Search found 158 matches

by Nel Fie
15 May 2024 14:37
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: What is the most weirdly specific concept that your language has a single-morpheme word for?
Replies: 8
Views: 209

Re: What is the most weirdly specific concept that your language has a single-morpheme word for?

I like this. Commonthroat has a similar, though not as nuanced, way of expressing failure. <B ____ smprb> literally means "I fall from ____" as in to fall from a high place. It admittedly falls into the common worldbuilding trap of environmental determinism, because of course an arboreal ...
by Nel Fie
15 May 2024 10:04
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: What is the most weirdly specific concept that your language has a single-morpheme word for?
Replies: 8
Views: 209

Re: What is the most weirdly specific concept that your language has a single-morpheme word for?

My project isn't very developed, but one of its first “prototypical” words could count: wiski . It's pronounced [βɪs.ˈkí] on average (although [mʷɪs.ˈkí] is gaining traction, normalised from what used to be a "cuteifing" pronunciation) and at face value just means “red squirrel” (although ...
by Nel Fie
13 May 2024 17:36
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: What did you accomplish today?
Replies: 772
Views: 221989

Re: What did you accomplish today?

After spending all my time on pure comparison mechanisms, I've now taken the time to reintroduce actual sound changing to my sound changer. There were a few hiccups and there still is stuff to figure out, but progress has been much swifter. In its current state, it can take a word list such as: bat ...
by Nel Fie
09 May 2024 11:11
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: What did you accomplish today?
Replies: 772
Views: 221989

Re: What did you accomplish today?

I've still more testing to do, but I've made a lot of progress on making my sound changer capable of handling unordered searches* in all sorts of configurations. I can't go into all the details due to there being so many, but the progress is very satisfying. * unordered searches is what I call the n...
by Nel Fie
02 May 2024 18:47
Forum: Teach & Share
Topic: Conlangery Podcast - All episodes grouped by topic
Replies: 17
Views: 55093

Re: Conlangery Podcast - All episodes grouped by topic

Conlangery has an event coming up that might be of interest and entertainment to many here: A conlang-heavy D&D one-shot, streamed live. Players will be: George Corley Biblaridion Agma Schwa Artifexian David J. Peterson and Joey Windsor will be the DM. George Corley made an announcement short ab...
by Nel Fie
29 Apr 2024 18:32
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: What did you accomplish today?
Replies: 772
Views: 221989

Re: What did you accomplish today?

It took more work than expected, but I programmed a mechanism for my sound changer to compare two "unnordered search blocks" (see my previous post for an explanation of what those are and how they work) to each-other. Which is to say, my app can now correctly compare a block such as: |s,v|...
by Nel Fie
25 Apr 2024 18:41
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: What did you accomplish today?
Replies: 772
Views: 221989

Re: What did you accomplish today?

After a whole lot more work and headaches, I think I've finally implemented a mechanism in my sound changer to basically ask it "are these segments or segment patterns found in this part of the word, regardless of order or if anything else is in between". It's best understood by illustrati...
by Nel Fie
17 Apr 2024 15:06
Forum: Linguistics & Natlangs
Topic: Phoneme cooccurrence in Phoible inventories
Replies: 5
Views: 448

Re: Phoneme cooccurrence in Phoible inventories

/ɛ ɔ/ are lax mid vowels and /e o/ are tense mid vowels. Thank you. Sorry, I hadn't noticed yet that this is based on PHOIBLE's own system of features. Their whole approach as a whole is not quite what I'm used to. About your last point, when you said "/ɲ/ and /h/ also frequently cooccur with ...
by Nel Fie
16 Apr 2024 16:28
Forum: Linguistics & Natlangs
Topic: Phoneme cooccurrence in Phoible inventories
Replies: 5
Views: 448

Re: Phoneme cooccurrence in Phoible inventories

[...] [*]Lax mid vowels frequently cooccur with voiced fricatives. Maybe an effect of Bantu? [*]Voiced stops frequently cooccur with tense mid vowels. No real idea for an explanation here. [...] Could you clarify which mid vowels you mean, exactly? I'm afraid I'm not familiar with the lax-tense cla...
by Nel Fie
15 Apr 2024 18:12
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: What did you accomplish today?
Replies: 772
Views: 221989

Re: What did you accomplish today?

It took a whole lot longer than intended, but I think I finally assembled a particular function for my sound changer / conlanging app, although further debugging and testing will be required, as well as perhaps implementing some additional mechanisms. It's a tool that collects all segments that conf...
by Nel Fie
14 Apr 2024 10:00
Forum: Linguistics & Natlangs
Topic: Phoneme cooccurrence in Phoible inventories
Replies: 5
Views: 448

Re: Phoneme cooccurrence in Phoible inventories

Here's some more info about the first two you noticed. The coocurence of /ɮ/ and /ŋɡʷ/ is all down to 16 Afro-Asiatic languages in PHOIBLE's data. The exact languages are Bana, Besleri, Buwal, Dghwede, Gavar, Hdi, Mbuko, Merey, Mofu-Gudur, Moloko, Ngizim, Daba, Tera, Vame, Wandala and Wuzlam. It's m...
by Nel Fie
06 Apr 2024 09:39
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here
Replies: 1766
Views: 371451

Re: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here

It's not described as such, but that's a possibility, yes - after all, what would even be the distinction between harmony and a phonotactic constraint in the case of roots? Again, the data provided in the paper doesn't really give us enough to go on there. The original source might have more insight...
by Nel Fie
05 Apr 2024 14:39
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here
Replies: 1766
Views: 371451

Re: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here

@Nel Fie: I am still not sure if I understand the relation between the concrete data and the high-level abstract generalizations. But I can't think of many concrete questions. Going back to my answer to the original question: Does /a/ alternate in these languages or is it neutral? @Sal: I think, yo...
by Nel Fie
05 Apr 2024 11:47
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: What did you accomplish today?
Replies: 772
Views: 221989

Re: What did you accomplish today?

Can it do -@? So only apply if feature values don't match? It couldn't yesterday, now it can. Thank you very much for suggesting the idea! I hadn't thought of it yet, but it's a good feature to have and was not overly complicated to implement. As a result, one can now provide a pattern such as C[@1...
by Nel Fie
04 Apr 2024 18:45
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: What did you accomplish today?
Replies: 772
Views: 221989

Re: What did you accomplish today?

It took a bit of work, and maybe more testing and debugging down the road, but ostensibly my sound changer can now handle feature matching. Which is to say, aught one would typically notate as a feature preceded by an alpha, e.g. C [α place] . Due to wanting a simpler formatting, it is notated with ...
by Nel Fie
04 Apr 2024 14:08
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here
Replies: 1766
Views: 371451

Re: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here

Do the triggers also have to be back? Right, the table didn't specify that so I forgot to include it. Apologies. The adjoining text provides some clarification: In Shuluun Hˆh (Svantesson, 1985), like other Mongolian languages, rounding harmony is observed as long as the trigger and target agree in...
by Nel Fie
02 Apr 2024 20:50
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here
Replies: 1766
Views: 371451

Re: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here

That's where I read about Shuluun Höh. I encountered some Sibe data in a more computational paper. But the original sources are cited in the source you give, IIRC. Right. Based on a quick read-through of the above paper (not the original source), their rounding harmony operates as follows: Sibe: Ta...
by Nel Fie
31 Mar 2024 14:49
Forum: Linguistics & Natlangs
Topic: (L&N) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here
Replies: 1137
Views: 300666

Re: (L&N) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here

[...] Doesn't Navajo have a whole thing with word order? It doesn't seem to mark anything, but it seems to organize things. From what I remember, it uses the order of nouns (or maybe just arguments?) to mark hierarchy in a gender system. Higher ranking nouns have to come before lower ranking ones. ...
by Nel Fie
31 Mar 2024 14:27
Forum: Conlangs
Topic: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here
Replies: 1766
Views: 371451

Re: (Conlangs) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here

[...] No, compared to languages with front rounded vowels and also backness harmony. Shibe and Shuluun Höh have systems with rounding harmony only in back vowels but they are pretty complicated and I don't really understand them. Out of curiosity, I looked them up and found this paper which mention...
by Nel Fie
29 Mar 2024 15:50
Forum: Linguistics & Natlangs
Topic: (L&N) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here
Replies: 1137
Views: 300666

Re: (L&N) Q&A Thread - Quick questions go here

This is an interesting question, and it's also interesting to consider why word order isn't used for "anything and everything". [...] So basically my intuition is that people are 'hardwired' to use word order primarily for argument & information structure, with some slight (and more s...