V-pat gen S trig O pp N
V-obl gen S gen O trig N
(other constituent orders are available, naturally)
This reminds me a lot of the use of the genitive case in Arabic and possessive de in Spanish, which can also mark either the subject or the object of a deverbal noun. Meanwhile, the trigger particle clarifies what the subject of the verb is, which reminds me a lot of the Indo-European cleft construction (it was Akangka who bought the book) as well as its sister the headless relative clause identified as an argument of a copula (the one who bought the book was Akangka; Akangka was the one who bought the book).
Could it be that Austronesian verbs were actually ancient verbal participles, that the Austronesian "indirect-genitive" particles were originally just genitive markers, and that the trigger particle was a copula?
I can imagine a process where, say, pseudo-Late-Latin gets reinterpreted in such a way:
emptor de libro est acanca
buy.AGT.PARTIC of book is Akangka -> buy-AGT GEN book TRIG akangka
'The buyer of the book is Akangka.' -> 'Akangka bought the book.'
emptum de acanca est libro
buy.PAT.PARTIC of akangka is book -> buy-PAT GEN akangka TRIG book
'The thing bought by Akangka is the book.' -> 'Akangka bought the book.'
I haven't read any of the relevant literature, but I imagine this is probably one of the hypothesis thrown around, since it's low-hanging fruit. What others are there?
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/begus ... slides.pdf
It's not and the result should be at best Indonesian voice system. First the syntax would be:
acanca est emptor de libro
libro est emptum de acanca
Then if you use Latin without applicatives, the result is symmetric voice system, not Philipine voice system. Even with applicatives, the result is Indonesian voice system.
IPA of my name: [xʷtɛ̀k]
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
Shilha, how are human supposed to distinguish the pronunciation between: i-fri and y-fri?
IPA of my name: [xʷtɛ̀k]
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Favourite morphology: Polysynthetic, Ablaut
Favourite character archetype: Shounen hero
Re: If natlangs were conlangs
It seems to be a morphophonemic distinction. As far as I can make out the descriptions, a high vowel becomes a semivowel, is dropped, or sprouts -y- before the former, while it remains before the latter. Note that the latter form does not occur at the start of an utterance.
Documentation is contradictory on whether a semivowel can be a nucleus without turning into a vowel.