Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
I’m trying to make a new set of sample files for my Brassica sound change applier, to show off its new and improved support for tone. I was thinking that perhaps something Sinitic might work for the purpose.
So, does anyone know of any references about this which I could look at? It could be Middle Chinese to any of the modern varieties, or Old Chinese to Middle Chinese… just as long as it’s something I can extract some sound changes and sample words from. (It doesn’t even need to be Sinitic necessarily, as long as it’s from a tonal family and reasonably comprehensive.)
So, does anyone know of any references about this which I could look at? It could be Middle Chinese to any of the modern varieties, or Old Chinese to Middle Chinese… just as long as it’s something I can extract some sound changes and sample words from. (It doesn’t even need to be Sinitic necessarily, as long as it’s from a tonal family and reasonably comprehensive.)
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
I think you have access to a university library... the info you need will be in Axel Schuessler's Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese (for the Middle Chinese tones-- OC wasn't tonal) and Jerry Norman's Chinese (for the sound changes in the major dialects).bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 10:31 pm So, does anyone know of any references about this which I could look at? It could be Middle Chinese to any of the modern varieties, or Old Chinese to Middle Chinese… just as long as it’s something I can extract some sound changes and sample words from. (It doesn’t even need to be Sinitic necessarily, as long as it’s from a tonal family and reasonably comprehensive.)
Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Thanks!zompist wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 10:48 pmI think you have access to a university library... the info you need will be in Axel Schuessler's Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese (for the Middle Chinese tones-- OC wasn't tonal) and Jerry Norman's Chinese (for the sound changes in the major dialects).bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 10:31 pm So, does anyone know of any references about this which I could look at? It could be Middle Chinese to any of the modern varieties, or Old Chinese to Middle Chinese… just as long as it’s something I can extract some sound changes and sample words from. (It doesn’t even need to be Sinitic necessarily, as long as it’s from a tonal family and reasonably comprehensive.)
(And I do have access to a university library, yes.)
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Great! Just to save you some time, some key bits:bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 10:52 pmThanks!zompist wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 10:48 pm I think you have access to a university library... the info you need will be in Axel Schuessler's Etymological Dictionary of Old Chinese (for the Middle Chinese tones-- OC wasn't tonal) and Jerry Norman's Chinese (for the sound changes in the major dialects).
(And I do have access to a university library, yes.)
1. Schuessler's entries have the modern Mandarin as a keyword, followed by the MC in parentheses.
2. MC had four tones, A B C D. The dictionary leaves A unmarked, but gives B and C. If the word ends in a stop, it's D, also unmarked.
3. The sound changes from MC to the modern dialects are given in Norman, in the Dialects chapters. They are mostly pretty simple.
4. The first stage was a division into upper and lower tones-- thus the 4 tones become 8. 1/2 = A, 3/4 = B, etc.
5. Thus Norman will refer to MC tone 1 to 8 and give their modern tone contours.
6. Mandarin tones are a mess, largely because tone D could go to any of the four modern tones. The other dialects are much more well-behaved.
Wikipedia actually has the same info as Norman (the tone correspondences)... well, I assume they're about the same, I haven't compared them. Where you'd need Schuessler is actually getting examples.
It looks like Wiktionary has MC reconstructions too... multiple ones, in fact. Just be consistent in which one you use.
Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Most of this I’m already aware of, actually, but thanks for the summary!zompist wrote: ↑Tue Sep 24, 2024 12:34 am 2. MC had four tones, A B C D. The dictionary leaves A unmarked, but gives B and C. If the word ends in a stop, it's D, also unmarked.
3. The sound changes from MC to the modern dialects are given in Norman, in the Dialects chapters. They are mostly pretty simple.
4. The first stage was a division into upper and lower tones-- thus the 4 tones become 8. 1/2 = A, 3/4 = B, etc.
5. Thus Norman will refer to MC tone 1 to 8 and give their modern tone contours.
6. Mandarin tones are a mess, largely because tone D could go to any of the four modern tones. The other dialects are much more well-behaved.
(I’m reading through Norman now, and enjoying it a lot. I’ll find a copy of Schuessler’s dictionary if Norman doesn’t give sufficient examples.)
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
I’ve read through most of Norman now. As far as I can tell, it doesn’t actually have many sound changes. For Min initials, he even says outright that ‘no attempt is made to indicate diachronic correspondences’ (p264). So I don’t think this will work for the purposes of a sample sound change file (which needs to be able to evolve protoforms to current forms). I’ll have a look at Schuessler next.
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
I have noticed some inconsistency in the application of American/Canadian Raising* to German names/loans in the dialect here. Take the following:
* The dialect here has weak allophonic raising of /aʊ/ from [ɑɔ̯] to [ʌ̆ŏ̯], which strictly speaking makes it have Canadian Raising, but in general it patterns with American dialects more than Canadian dialect with regard to raising.
- [əe̯]senhower
- H[ae̯]ser (a car dealership here in the Milwaukee area)
- H[ae̯]senberg
- [ae̯]~[əe̯]genvalue, [ae̯]~[əe̯]genvector
- Schn[əe̯]der
- T[ăĕ̯]~[ə̆ĕ̯]tonia
* The dialect here has weak allophonic raising of /aʊ/ from [ɑɔ̯] to [ʌ̆ŏ̯], which strictly speaking makes it have Canadian Raising, but in general it patterns with American dialects more than Canadian dialect with regard to raising.
Yaaludinuya siima d'at yiseka wohadetafa gaare.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
I thought what you wanted was the changes in tone. All the non-tone changes are going to be a taller order... Schuessler may or may not help, he's more interested in the transition from OC to MC.bradrn wrote: ↑Tue Sep 24, 2024 6:39 am I’ve read through most of Norman now. As far as I can tell, it doesn’t actually have many sound changes. For Min initials, he even says outright that ‘no attempt is made to indicate diachronic correspondences’ (p264). So I don’t think this will work for the purposes of a sample sound change file (which needs to be able to evolve protoforms to current forms). I’ll have a look at Schuessler next.
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Hmm, perhaps. It looks like the relevant book is their Old Chinese: A New Reconstruction (2014).
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
I haven't seen their work, and I would hate to discourage an interest in OC reconstruction, which is fascinating, but this probably takes you away from your original intention: OC was not a tonal language.
Did you see Richard W's post on Thai?
Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
But MC was!zompist wrote: ↑Tue Sep 24, 2024 11:14 pmI haven't seen their work, and I would hate to discourage an interest in OC reconstruction, which is fascinating, but this probably takes you away from your original intention: OC was not a tonal language.
No, where was that?Did you see Richard W's post on Thai?
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Ooh… I had absolutely no idea that was there. Thanks!
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Managed to get access to this book. Let’s see how I go…
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Further on Sinitic, I turned up something very interesting. Apparently the code here is able to predict Mandarin and Cantonese forms from Middle Chinese: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Module:ltc-pron/predict. If only it had references — or, for that matter, any explanation whatsoever…
(The idea is that it’s called by this code to generate Chinese pronunciation tables for Wiktionary: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Module:ltc-pron.)
(The idea is that it’s called by this code to generate Chinese pronunciation tables for Wiktionary: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Module:ltc-pron.)
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
If you want to demo it with Chinese, I'd recommend deciding whether to work with "dialect" material or else with the literary reconstruction tradition, and exclude the other -- just to keep from having apples and oranges gumming up the works when that's not the point of the exercise (IIUC).
Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
I’m not quite sure what you’re talking about here, sorry.fusijui wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 12:40 pm If you want to demo it with Chinese, I'd recommend deciding whether to work with "dialect" material or else with the literary reconstruction tradition, and exclude the other -- just to keep from having apples and oranges gumming up the works when that's not the point of the exercise (IIUC).
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Well, I managed to transcribe this into Brassica notation, and it seems to work, but the result isn’t very revealing. The code uses a big lookup table to convert all the Middle Chinese rhymes into their Mandarin equivalents, so it doesn’t really look like traditional sound changes.bradrn wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 6:31 am Further on Sinitic, I turned up something very interesting. Apparently the code here is able to predict Mandarin and Cantonese forms from Middle Chinese: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Module:ltc-pron/predict. If only it had references — or, for that matter, any explanation whatsoever…
(The idea is that it’s called by this code to generate Chinese pronunciation tables for Wiktionary: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Module:ltc-pron.)
But this causes me to wonder… is it even possible to adequately describe Sinitic evolution with traditional sound changes? Because the nucleus and coda are so tightly bound together, they often seem to evolve as a single unit — yielding, in effect, 160 unconditional sound changes. I made a big table to see if there’s any regularities, but if there are, they seem well-hidden. (e.g. in Standard Mandarin, {*ap,*at}→a, {*ep,*et}→ie… but {*op,*ot}→{a,e}. *jep, *jet, *jop evolve the same as *ep, *et, *op, but *jot gives ie rather than e. And don’t ask me what happens to *it.)
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Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
I suspect that you're seeing that what comes out of the model-- the rhymes-- is what goes into it. If you recall Norman's explanations, the reconstruction is a marrying of the comparative method with the MC analysis of the Qieyun rhyme tables. And all the actual data we have (modern dialect forms, Qieyun groups) is oriented around initials and rhymes.bradrn wrote: ↑Thu Sep 26, 2024 11:50 pm But this causes me to wonder… is it even possible to adequately describe Sinitic evolution with traditional sound changes? Because the nucleus and coda are so tightly bound together, they often seem to evolve as a single unit — yielding, in effect, 160 unconditional sound changes. I made a big table to see if there’s any regularities, but if there are, they seem well-hidden. (e.g. in Standard Mandarin, {*ap,*at}→a, {*ep,*et}→ie… but {*op,*ot}→{a,e}. *jep, *jet, *jop evolve the same as *ep, *et, *op, but *jot gives ie rather than e. And don’t ask me what happens to *it.)
OTOH, there might be deeper patterns if you have the right phonemicization... and Mandarin vowels are not that. Norman offers a phonemic analysis which you might play with; FWIW he thinks Mandarin has no /o/.