a template for producing CV line items. apply theory A to language B, publish, hey presto! you're "doing" "research"
noIs it something worth learning?
a template for producing CV line items. apply theory A to language B, publish, hey presto! you're "doing" "research"
noIs it something worth learning?
I may have a healthy skepticism of linguistic theories, but this strikes me as a little too cynical. There’s at least some interesting stuff in OT, and I think the basic idea of studying cross-linguistic phonological constraints is a worthy one.Nortaneous wrote: ↑Sun Feb 04, 2024 12:16 pma template for producing CV line items. apply theory A to language B, publish, hey presto! you're "doing" "research"
Thanks! (that's the answer I wanted)
IMO some of the constraints are interesting (conlangers especially underestimate faithfulness constraints - I see some very silly paradigms sometimes), but I'm not aware of an adequate solution to the problem of candidate form generation, and it looks very unlike current hypotheses about the architecture and functioning of the brain. What else is there?
Yeah, this is basically my position too.Nortaneous wrote: ↑Mon Feb 05, 2024 1:01 am It's useful to have basic literacy in it - learning to read the spreadsheets and the conventions for naming rules - but as a paradigm it seems silly.
Hmm, I’ve never really got this feeling — do you happen to have any examples?conlangers especially underestimate faithfulness constraints
Indeed, this is the silly bit. Personally, I think very high-ranking constraints have such a strong effect you might as well consider them restrictions on the input, which makes the theory tractable… but at that point the whole edifice starts crumbling apart (at least according to its practitioners).but I'm not aware of an adequate solution to the problem of candidate form generation, and it looks very unlike current hypotheses about the architecture and functioning of the brain.
This looks pretty terrible to me: too dogmatic, and ignoring the variation to be found in natlangs. Not every phoneme produces a consistent tone… in fact, most don’t.Ahzoh wrote: ↑Mon Feb 05, 2024 2:26 am Been reading this over again:
https://www.reddit.com/r/conlangs/comme ... all_gonna/
None of which have tones! (Except Nivkh, and debatably Yeniseian.)One thing I really do worry about is that my conlang will end up looking too much like a Sino-Tibetan language. And it's supposed to be more Caucasian/Siberian/Inuit.
It's the only thing that's given me a sense of direction in this endeavor. Looking at Tibetan (a language that has kept voicing distinctions and coda consonants) has helped me a little, but not much.
Say what? Both sylable loss and open vowels (in Ambel) are reported to have triggered tonogenesis? A conlang of mine's case of second syllable vowels' openness inducing tone in the first syllable and then dropping out might not be so hopeless, after all.bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Feb 02, 2024 8:18 pmI was trying to write up something, but in the process I discovered this paper which looks quite comprehensive: https://doi.org/10.1080/07268602.2022.2157675. It looks like it should answer most of your questions. (I can send you a PDF if you can’t access it.)
I think you have to look at the individual cases to check what is going on. I think there is some confusion because of recurring behaviours. For example, in Thai, modern onset voicing affects pitch, so the change (not entirely complete) of preglottalisation to voicing may well have changed the pitch of some words, but this hasn't led to any split in the tones, just a rearrangement of allophones.Zju wrote: ↑Mon Feb 05, 2024 3:35 pmSay what? Both sylable loss and open vowels (in Ambel) are reported to have triggered tonogenesis? A conlang of mine's case of second syllable vowels' openness inducing tone in the first syllable and then dropping out might not be so hopeless, after all.bradrn wrote: ↑Fri Feb 02, 2024 8:18 pmI was trying to write up something, but in the process I discovered this paper which looks quite comprehensive: https://doi.org/10.1080/07268602.2022.2157675. It looks like it should answer most of your questions. (I can send you a PDF if you can’t access it.)
Might I use this opportunity to advertise my own sound change applier?
It looks very flexible. If only I did not spend 2 days learning how SCA works and getting it to do what I wanted. I might as well stick with SCA now.bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Feb 05, 2024 9:05 pmMight I use this opportunity to advertise my own sound change applier?
(It even comes with a tonogenesis example! Though probably not a plausible one.)
Splitting /ə/ info [ə] and [a] sounds like a good idea to me; a system without any low vowels seems unstable IMO (despite the reconstructions of PIE with /e/ and /o/).keenir wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 6:28 pm Currently, I'm working on a protolang with the vowels <i u e> [i u ə]...and the suggestion in the very enjoyable Conlang Year - https://www.quothalinguist.com/2024/01/ ... y-29-2024/ - is to let one of the vowels mutate...
I understand that the [ə] probably wouldn't mutate to [e], as that would be too close to both [ə] and to [.i.]...so I was thinking of [ə] mutating in places to [ɛ].
But would that still be too close? Might it distance itself from the other (and unmutated) [ə]s, and become [a] ?
Thank you.
PIE /o/ was probably low.Travis B. wrote: ↑Thu Feb 08, 2024 2:11 pmSplitting /ə/ info [ə] and [a] sounds like a good idea to me; a system without any low vowels seems unstable IMO (despite the reconstructions of PIE with /e/ and /o/).keenir wrote: ↑Wed Feb 07, 2024 6:28 pm Currently, I'm working on a protolang with the vowels <i u e> [i u ə]...and the suggestion in the very enjoyable Conlang Year - https://www.quothalinguist.com/2024/01/ ... y-29-2024/ - is to let one of the vowels mutate...
I understand that the [ə] probably wouldn't mutate to [e], as that would be too close to both [ə] and to [.i.]...so I was thinking of [ə] mutating in places to [ɛ].
But would that still be too close? Might it distance itself from the other (and unmutated) [ə]s, and become [a] ?
Thank you.
Most Mekeo varieties only have [ts] as an allophone of /k/ before /i/, no other coronal stops.Knit Tie wrote: ↑Fri Feb 09, 2024 1:12 am Are there any languages without or with few phonetic alveolar or dental stops?
I'm playing with a conlang where the single alveolar stop has lenited to [ts] in onset and coda and to [r] intervocalically, leaving [t] only in the geminated [tː], the realisation of /pt tt kt/ sequences.
This sounds very similar to my dialect of English, where /t/ is [ɾ] intervocalically and [tˢ] in the onset and coda, except in consonant clusters where it’s [t̚].
Something between South African and Australian.