Who knows, maybe a second Miracle of the Translation is in store

Who knows, maybe a second Miracle of the Translation is in store
Sign me up! Though I’ll happily remain in this cosy beriludo for now.Arzena wrote: ↑Tue Apr 16, 2024 3:03 pmWho knows, maybe a second Miracle of the Translation is in storebarring that perhaps karmic threads will lead you to reincarnation in Verduria City: enda dzu ez orap ez e, after all
I think this is overly cynical. I’ve seen plenty of academics who just have no idea how to write well, because they never learnt. In my view, the use of technical terms is adequately explained by a combination of conlangs being simpler than natlangs, conlangers being less familiar with linguistic theories, and academics being poor writers.Glass Half Baked wrote: ↑Sun Apr 28, 2024 11:11 pm I think you all have missed the main reason congrammars are written in plain terms. The conlanger is trying to communicate, while the linguist is trying to prove to their employer that they are on the cutting edge of their field.
Ah, but the initial post was about it not being used to mean ‘low agency subject’! Instead, it was about zompist using it to mean ‘intransitive subject’, which is not its usual meaning. (Though as I said at the beginning, I’m pretty sure I’ve seen it used that way before.)As for Zompist's use of "experiencer," I think this is an acceptable shorthand for "low agency subject." Either way, it is outrageous flattery to suggest he is the origin of the confusion between these two linguistic concepts.
I rarely ever agree with xxx, but they have a point there. Natural languages were created by human beings, after all, so you could interpret them as a form of collaborative conlangs.
I think there’s a fundamental and very important difference: natural languages have evolved under the process of normal language transmission, whereas conlangs have not. Even collaborative conlangs have not undergone this process. Perhaps Esperanto may become similar to natlangs which have undergone interrupted transmission, but that’s not the case for most conlangs.
I'd say that the difference is in degree rather than in kind, as with so many other things.bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 6:44 amI think there’s a fundamental and very important difference: natural languages have evolved under the process of normal language transmission, whereas conlangs have not. Even collaborative conlangs have not undergone this process. Perhaps Esperanto may become similar to natlangs which have undergone interrupted transmission, but that’s not the case for most conlangs.
It's true of most languages, but why is this fundamental or important?
Esperanto has developed in the 147 years since its creation. A.Z.Foreman used to have a good introduction to the changes, but sadly it's gone from his blog.Perhaps Esperanto may become similar to natlangs which have undergone interrupted transmission, but that’s not the case for most conlangs.
I’d also say that some conlangs try to simulate the effects of ‘normal language transmission’, while others have no interest in it.WeepingElf wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 6:48 amI'd say that the difference is in degree rather than in kind, as with so many other things.bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Apr 29, 2024 6:44 amI think there’s a fundamental and very important difference: natural languages have evolved under the process of normal language transmission, whereas conlangs have not. Even collaborative conlangs have not undergone this process. Perhaps Esperanto may become similar to natlangs which have undergone interrupted transmission, but that’s not the case for most conlangs.
People making naturalistic conlangs are, well, trying to be naturalistic. Often that means simulating natural changes. E.g. you take a word list, run it through some plausible sound changes, and see what havoc that does to your morphology. That in turn suggests changes to the syntax. All this is pretty similar to how languages do change.
Sure they do. We call it "borrowing."People don't intentionally fiddle with morphemes and syntax, not with the intention of how their language "should" look like a couple of generations down the line.
Indeed, most conlangs try to be as close to natlangs as possible. That doesn't mean the development of natlangs and the development of conlangs are the same thing.People making naturalistic conlangs are, well, trying to be naturalistic. Often that means simulating natural changes. E.g. you take a word list, run it through some plausible sound changes, and see what havoc that does to your morphology. That in turn suggests changes to the syntax. All this is pretty similar to how languages do change.
Those are two approaches to conlanging. The analogy for natlang development is to map out some unknown terrain.It's like two people creating maps. One just draws rivers and coastlines "out of their own head". The other builds a model from sand, randomizes the heights a bit, and drips water onto it, letting the water find it own paths, and letting the resulting collected pools be the ocean. Are the water features of the second map "created consciously"? Only indirectly.
Individual morphemes and pieces of syntax are borrowed occasionally, yes. And has this borrowing occurred because:
I don't say they're the same thing, only that it's not as clear-cut as people here are saying.Zju wrote: ↑Sat May 04, 2024 4:51 pmIndeed, most conlangs try to be as close to natlangs as possible. That doesn't mean the development of natlangs and the development of conlangs are the same thing.People making naturalistic conlangs are, well, trying to be naturalistic. Often that means simulating natural changes. E.g. you take a word list, run it through some plausible sound changes, and see what havoc that does to your morphology. That in turn suggests changes to the syntax. All this is pretty similar to how languages do change.
These are just neutral and emotive restatements of the same thing.zompist wrote: ↑Sat May 04, 2024 4:33 pm 1) Speakers of that language have been influenced by a superstratum language for a long time and just tend to use features of the superstratum instead of the respective native features because of immersion and mixup?
or
2) Because they individually or collectively thought: "Hey, our language should have such and such features in the future. So let's borrow them!"
Except that if you say that drawing an invented character is an analogy to conlanging, then the analogy to natlang development is a face of a baby developing to a face of an adult. (and not drawing faces from life)To me this sounds like someone saying it's a totally different thing to draw faces from life, and to draw invented characters, so we should strictly separate "natfaces" and "confaces."
How so? (more precisely, how is superstratum influence the same thing as mindful borrowing with the intent to change one's native language in a specific direction?)These are just neutral and emotive restatements of the same thing.
What do you think superstratum influence is? You're repeating a technical term as if it's a mechanism, and forgetting that languages are spoken by human beings with minds.
Because the intent to sound cool or prestigious is a different (kind of) intent than the intent to conlang.Why do you think it's not made "with the intent to change one's native language"?
Exactly, and the process of hundreds of instances of speakers being swayed by this substratum or that neighbouring language is a different process than a conlanger fancying up a new conlang and all its aspects.But when hundreds of terms or constructions all go in the same direction, when the source of the borrowings is widely viewed as cooler... well, that's what having a superstatum language means.