bradrn wrote: ↑Tue Mar 30, 2021 5:46 amI honestly have no idea what you mean by this paragraph. Why would you need to ‘derive’ adjectives from something else?
There are very few adjectives that just exist and they're usually only interrogatives, demonstratives, or numbers. The rest have to be derived, either from nouns or verbs. That's my entire problem, I don't know what the "pattern" should look like or if it's just verb stem + gender-case ending (which would work better in a lang where adjectives can behave like nouns and vice-versa)
I also had the same problem a while ago. What fixed it was reading more about diachronics — not general books about historical linguistics, that is, but about the specific sound changes which specific languages have gone through.
Oh no, I wasn't talking about generalist books, but books of specific languages, like Akkadian and Tigre, and some other languages of other families.
(Also, I should point out that for triliteral systems, you want to start with a normal system and ‘lay waste’ to it, as you say. Past that point, you can maintain regularity even with massive sound changes, since analogy immediately restores any paradigms which might have been broken. Deutscher’s The Unfolding of Language has a nice explanation if you want one.)
Don't take this the wrong way, but I'm far from a noob regarding triliteral systems or the languages's pervasive vowel mutations and analogizing, and also their limitations. In fact, that book is quite old hat to me now.
There's just no way I can simulate thousands of years of changes without losing my mind or being burnt out. I
do have a general idea of how this or that thing would operate or turn into something else within a triconsonantal system. But I just don't have the imagination to turn something like
kurpaneddakazen "rostrum, dias" or
dapsenadkazen "registry" into something shorter.
But the diachronic wizards on this board and others make such changes seem too easy and thoughtless.