What have you accomplished today?

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Emily
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Emily »

figured out the basics of a phoneme inventory for an alien species with a bigger mouth than humans so i can use the resulting conlang for background text in a series of comedy sketch videos i'll probably never make (42 vowels and 93 consonants 💀💀💀)
bradrn
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by bradrn »

Emily wrote: Fri Jun 21, 2024 1:41 pm figured out the basics of a phoneme inventory for an alien species with a bigger mouth than humans
You can’t just say something interesting like that and then not give us any details!
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Emily
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Emily »

so it's maybe not the most scientifically accurate whatever whatever. basically their mouths are longer front to back than ours, and there's a ridge midway towards the back that essentially divides the mouth more or less in half. so there's essentially two palates and two velums. also they have two windpipes and two glottises, because why not. so front to back you have:
  • labial
  • labiodental
  • dental
  • alveolar
  • postalveolar
  • anteriopalatal
  • anteriovelar
  • protuberal (directly on the ridge itself)
  • posteriopalatal
  • posterovelar
  • uvular
  • anterioglottal
  • posterioglottal
two glottises means three levels of voicing instead of two: unvoiced, half-voiced (voicing through one glottis), and fully voiced (through both glottises). i had to do a unicode deep dive just to grab usable symbols for half of these sounds lol

the vowels aren't quite as elaborate, but i have basically five primary levels of frontness instead of three, although i'm only using all 5 for higher vowels

writeup is on anthologica (work in progress obviously)
Creyeditor
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Creyeditor »

Does two glottises also mean two f0? So two pitch levels?
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Man in Space
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Man in Space »

Creyeditor wrote: Sat Jun 22, 2024 10:15 am Does two glottises also mean two f0? So two pitch levels?
Default overtone singing? I hope so!
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WeepingElf
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by WeepingElf »

Man in Space wrote: Sun Jun 23, 2024 3:20 am
Creyeditor wrote: Sat Jun 22, 2024 10:15 am Does two glottises also mean two f0? So two pitch levels?
Default overtone singing? I hope so!
In the German D&D-like fantasy RPG Das Schwarze Auge, Elves are characterized as having "two voices". My Elves are of course a different race and have normal human vocal tracts, but some people believe them to have two voices - which is just a mistaken account of overtone singing, an art practiced by the Elves.
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Ahzoh
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Ahzoh »

Tentatively decided the mediopassive will be indicated by the prefix si- and the stem vowel changes to -u-

Realis / Irrealis / Jussive
si-pruḫ- / -si-pruḫ- / si-pruḫ-u-
si-parruḫ- / -s-parruḫ- / si-parruḫ-u-

Thus:
sipruḫni "I was spoken to"
nasipruḫni "I may/will be spoken to"
tasipruḫni "I shall be spoken to"
yasipruḫni "I would have been spoken to"
sipruḫunni "I must be spoken to"
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linguistcat
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by linguistcat »

I have hashed out the phonology and syllable restraints for a naming language I've been meaning to work on. And as a bonus, if I dislike anything (like, since I plan to use it in a story, if I can't make a good Romanization for it), I can always make changes and count it as the proto-lang for the official book language.

/m n ŋ/
/p b t d k g ?/
/ts dz/
/ɸ β s z ɕ ʑ h/
/r l/
/w j/
Q (long form)

/i y u/
/e ø o/
/a ɶ ɑ/
as well as long versions

consonant clusters
l/r/s/t/w/j+any -h
z/d/n+voiced
h+unvoiced
Q+any -(?, h, w, j)

diphthongs (will almost certainly reduce these)
iy, iu, ie, iø, io, ia
ye, yø, yɶ
ui, ue, uo, uɑ
ei, ey, eu
øi, øy, oi, ou
ai, ay, au, ɶy, ɑu

syllable structure
generally (C)V(T)(Q), word final (C)V(T) where C is any consonant, V is any vowel/long vowel or allowed diphthong, T is any of n/t/d/s/z/h/w/j, and Q causes lengthening in the following consonant, if applicable, and disappears if not.

I was shooting for something between Japanese and Finnish, which considering their similarities is a bit of a thin line to walk. I want to keep tone or stress very simple, but I haven't decided if I'm leaning toward Japanese of Finnish on that one. But for name creation I don't think it's much of a concern. I do have ideas for how I'll Romanize things, but it's going to involve diacritics to avoid a situation where /j/ is <j> and /y/ is <y> because most English speakers would pronounce those /d̠ʒ/ and /j/ respectively. This is the first real attempt at a conlanging project I've started in a while, but I think it's working well so far.
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Imralu
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Imralu »

Man in Space wrote: Sun Jun 23, 2024 3:20 am
Creyeditor wrote: Sat Jun 22, 2024 10:15 am Does two glottises also mean two f0? So two pitch levels?
Default overtone singing? I hope so!
With two glottises that act independently, it wouldn't just be overtones that could be produced. Overtones are multiples of the fundamental frequency (f0) and with overtone singing, all that is happening is that the singer is allowing certain frequency ranges to resonate very loudly, meaning that we hear certain overtones more than others. Two glottises could generate two fundamental frequencies (each of which would have its own overtones). They could sing and speak in chords!
Glossing Abbreviations: COMP = comparative, C = complementiser, ACS / ICS = accessible / inaccessible, GDV = gerundive, SPEC / NSPC = (non-)specific, A/ₐ = agent, E/ₑ = entity (person or thing)
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spindlestar
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by spindlestar »

i sat down last night and forced myself to algorithmically generate a small initial lexicon that is, deliberately, phonotactically ugly as hell, no tinkering with sound changes allowed yet. so far i have managed to avoid getting distracted until 3am by fiddling with the phonotactics and instead got distracted until 3am by trying to find my old lecture notes on x-bar theory... BUT tiny speedlang now has a basic syntax, so task failed successfully! thanks a ton to Emily especially for your advice :D
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doctor shark
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by doctor shark »

Completed today.
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hwhatting
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by hwhatting »

What language are the colour terms in?
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doctor shark
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by doctor shark »

hwhatting wrote: Fri Jul 05, 2024 3:53 am What language are the colour terms in?
Telèmor! ASE refers to asseur, or azure/light blue; VAR is varço, or black. (Other common colors would be TER/terașto for brown; ARE/areiro for blond; ALB/albo for white/gray; VIR/virtar for green; and ÇAV/çavu for bald.)
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doctor shark
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

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Also accomplished today.
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Emily
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Emily »

realized there's no attested gothic word for "wheel" which is a pretty important word to have in modern gothic. so i looked into the proto-germanic words for it, which there seem to be two of: the one that let to german "Rad" and the one that led to english "wheel". the one for "wheel" is the more common reflex among the daughters, which would initially lead me to go with the other one (giving me gothic *raþ) since part of the fun is seeing how i can make the language atypical compared to the other german languages. but then i saw that wiktionary claims that the plural of pg *hwehwlą was *hweulō which descends from an IE collective noun. these forms would give a gothic singular stem of *ƕaíƕl- and a plural stem of *ƕiul-. now that's fun! certainly more so than just going with the same root as german instead of as english. so after looking at the sound changes it looks like the singular vs plural roots would be:
  • middle gothic: fɔvl- vs vwal-
  • early modern gothic: fovl- vs vol-
  • modern gothic: fovl- vs vɒl-
now the question is, do i have these divergent roots remain the singular and plural stems, or do i have one of them change the meaning and the other one regularize? for example, fovl- could come to mean "rudder, crank" and the presumably more common root vɒl- could become the only root for "wheel". alternatively vɒl- as the plural could come to mean vehicle (like we see today where someone's car could be called "wheels"), and the singular root fovl- could regularize into the plural. decisions, decisions!!!
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Zju »

You could make it a difference of register: official speech keeps the old distinction, whereas colloquial speech has e.g. fovl- 'bicycle' vs vɒl- 'wheel'
/j/ <j>

Ɂaləɂahina asəkipaɂə ileku omkiroro salka.
Loɂ ɂerleku asəɂulŋusikraɂə seləɂahina əɂətlahɂun əiŋɂiɂŋa.
Hərlaɂ. Hərlaɂ. Hərlaɂ. Hərlaɂ. Hərlaɂ. Hərlaɂ. Hərlaɂ.
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Raholeun
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Raholeun »

Emily wrote: Wed Jul 24, 2024 1:30 pm
  • middle gothic: fɔvl- vs vwal-
  • early modern gothic: fovl- vs vol-
  • modern gothic: fovl- vs vɒl-
now the question is, do i have these divergent roots remain the singular and plural stems, or do i have one of them change the meaning and the other one regularize? for example, fovl- could come to mean "rudder, crank" and the presumably more common root vɒl- could become the only root for "wheel". alternatively vɒl- as the plural could come to mean vehicle (like we see today where someone's car could be called "wheels"), and the singular root fovl- could regularize into the plural. decisions, decisions!!!
The sky is the limit really. Perhaps even vɒl- becomes interpreted as a plurale tantum meaning 'cart, vehicle', while the singular form is lost to obscurity and perhaps only encountered as a cranberry morpheme.

Today, I converted the pseudo-code to amateurishly formulated, but legitimate rules for Brassica. For the most part it does not take into account features, nor does it work with the paradigm builder just yet, but there is progress.
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Arzena »

Worked on elevation maps for my conworld, Enumene.
Deep in the human unconscious is a pervasive need for a logical universe that makes sense. But the real universe is always one step beyond logic.

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xxx
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by xxx »

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I saw this week this painting about the miraculous gift of the Breton language,
and I couldn't help but see in it the miraculous gift of conlang...
Ahzoh
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Re: What have you accomplished today?

Post by Ahzoh »

Working on collapsible grammar tables on FrathWiki:
https://www.frathwiki.com/User:Ahzoh#WIP_Verb_System
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