There was that one tribe in southwestern Alaska that spread out so much that they came to have different names for their groups. The government set up a conference of all the tribal leaders. They debated for hours but they couldnt agree on which name should take precedence over the others. At the end of the meeting the transcriber opened the door and asked, "So, I need to write down the official tribal name. What have you decided to call yourselves?" But the eldest tribal leader informed the man that they still could not agree on a name, and then said "oh, I dont know .... you pick."
I found an amazing website with a bunch of freely accessible linguistics books, including a number of grammars. But I got a shock when I found a book called The Ik language: Dictionary and grammar sketch! At first I thought it was a conlang, but amazingly enough the language turns out to be real — it’s a Kuliak language from Uganda. Anyway, I found the name quite amusing, even if it isn’t terribly notable in the scheme of things.
Huh, there's a language associated with that place. In Europa Universalis IV there's an achievement called "laughing stock", which you get if you conquer the three provinces of Haha, Hehe and Lolland.
Nachtswalbe wrote: ↑Fri Sep 25, 2020 1:38 pm
Rotokas because it should be pronounced as <Dotokat>
it's /doto/ 'red mud' + /kati/ "burn, build a fire" (i.e. "paint-cookers"), a recent coinage (calqued from some coastal language) replacing the earlier endonym /asigoao/ - not sure about allophony in Rotokas but the related Konua has /ti/ > [s̩] / _#