Travis B. wrote: ↑Sat Aug 16, 2025 11:13 am
(note how Greek ⟨υ⟩ generally maps to a rounded front vowel in StG to this day, even though Kirche is an exception).
Refining that a bit - it's written "y" and pronounced like "ü", but only in learned and modern loans*), not in old nativized loans like Kirche.
*) E.g., even in a modern loan like Gyros, where the German pronuciation is based on the spelling of the transcription from Greek, not on the pronounciation in spoken Greek (which would give something like *Jiros in German).
Travis B. wrote: ↑Sat Aug 16, 2025 11:13 am
(note how Greek ⟨υ⟩ generally maps to a rounded front vowel in StG to this day, even though Kirche is an exception).
Refining that a bit - it's written "y" and pronounced like "ü", but only in learned and modern loans*), not in old nativized loans like Kirche.
*) E.g., even in a modern loan like Gyros, where the German pronuciation is based on the spelling of the transcription from Greek, not on the pronounciation in spoken Greek (which would give something like *Jiros in German).
How do you pronounce Gyros? In the English here it is /ˈjəroʊz/ [ˈjʁ̩ˤːʁˤo̞ːs] outside careful speech, where it is /ˈjiroʊz/ [ˈjiːʁˤo̞ːs]~[ˈjɪːʁˤo̞ːs], even though we spell it gyros (or in the singular often turn it into gyro in everyday speech)?
Travis B. wrote: ↑Sat Aug 16, 2025 11:13 am
(note how Greek ⟨υ⟩ generally maps to a rounded front vowel in StG to this day, even though Kirche is an exception).
Refining that a bit - it's written "y" and pronounced like "ü", but only in learned and modern loans*), not in old nativized loans like Kirche.
*) E.g., even in a modern loan like Gyros, where the German pronuciation is based on the spelling of the transcription from Greek, not on the pronounciation in spoken Greek (which would give something like *Jiros in German).
How do you pronounce Gyros? In the English here it is /ˈjəroʊz/ [ˈjʁ̩ˤːʁˤo̞ːs] outside careful speech, where it is /ˈjiroʊz/ [ˈjiːʁˤo̞ːs]~[ˈjɪːʁˤo̞ːs], even though we spell it gyros (or in the singular often turn it into gyro in everyday speech)?
['gyːʀɔs], though some people say ['giːʀɔs]. This is of course a spelling pronunciation - is is more or less what a word spelled Gyros is expected to sound like in German, no matter what the Greeks actually call it.
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WeepingElf wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 7:18 pm
Not really. The standard pronunciation is ['kiɐçə], but many speakers either front the [k] or retract the [i] slightly.
I thought /k/ was generally aspirated in StG.
It is, people just normally don't notice it because that's how /k/ is pronounced; that's why Germans also forget to notate it when using IPA. That said, there are German regiolects without aspiration; maybe Elf speaks one of those.
Travis B. wrote: ↑Sat Aug 16, 2025 11:13 am
(note how Greek ⟨υ⟩ generally maps to a rounded front vowel in StG to this day, even though Kirche is an exception).
Refining that a bit - it's written "y" and pronounced like "ü", but only in learned and modern loans*), not in old nativized loans like Kirche.
*) E.g., even in a modern loan like Gyros, where the German pronuciation is based on the spelling of the transcription from Greek, not on the pronounciation in spoken Greek (which would give something like *Jiros in German).
How do you pronounce Gyros? In the English here it is /ˈjəroʊz/ [ˈjʁ̩ˤːʁˤo̞ːs] outside careful speech, where it is /ˈjiroʊz/ [ˈjiːʁˤo̞ːs]~[ˈjɪːʁˤo̞ːs], even though we spell it gyros (or in the singular often turn it into gyro in everyday speech)?
While over in Britain noöne knows how to pronounce it. Wiktionary lists 6 forms¹ from straight up spelling pronunciations /ɡajrəwz/² (Plural of gyro) to the quite-accurate-to-the-Greek /jɪjrəws/. I have /jɪjrɔs~ʒɪjrɔs³/ myself, neither of which is listed.
¹ Which all sound okay to me, although I can't vouch for having heard them all in the wild
² All IPA renotated to my SSBE
³ Either an attempt at [ʝ], or a hyperforeignism
LZ – Lēri Ziwi
PS – Proto Sāzlakuic (ancestor of LZ)
PRk – Proto Rākēwuic
XI – Xú Iạlan
VN – verbal noun
SUP – supine
DIRECT – verbal directional
My language stuff
WeepingElf wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 7:18 pm
Not really. The standard pronunciation is ['kiɐçə], but many speakers either front the [k] or retract the [i] slightly.
I thought /k/ was generally aspirated in StG.
It is, people just normally don't notice it because that's how /k/ is pronounced; that's why Germans also forget to notate it when using IPA. That said, there are German regiolects without aspiration; maybe Elf speaks one of those.
That's what I was wondering about -- does the regiolect where Elf is from lack aspiration, or did he just simply neglect to mark it?
hwhatting wrote: ↑Sun Aug 17, 2025 5:20 am
Refining that a bit - it's written "y" and pronounced like "ü", but only in learned and modern loans*), not in old nativized loans like Kirche.
*) E.g., even in a modern loan like Gyros, where the German pronuciation is based on the spelling of the transcription from Greek, not on the pronounciation in spoken Greek (which would give something like *Jiros in German).
How do you pronounce Gyros? In the English here it is /ˈjəroʊz/ [ˈjʁ̩ˤːʁˤo̞ːs] outside careful speech, where it is /ˈjiroʊz/ [ˈjiːʁˤo̞ːs]~[ˈjɪːʁˤo̞ːs], even though we spell it gyros (or in the singular often turn it into gyro in everyday speech)?
While over in Britain noöne knows how to pronounce it. Wiktionary lists 6 forms¹ from straight up spelling pronunciations /ɡajrəwz/² (Plural of gyro) to the quite-accurate-to-the-Greek /jɪjrəws/. I have /jɪjrɔs~ʒɪjrɔs³/ myself, neither of which is listed.
¹ Which all sound okay to me, although I can't vouch for having heard them all in the wild
² All IPA renotated to my SSBE
³ Either an attempt at [ʝ], or a hyperforeignism
I'm surprised that I haven't heard someone pronounce it something like /ˈdʒəɪroʊz/ considering how apt people here are to spelling-pronounce loans according to English spelling...
Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 11:30 amI'm surprised that I haven't heard someone pronounce it something like /ˈdʒəɪroʊz/ considering how apt people here are to spelling-pronounce loans according to English spelling...
Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 11:30 amI'm surprised that I haven't heard someone pronounce it something like /ˈdʒəɪroʊz/ considering how apt people here are to spelling-pronounce loans according to English spelling...
Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Aug 18, 2025 11:30 amI'm surprised that I haven't heard someone pronounce it something like /ˈdʒəɪroʊz/ considering how apt people here are to spelling-pronounce loans according to English spelling...
That is how I say gyro as in “gyroscope”.
Same here.
And of course, the words are related.
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I was looking at Zompist's page on Flaidish and came across this sentence:
ʔok garse ʔelzichpo, ʔok ʔozse festpo ʔaax
I if-ONG disobey-PART, I get-ONG paint-PART blue If I disobeyed, I'd be painted blue
Memorable enough in itself, the sentence also made me wonder about the syntactic role of "blue", or generally of Y in phrases like "to make X Y". If I had to guess, I would say it's an adverbial, but it doesn't really modify the verb - it sounds more like an argument of it. Does anyone more knowledgeable on syntax have a definite answer?
Flau wrote: ↑Wed Aug 20, 2025 11:57 am
I was looking at Zompist's page on Flaidish and came across this sentence:
ʔok garse ʔelzichpo, ʔok ʔozse festpo ʔaax
I if-ONG disobey-PART, I get-ONG paint-PART blue If I disobeyed, I'd be painted blue
Memorable enough in itself, the sentence also made me wonder about the syntactic role of "blue", or generally of Y in phrases like "to make X Y". If I had to guess, I would say it's an adverbial, but it doesn't really modify the verb - it sounds more like an argument of it. Does anyone more knowledgeable on syntax have a definite answer?
IIRC, in English grammar this is generally called ‘secondary predication’.
EDIT: actually, that’s something slightly different. Looking more closely at your examples, those are just ordinary ditransitive verbs taking two objects.