Search found 668 matches
Re: Project K
MIGHTY phonology, very pleasing to the irrational phonaesthetic in my brain
- 15 Feb 2020 15:26
- Forum: Everything Else
- Topic: An Unofficial CBB Discord Server
- Replies: 31
- Views: 103278
Re: An Unofficial CBB Discord Server
The link has been replaced once more. Boy have I not updated the active user list, it's way bigger now- too big to keep manual track of.
- 11 Nov 2019 16:51
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: Modern Khotanese -- "reviving" an extinct Eastern Iranian language (advice needed)
- Replies: 13
- Views: 3279
Re: Modern Khotanese -- "reviving" an extinct Eastern Iranian language (advice needed)
I just want to say that that's a lovely bibliography you've assembled and its a shame some of the sources aren't as well constructed as they could be.
- 20 Mar 2019 05:41
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: How to make 1st person Neutr?
- Replies: 6
- Views: 2159
Re: How to make 1st person Neutr?
Would it be possible that lexical pronouns would be devised for poetic use, if that society tended to devise lexical items for pronouns frequently? [Such as the numerous examples previously mentioned from east asian languages, thank you all] Then that poetic use might be grammaticized later in some ...
- 06 Mar 2019 07:48
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: How to make 1st person Neutr?
- Replies: 6
- Views: 2159
How to make 1st person Neutr?
What possible ways could grammatical diachrony produce a neuter and/or animate neutral distinction in the first person pronouns of a language with MF+ Gendered pronominal classes? Possible paraphrasis or other strategies? Scribal practice influencing spoken language? I speak of course from a grammar...
- 16 Jan 2019 08:09
- Forum: Beginners' Corner
- Topic: How would one go about making a Slavic language?
- Replies: 2
- Views: 3295
How would one go about making a Slavic language?
Same question as title: How would one go about making a Slavic language? To elaborate, what are the best sources to consult? (Besides wikipedia) How would one go about a language of a particular branch of slavic? How would one make a language of a unique branch? I may add more questions as I think o...
- 08 Jan 2019 08:07
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
- Replies: 26
- Views: 14065
Re: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
Syrgastuata is spoken inside one such pocket dimension, which stretches from the shadows of the Arabian Peninsula to the Western Sahara and is named in the upper world ("our" world, so to speak) after the most famous city therein, Iram of the Pillars. People have been bleeding into these ...
- 08 Jan 2019 06:44
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
- Replies: 26
- Views: 14065
Re: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
Syrgastuata is spoken inside one such pocket dimension, which stretches from the shadows of the Arabian Peninsula to the Western Sahara and is named in the upper world ("our" world, so to speak) after the most famous city therein, Iram of the Pillars. People have been bleeding into these ...
- 04 Jan 2019 23:28
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
- Replies: 26
- Views: 14065
Re: Phonology and Topic List
So, to clarify, they had a great deal of cultural impact on the Upper World in the past, but they don't really anymore, despite continuing to have a large presence there? Oh the djinn continue to impact the upper world, arguably more after globalization, in much the same way any large class of peop...
- 15 Nov 2018 18:33
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: What did you accomplish today? [2011–2019]
- Replies: 11462
- Views: 1650695
Re: What did you accomplish today?
I fixed the verbal paradigms in my semitic language! They all had bad etymologies, malformances, and arbitrary irregularities that have been completely resolved! They're still a bit weird, but in good, justifiably semitic ways.
- 04 Nov 2018 04:55
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
- Replies: 26
- Views: 14065
Re: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
BASIC NOMINAL MORPHOLOGY PART 2 QRPS = Qualitative Relative Pronominal Suffix Case Irregularities Before I go over the definite article and the . . . Qualitative Relative pronominal suffix (I need a better name for that, open to suggestions) I realize I forgot to go over additional irregularity in t...
- 03 Nov 2018 21:11
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
- Replies: 26
- Views: 14065
Re: Phonology and Topic List
You posted this at quite the auspicious time, I was working on the second nominals post! PHONOLOGY OF THE NOBLE SPEECH Are the affricates more like [d͡zz d͡ʒʒ] or [dd͡z dd͡ʒ]? Can any consonant be geminated? Is there anything you'd consider notable about the language's prosody? The affricates are mo...
- 25 Oct 2018 03:14
- Forum: Beginners' Corner
- Topic: alternate ways to say "tribal fantasy"
- Replies: 24
- Views: 186535
Re: alternate ways to say "tribal fantasy"
Rock Stick Bone? Stone Stick Bone? In my journal, I've referred to stories/films like The Dark Crystal , as a kind of Rock,Stick & Bone fantasy. I've also referred to the Dark Ages of my conworld Tirga as the Age of Stone, Stick & Bone. :wat: That's great. I just wanted to comment on how pe...
- 17 Oct 2018 17:18
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
- Replies: 26
- Views: 14065
Re: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
I like it. It has a Maltese-Somali feel in the alphabet. And maybe you should translate the Tower Of Babel, which would be great to compare with the other Semitic language versions. Oh that's a very good idea, thank you for suggesting! I will get on that after I've done the commissive statements. I...
Re: Yǒłra'eli
Diachronically modern hebrew in .... The Caucasus? Well wherever it is, its wonderful! Actually, in Pakistan. The protolanguage was a very Aramaic influenced dialect of Hebrew, and it has words from Dravidian, Iranian, Elamite and possible relatives of Burashaski Oh well then there's a slight chron...
Re: Yǒłra'eli
Diachronically modern hebrew in .... The Caucasus? Well wherever it is, its wonderful!
- 16 Oct 2018 05:41
- Forum: Linguistics & Natlangs
- Topic: I'd Like to See Phonetic Irish
- Replies: 16
- Views: 11453
Re: I'd Like to See Phonetic Irish
I don't think Salmoneus was joking. As you said yourself, the rules of Irish spelling are very systematic, so why can't you create your own phonetic spelling system? I am of course guessing here, but the reason he is asking might be because creating his own spelling would require quite a lot of tim...
- 16 Oct 2018 04:24
- Forum: Linguistics & Natlangs
- Topic: I'd Like to See Phonetic Irish
- Replies: 16
- Views: 11453
Re: I'd Like to See Phonetic Irish
Would it be possible for someone to take a fairly long irish text and try their best spell it pseudo phonetically, using the entire latin alphabet? I would like to see irish as it is and even though I'm told the spelling is very systematic its just . . . . So obtuse. I've been spoiled by welsh. You...
- 15 Oct 2018 17:14
- Forum: Linguistics & Natlangs
- Topic: I'd Like to See Phonetic Irish
- Replies: 16
- Views: 11453
I'd Like to See Phonetic Irish
Would it be possible for someone to take a fairly long irish text and try their best spell it pseudo phonetically, using the entire latin alphabet? I would like to see irish as it is and even though I'm told the spelling is very systematic its just . . . . So obtuse. I've been spoiled by welsh.
- 15 Oct 2018 06:54
- Forum: Conlangs
- Topic: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
- Replies: 26
- Views: 14065
Re: Iramite of the Pillars - Progeny of a Lost Semitic
I really like the phonation chain shift! Is that kind of change attested in any Semitic natlangs? Not to my knowledge, though Ge'ez tends to borrow emphatic roots from other semitic languages that pharyngealize the emphatic consonants by replacing the emphatic consonants with voiced ones e.g. Qaṭal...