None, I'd say. They're accidental errors in language production, at a stage cognition is no longer a part of it.Man in Space wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2024 5:06 pmWhat implications do spoonerisms have for cognitive theories of language?
JAL
None, I'd say. They're accidental errors in language production, at a stage cognition is no longer a part of it.Man in Space wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2024 5:06 pmWhat implications do spoonerisms have for cognitive theories of language?
I'd disagree, but only mildly. Mistakes can be revealing about underlying mechanisms. E.g. they might be evidence that the brain is aware of word boundaries. Spoonerisms are not just random interchange of two phonemes, but an interchange at word boundaries.keenir wrote: ↑Wed Aug 14, 2024 12:02 amThe implication that we all make mistakes? *shrugs*Man in Space wrote: ↑Tue Aug 13, 2024 5:06 pm What implications do spoonerisms have for cognitive theories of language?
I myself have heard, and caught myself unintentionally saying, [ˈɡ̥ɔ̃ʏ̯̃ɾ̃ə(ː)] (this is a disyllable - [ɔ̃ʏ̯̃] here is a diphthong), which I suspect is an innovation derived from going to parallel to gonna.
"Sound Pattern of English"-type analyses of French with underlying word-final consonants and schwa that get deleted on the surface level have been posited. I don't know whether they're still most common in terms of technical theories. Personally, I find some aspects of these analyses about as unconvincing as the SPoE-style analyses of English night as underlying /niht/, or giraffe as underlying /giraffe/, etc.Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2024 11:46 am French question - how is French liaison typically analyzed? Is it generally posited that the final consonants are in the underlying forms of words that have them, and are elided except before another vowel, or is it generally posited that word-final morphemes have two allomorphs, which are selected based upon with follows them?
The problem with the vowel-initial allomorphy approach as I'd see it is that then it would require both vowel-initial allomorphy and final allomorphy to exist in the same system, which seems less parsimonious than having just final allomorphy, which is by no means incompatible with primarily grammatically-conditioned liaisons. I agree with you that a "Sound Pattern of French" approach is not viable in practice.Estav wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2024 2:42 pm"Sound Pattern of English"-type analyses of French with underlying word-final consonants and schwa that get deleted on the surface level have been posited. I don't know whether they're still most common in terms of technical theories. Personally, I find some aspects of these analyses about as unconvincing as the SPoE-style analyses of English night as underlying /niht/, or giraffe as underlying /giraffe/, etc.Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Aug 26, 2024 11:46 am French question - how is French liaison typically analyzed? Is it generally posited that the final consonants are in the underlying forms of words that have them, and are elided except before another vowel, or is it generally posited that word-final morphemes have two allomorphs, which are selected based upon with follows them?
One interpretation you didn't mention, but that I've seen discussed at least as a possible model of initial acquisition, is that at least some liaisons are a matter of vowel-initial words having multiple allomorphs (one starting with /z/, one starting with /n/, etc.) selected based on their context / what precedes them.
Obligatory liaisons are mostly grammatically conditioned, in some cases in ways that resemble Celtic "consonant mutations". Obligatory plural /z/ in particular seems to clearly show strong attachment to the following word in ways that makes the orthography-based interpretation of it as a word-final consonant not especially convincing compared to an alternative interpretation of it as a plural prefix attached to vowel-initial nouns or adjectives in particular grammatical contexts (although I guess you could argue that it is initially acquired as a word-initial consonant, but then gets reinterpreted as a word-final consonant as speakers acquire literacy and develop an adult understanding of the standard language). There are still some restrictions in the use of plural /z/ based on the preceding lexeme, most notably in the case of numerals, but for the most part we find /z/ pretty consistently and obligatorily when a plural vowel-initial noun or adjective immediately follows a determiner.
On the other hand, liaison in some other contexts, such as after singular adjectives, isn't as easily interpreted as involving mutation of the following word. Pairs like beau/bel pretty much have to be analyzed as separate allomorphs of the adjective (unless you go with an extremely abstract, historical-sound-change-based approach that treats l-vocalization and eau-coalescence as a synchronic rule of French phonology, which I haven't seen so far). I believe some analyses connect the liaison variant of adjectives with the feminine version, although they aren't always the same.
All that was just based on my memory, but here's a few links: http://www.llf.cnrs.fr/sites/llf.cnrs.f ... slides.pdf, https://user.uni-frankfurt.de/~cfery/pu ... French.pdf, https://www.iastatedigitalpress.com/psl ... 3707/view/, https://www.ling.upenn.edu/courses/ling620/Liaison.pdf
It still slightly pains me that in the first conlang reconstruction relay in which I participated, I made what I thought were clear mutual influences between adjacent numerals. The other team, of course, immediately noticed them... and started to ponder, over multiple posts, how on earth could they be so phonetically irregular, did they perhaps exhibit a singular example of a reflex of *tʷ, etc etc.
To put effort into making such a detail, to have it completely overlooked and analyzed in a fashion that missed the point...Zju wrote: ↑Thu Sep 05, 2024 1:49 pmIt still slightly pains me that in the first conlang reconstruction relay in which I participated, I made what I thought were clear mutual influences between adjacent numerals. The other team, of course, immediately noticed them... and started to ponder, over multiple posts, how on earth could they be so phonetically irregular, did they perhaps exhibit a singular example of a reflex of *tʷ, etc etc.
I'm probably missing the point here, but wouldn't that be the subconscious trend, at least in part?Man in Space wrote: ↑Wed Sep 04, 2024 7:37 pmIt just occurred to me that Janko is in a unique position to study subconscious (primarily phonological) aesthetic trends in conlang number systems. One wonders if any frequent patterns come up—at the least, in a priori languages.
Whether it’s actually reflective of anything is anyone’s guess, but perhaps something interesting would shake out. Though one thing I can see being a confounding factor is the phonologies themselves—lots of conlangs have /t/; (likely) few, an epiglottal trill.
Yes and no? Those strike me as pretty heavy words for simple concepts, though maybe you can get away with it for 'sit'-- cf. Arabic qa'ada, Russian saditsya, Spanish sentarse, all three syllables. (The latter two are extended by being reflexives, however.)bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Sep 11, 2024 2:08 am I’ve been wondering about the plausibility of some word shapes in my current conlang — especially its verbs, which are often long and phonologically heavy. Even basic verbs like lisŋumŋun ‘see’ and asanmarnir ‘sit’ can reach three or four closed syllables.
Does this kind of thing have any natlang precedent?
Yeah, ‘sit’ is justifiable, I think. ‘see’ is the one I’m more worried about.zompist wrote: ↑Wed Sep 11, 2024 3:36 amYes and no? Those strike me as pretty heavy words for simple concepts, though maybe you can get away with it for 'sit'-- cf. Arabic qa'ada, Russian saditsya, Spanish sentarse, all three syllables. (The latter two are extended by being reflexives, however.)bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Sep 11, 2024 2:08 am I’ve been wondering about the plausibility of some word shapes in my current conlang — especially its verbs, which are often long and phonologically heavy. Even basic verbs like lisŋumŋun ‘see’ and asanmarnir ‘sit’ can reach three or four closed syllables.
Does this kind of thing have any natlang precedent?
Indeed, these both have internal structure, as do all lexical verbs:If there is some internal structure it would be more plausible; after all English has idioms like "take a look at" and "have a seat".
I looked at your verbs post, and it looks like you want very heavy but non-fusional verbs in general. That's fine-- reminds me of Sumerian and Algonquian. A little like Quechua, but in practice Quechua doesn't always make use of everything in its extensive verbal morphology.bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Sep 11, 2024 3:42 am Indeed, these both have internal structure, as do all lexical verbs:
(This is all in the post I linked.)
- lisŋumŋun is root √lis-mŋun ‘related to visual perception’ plus aspectual marker -ŋu- ‘stative’
- asanmarnir is root √asan-rnir ‘related to sitting’ plus aspectual marker -ma- ‘punctual’
Not exactly… what I really wanted is for the verbs to have regular internal structure. (My inspiration was Hebrew binyanim, although this is aspectual rather than transitivity-based.) The heaviness is an unfortunate side-effect of that.zompist wrote: ↑Wed Sep 11, 2024 4:24 amI looked at your verbs post, and it looks like you want very heavy but non-fusional verbs in general. […] If you really like them I'd suggest having some internal etymology (not necessarily available to the speakers).bradrn wrote: ↑Wed Sep 11, 2024 3:42 am Indeed, these both have internal structure, as do all lexical verbs:
(This is all in the post I linked.)
- lisŋumŋun is root √lis-mŋun ‘related to visual perception’ plus aspectual marker -ŋu- ‘stative’
- asanmarnir is root √asan-rnir ‘related to sitting’ plus aspectual marker -ma- ‘punctual’
I don’t really see the resemblance to Sumerian. Algonquian (to my understanding) has a lot of verbs of great specificity, but the most basic verbs are underived and very short. I don’t know much about Quechua.That's fine-- reminds me of Sumerian and Algonquian. A little like Quechua, but in practice Quechua doesn't always make use of everything in its extensive verbal morphology.