Conlang Random Thread
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Re: Conlang Random Thread
I'm willing to bet that things of the "previous" word order hang around later the closer they are to the head of the phrase.
For example, if you have an SOV language where the noun phrase is ( ( adjective ( noun ) ) ) postposition ), the postposition to preposition swap is more likely to happen than the adj-noun to noun-adj swap. Something actually attached to the head of the phrase, like a suffix or clitic, can retain the previous order for milllennia.
For example, if you have an SOV language where the noun phrase is ( ( adjective ( noun ) ) ) postposition ), the postposition to preposition swap is more likely to happen than the adj-noun to noun-adj swap. Something actually attached to the head of the phrase, like a suffix or clitic, can retain the previous order for milllennia.
I did it. I made the world's worst book review blog.
Re: Conlang Random Thread
Why? The explanation I’ve seen is that verbs became treated similarly to second-position clitics and consequently moved from clause-final position to second position, while remaining at the end of the clause when they didn’t move.
Conlangs: Scratchpad | Texts | antilanguage
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Other: Ergativity for Novices
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Software: See http://bradrn.com/projects.html
Other: Ergativity for Novices
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Re: Conlang Random Thread
There's so much weirdness going on with clause order in those languages, that I found it unlikely at first glance. But then again, I might be very wrong.
JAL
Re: Conlang Random Thread
I've come up with a few relics of SOVness or head final ness
*van from *bane is reinterpreted from an inanimate nominative marker to a passive marker which is cliticised to the verb it is also a general descendant of postpositions
The "weak" causative appears *laf from *lapa appears before the verb as a prefix in a sentence which most naturally would come out SOV since it derives from a postposition *pana
In general we have postpositions and not prepositions
1 and 2 object markers precede the verb through this is a retention from the proto language as it already had them as prefixes in these positions
In general postpositioniness.
*van from *bane is reinterpreted from an inanimate nominative marker to a passive marker which is cliticised to the verb it is also a general descendant of postpositions
The "weak" causative appears *laf from *lapa appears before the verb as a prefix in a sentence which most naturally would come out SOV since it derives from a postposition *pana
In general we have postpositions and not prepositions
1 and 2 object markers precede the verb through this is a retention from the proto language as it already had them as prefixes in these positions
In general postpositioniness.
Re: Conlang Random Thread
Other notes
The standard possesive construction in most languages of Marians family is Head + Genitive Pronoun + Possesor this is in imitation of Head + Genitive Preposition + Possessor in the language family which has influenced them
This is influenced by their shift to SVO since pronoun posssessed phrases shifted to head initial more quickly then adpositional phrases and in fact adpositions fronting is not seen in many languages
Marianic and many others even has the forms guitar + 1.sing.gen + father + 1.sg.gen for something like "my father's guitar"
The family (i have a draft of it btw) which influenced this shift also used relational nouns extensively so you get Preposition/Relational noun + (Genitive could go hear) + Noun + (Genitive could also go here in more conservative languages) in related languages through these are generally absent from Marian
Marianic and to a lesser extent other southeastern languages underwent the shift in pronouns and demonstratives of Dative > Genitive > Accusative and also in Southeastern languages shortened versions of these demonstratives as articles. Marian doesn't retain them but some have also undergone shifts in the Instrumental and Locative demonstratives/pronouns
(Also Marianic only distinguishes) case in demonstratives/pronouns
Marian and to some degree other Southeastern languages reduce the original accusative from *na to *a and have extended its usage to animate nouns
The Marianic passive functions as an ergative in many languages another shift from its original function to mark a subject inanimate
SVOness has shifted across the entire east as the human and dwarvish languages have generally shifted to it in more recent times. The catkin languages which have deeply influenced Marian are also in the process of a shift to SVO through some speculate this is due to the influence of the Chienna languages of the Empire of the Sun which are SVO which has began more extensive trade and communication with such languages.
The standard possesive construction in most languages of Marians family is Head + Genitive Pronoun + Possesor this is in imitation of Head + Genitive Preposition + Possessor in the language family which has influenced them
This is influenced by their shift to SVO since pronoun posssessed phrases shifted to head initial more quickly then adpositional phrases and in fact adpositions fronting is not seen in many languages
Marianic and many others even has the forms guitar + 1.sing.gen + father + 1.sg.gen for something like "my father's guitar"
The family (i have a draft of it btw) which influenced this shift also used relational nouns extensively so you get Preposition/Relational noun + (Genitive could go hear) + Noun + (Genitive could also go here in more conservative languages) in related languages through these are generally absent from Marian
Marianic and to a lesser extent other southeastern languages underwent the shift in pronouns and demonstratives of Dative > Genitive > Accusative and also in Southeastern languages shortened versions of these demonstratives as articles. Marian doesn't retain them but some have also undergone shifts in the Instrumental and Locative demonstratives/pronouns
(Also Marianic only distinguishes) case in demonstratives/pronouns
Marian and to some degree other Southeastern languages reduce the original accusative from *na to *a and have extended its usage to animate nouns
The Marianic passive functions as an ergative in many languages another shift from its original function to mark a subject inanimate
SVOness has shifted across the entire east as the human and dwarvish languages have generally shifted to it in more recent times. The catkin languages which have deeply influenced Marian are also in the process of a shift to SVO through some speculate this is due to the influence of the Chienna languages of the Empire of the Sun which are SVO which has began more extensive trade and communication with such languages.
Re: Conlang Random Thread
Marian's endonym is maric aveesi with Aveesi most likely being from proto *abaśi+masi which is "to dance" + "to make" reflexed as *aavi (proto marianic *x from *ś is generally inconsistent in its reflexion of length postconsonantally) and *més respectively when alone. Outside of the cities you reverse the order of these two elements but in the cities ethonological elements always come first. It's alternate name is né kal dekina "the musical speech" from *neiwi kala diheke napawa "dem.f tongue to.make.music create" which derives from its sing songy rhythm created by non phonmeic pitch accent. Words beginning with voiceless consonants have a HHL pitch while words beginning with voiced consonants have a LHH pitch (dialectally you see HLL/LLH and HLL/LHH). There is no sign of its phonemicisation as voiceless stops are lightly aspirated and voiced stops are fully voiced. This pitch accent is shared with most other Marianic languages and some other languages of its family have phonemic pitch accent. If you were wondering why *kal and *mar haven't undergone the chain shift to *o it's because in the former it is before a lateral and in the latter its in contact with a labial.
- linguistcat
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Re: Conlang Random Thread
How likely is it for a language game used for obfuscation in a small population to become it's own language with changes to grammar and separate sound changes from the main language it was based from? Or basically could something go from being actively used to hide the meaning of conversations in one language to developing on it's own into a new language?
I'm thinking stuff more like Cockney Rhyming Slang than Pig Latin, but might include changes similar to the latter as well.
I'm thinking stuff more like Cockney Rhyming Slang than Pig Latin, but might include changes similar to the latter as well.
A cat and a linguist.
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Re: Conlang Random Thread
Maybe Verlan is a good example. I guess it started out as a language game but I feel like a significant portion of French slang and colloquial language vocabulary is derived from it.
- Man in Space
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Re: Conlang Random Thread
You might check out Vietnamese nói lái.linguistcat wrote: ↑Fri Sep 01, 2023 12:06 pm How likely is it for a language game used for obfuscation in a small population to become it's own language with changes to grammar and separate sound changes from the main language it was based from? Or basically could something go from being actively used to hide the meaning of conversations in one language to developing on it's own into a new language?
I'm thinking stuff more like Cockney Rhyming Slang than Pig Latinq, but might include changes similar to the latter as well.
- linguistcat
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Re: Conlang Random Thread
Thanks both of you this gives me a few more options and I'll see what works for my conlang ^^
A cat and a linguist.
Re: Conlang Random Thread
Today I was imagining a language in the vein of Brahui or Albanian, or perhaps Romani or Ossetian, in that it would be either an isolate (or an "isolate within the family"), or geographically far-removed from the rest of its family, having been exposed to many layers of loanwords and profound influence from other languages - but not enough to be considered a mixed language, if only in that no one other language would dominate it enough to be the principal relexifier. Basically it would retain a (very) small core of true inherited reflexes from the ancestor language, both in the basic vocabulary and the grammatical elements, and each layer of loanwords would essentially trace its history by the sound changes they were exposed to. So, rather like Brahui or Albanian but taken to an even greater extreme.
And if I were to give it an actual "in-world" history, I like to imagine that it wouldn't be documented or written down until extremely late, maybe not even until the 20th century, thus making its external history a perplexing matter that has to be reconstructed from internal evidence. And, particularly, it would be amusing if it were an Indo-European language, or a member of some other well-known language family of Eurasia.
And if I were to give it an actual "in-world" history, I like to imagine that it wouldn't be documented or written down until extremely late, maybe not even until the 20th century, thus making its external history a perplexing matter that has to be reconstructed from internal evidence. And, particularly, it would be amusing if it were an Indo-European language, or a member of some other well-known language family of Eurasia.
It is apparently thought that the Äynu language in northwestern China originated as a cryptolect, i.e., a cant or "secret language". The Iban language of Sarawak (see p. 148 in Blust's The Austronesian Languages) also has a number of common lexical items whose semantics appear to be the inverse of cognates in other languages and their shared etymon, e.g. Malay kampoŋ 'hamlet, village' and Iban kampoŋ 'forest never yet cleared', suggesting that these meanings originated as part of a language game, but eventually entered common usage.linguistcat wrote: ↑Fri Sep 01, 2023 12:06 pm How likely is it for a language game used for obfuscation in a small population to become it's own language with changes to grammar and separate sound changes from the main language it was based from? Or basically could something go from being actively used to hide the meaning of conversations in one language to developing on it's own into a new language?
I'm thinking stuff more like Cockney Rhyming Slang than Pig Latin, but might include changes similar to the latter as well.
Re: Conlang Random Thread
Sounds a bit like Bai.missals wrote: ↑Sat Sep 02, 2023 4:03 pm Today I was imagining a language in the vein of Brahui or Albanian, or perhaps Romani or Ossetian, in that it would be either an isolate (or an "isolate within the family"), or geographically far-removed from the rest of its family, having been exposed to many layers of loanwords and profound influence from other languages - but not enough to be considered a mixed language, if only in that no one other language would dominate it enough to be the principal relexifier. Basically it would retain a (very) small core of true inherited reflexes from the ancestor language, both in the basic vocabulary and the grammatical elements, and each layer of loanwords would essentially trace its history by the sound changes they were exposed to. So, rather like Brahui or Albanian but taken to an even greater extreme.
Conlangs: Scratchpad | Texts | antilanguage
Software: See http://bradrn.com/projects.html
Other: Ergativity for Novices
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Software: See http://bradrn.com/projects.html
Other: Ergativity for Novices
(Why does phpBB not let me add >5 links here?)
- linguistcat
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Re: Conlang Random Thread
Thanks! I had forgotten the term cryptolect, and didn't know hardly anything about Austronesian Languages let alone cryptolects of them.missals wrote: ↑Sat Sep 02, 2023 4:03 pmIt is apparently thought that the Äynu language in northwestern China originated as a cryptolect, i.e., a cant or "secret language". The Iban language of Sarawak (see p. 148 in Blust's The Austronesian Languages) also has a number of common lexical items whose semantics appear to be the inverse of cognates in other languages and their shared etymon, e.g. Malay kampoŋ 'hamlet, village' and Iban kampoŋ 'forest never yet cleared', suggesting that these meanings originated as part of a language game, but eventually entered common usage.linguistcat wrote: ↑Fri Sep 01, 2023 12:06 pm How likely is it for a language game used for obfuscation in a small population to become it's own language with changes to grammar and separate sound changes from the main language it was based from? Or basically could something go from being actively used to hide the meaning of conversations in one language to developing on it's own into a new language?
I'm thinking stuff more like Cockney Rhyming Slang than Pig Latin, but might include changes similar to the latter as well.
A cat and a linguist.
Re: Conlang Random Thread
is this where we post stupid joke conlangs we make that don't deserve their own threads or is there somewhere else they should go
Re: Conlang Random Thread
I think anything goes in the random threads. It should be okay to post stupid joke conlangs here.
Re: Conlang Random Thread
You're describing my conlanging habits pretty well, actually Have you checked out the League of Lost Languages (on FrathWiki IIRC)? It had similar interests, but I think with a more 'isolates & lost paleolanguages' focus.missals wrote: ↑Sat Sep 02, 2023 4:03 pm Today I was imagining a language in the vein of Brahui or Albanian, or perhaps Romani or Ossetian, in that it would be either an isolate (or an "isolate within the family"), or geographically far-removed from the rest of its family, having been exposed to many layers of loanwords and profound influence from other languages - but not enough to be considered a mixed language, if only in that no one other language would dominate it enough to be the principal relexifier. Basically it would retain a (very) small core of true inherited reflexes from the ancestor language, both in the basic vocabulary and the grammatical elements, and each layer of loanwords would essentially trace its history by the sound changes they were exposed to. So, rather like Brahui or Albanian but taken to an even greater extreme.
And if I were to give it an actual "in-world" history, I like to imagine that it wouldn't be documented or written down until extremely late, maybe not even until the 20th century, thus making its external history a perplexing matter that has to be reconstructed from internal evidence. And, particularly, it would be amusing if it were an Indo-European language, or a member of some other well-known language family of Eurasia.
I gave up on it long ago, but for a while I was fiddling with a "counter-'Gypsy'" language, carried by Late Egyptian speakers eastward. (Eventually I admitted to myself that I enjoyed the <i>idea</i> of it more than the results. And Coptic just isn't as cool as I thought it would be.)
Re: Conlang Random Thread
all righty then
phonology
C = ɸ β f v θ ð s z ʃ ʒ ʂ ʐ ɕ ʑ ç ʝ x ɣ χ ʁ ħ ʕ h ɦ
S = syllabic versions of C
syllable structure: (C)S(C). S+S can sometimes be found within plain roots, but is much more common at the confluence of root and affix
all phonemes across a root match voicing to each other; all inflection affixes and most derivational affixes assimilate to voicing of root, but some derivational affixes don't
haven't worked out dissimilations to avoid "geminated" consonants but if i were being more serious with this i would
morphology
OAF is generally agglutinating and its inflections are suffixes
nouns
basic structure of a noun is ROOT + NUM + CASE
- sg: ∅
- pl: ɸ/β
- nom: ∅
- voc: x/ɣ
- acc: ç/ʝ
- dat: s/z
- gen: χ/ʁ
- inst: ʃ/ʒ
root ends in | endings | inflection(s) |
S | num | C |
S | case | C |
S | num + case | C + S |
C | num | S |
C | case | S |
C | num + case | S + C |
examples:
/sf̩/ "man" | /ɣ̍z/ "woman" | |
nom sg | sf̩ | ɣ̍z |
nom pl | sf̩ɸ | ɣ̍zβ̩ |
voc sg | sf̩x | ɣ̍zɣ̍ |
voc pl | sf̩ɸx̩ | ɣ̍zβ̩ɣ |
pronouns
pronouns take the same case suffixes as nouns, but the plurals are part of the root
- 1sg: ʃ̩θ
- 1pl excl: ʒ̍ð
- 1pl incl: ʒð̩
- 2sg: x̩f
- 2pl: ɣ̍v
- 3sg animate: s̩χ
- 3pl animate: z̩ʁ
- 3sg inanimate: ʂ̍χ
- 3pl inanimate: ʐ̍ʁ
there are no articles
verbs conjugate for tense/mood only, not for person or number
- past: f/v
- present: ∅
- future: θ/ð
- imperative: ʂ/ʐ
the basic word order is SVO. adjectives precede the noun, and do not inflect unless they are standing in for a noun (e.g. "red" meaning "the red one").
there are no participles. relative clauses immediately follow the head noun. they begin with the uninflected particle /h̩s/ (glossed below as "that") followed by an inflected pronoun, then the remainder of the clause:
- "i killed the man (who) i saw" (/ɕx̩θ/ "kill", /ʒɣ̍/ "see"):
- ʃ̩θ ɕx̩θf̩ sf̩ç h̩s s̩χç̍ ʃ̩θ ʒɣ̍v
- 1SG kill-PAST man-ACC that 3SG.ANIM-ACC 1SG see-PAST
- "i killed the man who saw me":
- ʃ̩θ ɕx̩θf̩ sf̩ç h̩s s̩χ ʒɣ̍v ʃ̩θç̍
- 1SG kill-PAST man-ACC that 3SG.ANIM see-PAST 1SG-ACC
- Man in Space
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Re: Conlang Random Thread
I have found an amusing plural in Old Central Tim Ar:
jiarâhi /xi̯aˈɹɨhi/ pl. ogerâng /oˈgeɹɨŋ/ 'province'
This is entirely regular, through sound change.
jiarâhi /xi̯aˈɹɨhi/ pl. ogerâng /oˈgeɹɨŋ/ 'province'
This is entirely regular, through sound change.
- WeepingElf
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