Pedant wrote: ↑Mon Sep 02, 2019 7:00 pm
(Grin) And just how many times have you seen that happen, Mr. Chappell?
The next time will be the first!
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Serious answer; whenever a congrammar includes some feature I still haven’t figured out, I want to see how that conlanger handles it.
So my answer is probably in constant flux.
I do have some long-standing questions/problems/mysteries-to-me.
For instance, what if a language has tritransitive tetravalent verbs, and reciprocalization, and reflexivization?
It seems that, in such a language, there should be six different kinds of reciprocalization and six different kinds of reflexivization.
Assume one of those processes can be applied even after another one has already been applied.
What are the various things that could happen?
For instance, what are the various things that can happen to a tetravalent verb if it’s reflexivized then reciprocalized?
Or reciprocalized then reflexivized?
Or reflexivized then reciprocalized then reflexivized?
Or reciprocalized then reflexivized then reciprocalized?
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There are others.
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Some of them inspire puns.
Whenever someone has serial-verb constructions, I always want them to tell me about Jack the Ripper.
Whenever someone has a switch-reference system, I always want them to explain how the lights are controlled in the long corridor where my office is, that has three switches at each end, and three sets of lights.
And so on,
But my entire brain is pun-based; I think it’s hereditary.
So even my serious ideas start out as puns. I actually have more serious pun-based or chiasm-based or word-play-based ideas posted on these bboards, than attempts at humor. Normally, though, I work on them enough that the roots are hidden by the time I post them.
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Alright, I guess I can probably go out on a limb, and say if a conlang’s lexicon and morphology allows for some good puns, I’ll probably find it engaging.
Or some other good garden-path or punctuation-is-important type jokes, such as mistaken focus, in the syntax and pragmatics and so on.