bradrn wrote: ↑Sat Oct 02, 2021 8:11 am
Rounin Ryuuji wrote: ↑Fri Oct 01, 2021 10:34 pm
Unrelatedly, I've realised that those two fantasy languages about which I've been sporadically posting — the Japonic (Ineshîmé, family name: Tinasan) and Oïl (Kokori) ones — as the fiction in which they're set develops, ought to be
internally related to each-other, and there should be at least two other living families (Kidakuran and Noritsuné). This is both enjoyable, and a very tiny bit brain-melting to try and figure out.
If you do manage to reconstruct the common ancestor of Oïl and Japonic (or derived languages thereof), exactly how worried should I get about the reliability of the comparative method?
The easiest correspondence was matching Ineshîmé 朕、朕れ/朕佬 (
ime, imere) with Kokori
moi, me, m', the Ineshîmé form descending from Archaic Tinasan
imĕre, Proto-Tinasan
*ime2-, from
*i "this, here" followed by
*me2, *mo2i (the original derivation is actually
*i "this, here" followed by
*me2ne2 "person, one who is", an apophonic form of *mo
2no
2 "thing" that doesn't appear in real-world Japonic; the form also had an archaic variant 朕身 (
imĕnĕ, which is the expected form, but which is only sparsely attested, leaving no living descendants), also spelled 俺 (which character later just gets used as a variant of 朕, then as its tonic form
imĕŏ >
imyo; the shift of
ĕ >
e in the "base" form is conditioned by the surrounding vowels), and sometimes treated as a pronominal stem, e.g. 俺佬
imĕnĕre...
The
-me2 part would be EASILY recognisable as somehow connected with Archaic Kokori
moi, me, m' (which are graphically, but not phonetically, identical to their modern counterparts).
Getting 吾、吾れ/吾佬 (
wo-, wore) out of a French word was a bit harder, but I did it well enough from a connection to
li gars, li gar (some convenient accidental semantic drift made this word come out meaning "youth, young person" more frequently than "boy"; just reconstruct the protoform as *gwar-əs, and the
*r-əs >
*r-əj >
-re even gives us the Japonic pronominaliser!), and throw in two other languages having it, the close-ish to Tinasan Kidakuran reflexes are
*(g)warəj > *
wajr~wēr > *
jōr : attested 吾 (
iór — "I, me"), and the not that close to other branches of the family Noritsuné
*ɣwarj- >
*hweu~*hyue : 吾
hüe [çɥɛ́ː] "person", to make the semantic relationship appear more plausible (also three of them use the same orthography, while Kokori goes off and innovates a weird idea called an "alphabet" much earlier).
Also, have some anime fantasy Celtic and Sinitic but they're the result of trying to reconcile Japonic and French?
You should probably not be worried, because you couldn't reconcile real-world Celtic and Sinitic to them in this way (probably; I hope) either. Probably not.
Probably...
Probably...