What have you accomplished today?
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
I wrote a post about my word order struggles:
https://chrisintheweeds.com/2023/04/22/ ... ndecision/
https://chrisintheweeds.com/2023/04/22/ ... ndecision/
Re: What have you accomplished today?
congratulations...
- WeepingElf
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
A good presentation, thank you for sharing!
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My conlang pages
My conlang pages
Re: What have you accomplished today?
Same, thanks for sharing. That was a good talk!
Re: What have you accomplished today?
Thank you very much!
Re: What have you accomplished today?
worked on developing what some place names might be in (early) modern gothic, though this is stymied somewhat by unclear info. mostly this is not knowing where the stress is supposed to go (e.g. borrowing /vrotislav/ "wrocław" results in either /vrudizlav/, /vrutizlev/, or /vrodizlev/ depending on the original stress), but there's also questions like whether prague's original /g/ was a stop or a fricative, or when and how the various consonants in szczecin/stettin got palatalized. idk where to look for more details besides wikipedia tbh. on the other hand i'm having fun with sound changes leading to irregular stems between accusative and dative forms (a possibility for plzen is acc /plizo/, dat /plene/, for example), and the slavic grad/gord/gorod is close enough to gothic /gard-/ that i'm just gonna have them substitute the latter for the former when they borrow place names (which ends up becoming a suffix /-herd/)
- Rounin Ryuuji
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
When in doubt, the substitution of similar-sounding native morphemes is always a probability.
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
I think the lenition of /g/ in Czech and other Slavic languages is dated to the high middle ages, a few centuries after the establishment of Prague.
As for the stress of Slavic words, the Proto-Slavic intonation is often recoverable, and we can compare that to modern Polish to see what has and hasn't moved. For Vortislav, the stress would have been on the first syllable, unless I'm wrong about the rules of compound words.
As for the stress of Slavic words, the Proto-Slavic intonation is often recoverable, and we can compare that to modern Polish to see what has and hasn't moved. For Vortislav, the stress would have been on the first syllable, unless I'm wrong about the rules of compound words.
I did it. I made the world's worst book review blog.
Re: What have you accomplished today?
thank you! you wouldn't happen to have any links or resources with more detail, would you?Moose-tache wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 7:24 am I think the lenition of /g/ in Czech and other Slavic languages is dated to the high middle ages, a few centuries after the establishment of Prague.
As for the stress of Slavic words, the Proto-Slavic intonation is often recoverable, and we can compare that to modern Polish to see what has and hasn't moved. For Vortislav, the stress would have been on the first syllable, unless I'm wrong about the rules of compound words.
Re: What have you accomplished today?
I can only jugde based on Russian; there, compounds can have the stress both on the first and the second element. But the personal names in -slav are indeed stressed on the first element.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Wed May 03, 2023 7:24 am For Vortislav, the stress would have been on the first syllable, unless I'm wrong about the rules of compound words.
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
Slavic stress is a controversial area, so I don't know if there is one source to consult. But I remember seeing some of the seminal papers on the topic on academia.org. I would recommend starting there, if Wiktionary/Wikipedia links don't help.
Also, Galician (my Balto-Slavic conlang) was influenced by OTL Gothic, and somewhere I might have a list of believed-to-be-Gothic toponyms, if I can navigate my own notes.
Also, Galician (my Balto-Slavic conlang) was influenced by OTL Gothic, and somewhere I might have a list of believed-to-be-Gothic toponyms, if I can navigate my own notes.
Last edited by Moose-tache on Thu May 04, 2023 8:19 pm, edited 1 time in total.
I did it. I made the world's worst book review blog.
- Man in Space
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
I did my senior capstone project on Slavic stress. Unfortunately I was a very uninspired student so my paper basically amounted to the undergraduate equivalent of a shrug emoji.
Re: What have you accomplished today?
took a break from the gothic project to work on reconstructing some thoughts for a setting i had worked on back in the day but lost the notes for (a socal county jammed in between a separated orange and san diego counties). very pleased with some of these place names, hope to get a map going soon
- doctor shark
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
I like money.
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aka vampireshark
The other kind of doctor.
Perpetually in search of banknote subjects. Inquire within.
The other kind of doctor.
Perpetually in search of banknote subjects. Inquire within.
Re: What have you accomplished today?
Another micronation?
- linguistcat
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
Really an accomplishment over several days, but I found a PDF of The Japanese Language Through Time by Samuel E. Martin, and have been reading through it for useful information. Some of the ideas are a little outdated (it IS from 1987), but I've been able to find several good bits of reference for my Japonic relative conlang and Classical Japanese in general.
A cat and a linguist.
- Rounin Ryuuji
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
Sounds like an interesting read. Do you happen to have a link handy?
- linguistcat
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
https://vdoc.pub/documents/the-japanese ... ns9uutl0l0 I did notice that if you save it, you need to get rid of the period after vdoc in the name (or just rename the file more generally) otherwise the PDF reader will think it's the wrong kind of file.Rounin Ryuuji wrote: ↑Mon May 15, 2023 12:48 pm Sounds like an interesting read. Do you happen to have a link handy?
A cat and a linguist.
- Rounin Ryuuji
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Re: What have you accomplished today?
Thank you!linguistcat wrote: ↑Mon May 15, 2023 6:18 pmhttps://vdoc.pub/documents/the-japanese ... ns9uutl0l0 I did notice that if you save it, you need to get rid of the period after vdoc in the name (or just rename the file more generally) otherwise the PDF reader will think it's the wrong kind of file.Rounin Ryuuji wrote: ↑Mon May 15, 2023 12:48 pm Sounds like an interesting read. Do you happen to have a link handy?