If you use "with" instead of "and", the answer to that question should be no. Maybe my chosen wording isn't clear enough.akam chinjir wrote:I almost agree about conjunction, too, though wonder if it's worth also distinguishing "A with B" from the SAE pattern.
It specifically says inflected relative pronouns, so if you have something you think is a relative pronoun but it doesn't inflect, you should say no.akam chinjir wrote:And I feel like "relative pronoun" could use a bit of unpacking, since the definition Haspelmath (and WALS) uses is a bit finicky, and IIRC on the old board plenty of people counted their languages as having relative pronouns when they just had a clause-initial particle (like English "that," not like English "who").
I've noticed that. Very few natlangs were run through the grammar test (as opposed to the phonology test), and none of those with the most recent version on that thread, though, so it's harder to tell what the scores for it mean. FWIW I tried it with English, French, German and Welsh and got 90, 95, 100 and 57 respectively, which might tell us something considering that the first three are SAE and the last isn't. Or it might mean I don't know what I'm talking about.akam chinjir wrote:And maybe worth mentioning that (at least on the old tests) scores on the grammar test were usually significantly lower than on the phonology test---on the phonology test if you got below about 70, you were pretty un-SAE, but not really on the grammar test.
Oops. This used to say "particle comparatives in comparisons of inequality", and some people found this confusing, but you're right -- I did a bad job of clarifying. I've removed "instead of a preposition". I hope it's still obvious what's meant.akam chinjir wrote:Edit: Oh, also, on #7 on the grammar test: word equivalent to "than" in comparisons of inequality instead of a preposition (e.g. English "bigger than an elephant")---that makes it sound like "than"-particles and prepositions are the only two possibilities, but there are other ones.
I don't know if this was intended, but now that you mention it I suppose it does seem a bit unfair to languages with no verbal person marking. According to WALS, marking both A and P is most common worldwide, but the second most common option is no marking. Swedish doesn't mark person, but AFAIK the other SAE languages do, and no marking is surely more common outside Europe.akam chinjir wrote:And #14 no marking of arguments other than the subject on the verb: as worded you get points if you've got no arguments marked on the verb, but I doubt that's intended. marking of the subject but of no other arguments on the verb, maybe?
Probably should get half points. I didn't add this possibility to the code because no half-points options were defined in the original. Some of those would be good.akam chinjir wrote:#10 in the second part only one converb (non-finite subordinate verb), preference for finite subordinate clauses maybe should have one and only one; I'm not sure how I'd weight the two parts of the condition if I had exactly one nonfinite subordinate verb form but used it all over the place.
Ah, you're right. I've credited you.Salmoneus wrote:It was me who originally wrote that phonology test, but I did so off the top of my head without any research or planning, and I've always meant to go back and do it properly. I even got as far as researching a bunch of the questions - comparing suggested generalities against both SAE and non-SAE languages to see which were really distinctive - but I only got a bit of the way through and got bored. I do intend to go back and finish it, but...
I think that's a record.Birdlang wrote:a 0 in grammar
I would say this is definitely not SAE, since SAE languages have at most masculine, feminine and neuter. In the original thread before this question was added, Cedh suggested "Two to four grammatical genders for nouns, causing agreement in pronouns, determiners and adjectives, with a basic distinction masculine vs. feminine being made (half marks if gender is only marked on pronouns)". For some reason, the wording "grammatical sex marking" was adopted instead, which is less clear. My version still doesn't account for the type of use case you mention. Something like Cedh's proposal would be better (do any SAE languages have four genders? I thought they stopped at three -- also not sure about agreement).mèþru wrote:I have a complex noun class system in some conlangs that includes masculine and feminine but also others, so what would I check for that?
This got rather lengthy -- oops.