Search found 1327 matches
- Thu May 23, 2024 11:13 am
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
- Replies: 4725
- Views: 2066624
Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
"Default" might be a better word here... I do agree that "me" etc. is the default form in English (and "moi" in French)! OK, ‘default’ is a far better word here. Then ‘marked-nominative languages’ might be better termed ‘default-accusative languages’, and so on. But ma...
Re: Caizu
I also started learning English at 10 - and like you, I am thus not a native speaker. My point was an attempt at a reductio ad absurdum of the idea that Europe, during the centuries when Latin was a widely used language of liturgy and scholarship, had native Latin speakers. Or that modern Copts are...
Re: Caizu
If Europe had native Latin speakers in the Middle and Early Modern Ages, wouldn't that mean that, by the same logic, I'm a native English speaker? Were you raised bilingually in German and English? No, I started to learn English at 10. Which is probably not that much later than when medieval Europe...
- Wed May 22, 2024 7:49 am
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: Resources Thread
- Replies: 91
- Views: 70325
- Wed May 22, 2024 5:52 am
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: Language Practice (Help your fluency)
- Replies: 710
- Views: 1064209
Re: Language Practice (Help your fluency)
Ist das Platt? Is that Low German? Jo, so twischen de Skandinavischespraken för miene Jorkischespraake studeren, un miene Famieljengeschicht söken, ik dache, dat ik versöken wull, en beten von dat Platt to lernen. Yes, so between studying the Scandinavian languages for my Yorkish language, and look...
- Sun May 19, 2024 11:37 am
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: Prehistoric migrations from the Near East to North Africa?
- Replies: 9
- Views: 294
Re: Prehistoric migrations from the Near East to North Africa?
Thank you, that looks useful!
- Sun May 19, 2024 8:46 am
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: Prehistoric migrations from the Near East to North Africa?
- Replies: 9
- Views: 294
Prehistoric migrations from the Near East to North Africa?
I seem to remember reading somewhere that there is archaeogenetic evidence of two prehistoric migrations from the Near East back to North Africa, one near the end of the last Ice Age, and one in the Neolithic, but I can't find any reference. Can anybody around here help me find it? Of course I tried...
- Sat May 18, 2024 7:15 am
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
- Replies: 4725
- Views: 2066624
Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Where does Swedish-Norwegian-Danish -en definite article come from? ON inn, which IIRC further back was originally a demonstrative, which is also reflected by South Jutish æ even though that comes before the noun under WGmc influence (I have heard that Jutland was originally WGmc rather than NGmc-s...
- Wed May 15, 2024 9:59 am
- Forum: Conlangery
- Topic: Romanization Challenge Thread v2.0
- Replies: 988
- Views: 479167
- Tue May 14, 2024 10:47 am
- Forum: Ephemera
- Topic: British Politics Guide
- Replies: 1941
- Views: 1020385
Re: British Politics Guide
London? Westminster? WTF? Historically, this conurbation should rather be known as Ossulstone
- Mon May 13, 2024 10:15 am
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
- Replies: 4725
- Views: 2066624
Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
To me as a non-native English speaker, math are sounds wrong, but maths is is odd, too. Maths sounds like a plural to me, but math is definitely singular. To me, maths is is the only acceptable form. ‘Maths’ behaves like a mass noun, and ‘math’ does not exist as a word. Yes. Maths is not as definit...
- Mon May 13, 2024 4:55 am
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
- Replies: 4725
- Views: 2066624
Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
I'm no expert, but I do have a Larousse, which says the word was singular or plural till the 18th century; while Etymonline says the English word became plural in the 17th century. I don't think it's random: it's "math" in the US and "maths" in the UK. While 'math' might always ...
- Sun May 12, 2024 2:59 pm
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
- Replies: 909
- Views: 1084606
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
You must not forget that PIE was no pristine isolated language, but was in contact with other languages around it, and thus probably contained loanwords that were borrowed into the language at a late stage when /a/ and /b/ had become phonemic. Such loanwords need not comply with the reconstructed wo...
- Thu May 09, 2024 4:48 pm
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
- Replies: 909
- Views: 1084606
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
As for PIE lacking post-velar consonants other than the laryngeals, Proto-Semitic is reconstructed in a similar way (though some Semitic languages at least have shifted /k'/ to /q/), and this is indeed the reason why Indo-Europeanists call them "laryngeals". Thing is, the *k *kʷ *q hypoth...
- Thu May 09, 2024 3:09 pm
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
- Replies: 909
- Views: 1084606
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
As for PIE lacking post-velar consonants other than the laryngeals, Proto-Semitic is reconstructed in a similar way (though some Semitic languages at least have shifted /k'/ to /q/), and this is indeed the reason why Indo-Europeanists call them "laryngeals".
- Wed May 08, 2024 12:55 pm
- Forum: Ephemera
- Topic: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
- Replies: 736
- Views: 138262
Re: AIs gunning for our precious freelancers
That's a dangerous and twisted logic, Torco. Just because the present world (dis)order is bad (I do not like the term "neoliberalism" because it 1) is ill-defined and 2) denotes something illiberal), doesn't mean that a Trump presidency wasn't any better. In fact, it would be much worse - ...
- Tue May 07, 2024 9:35 am
- Forum: Languages
- Topic: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
- Replies: 909
- Views: 1084606
Re: The Great Proto-Indo-European Thread's Sequel
Might the paper in question be Fenwick (2016) ? That's an interesting paper, thank you! Indeed that's it! Regarding the Kartvelian form, it's discussed in another paper by the same author . My thanks to Ketsuban and Zju as well. It's funny that Fenwick's ideas are partially close to what Taskubilos...
- Tue May 07, 2024 3:28 am
- Forum: Ephemera
- Topic: Venting thread
- Replies: 1943
- Views: 15030077
Re: Venting thread
Get better soon. My best wishes.
- Mon May 06, 2024 8:10 am
- Forum: Conlangery
- Topic: AI in conlanging - present and future
- Replies: 24
- Views: 653
Re: AI in conlanging - present and future
For me, the fun in conlanging lies in figuring out what I want, personally, and investigating the richness of language myself. Why would I get a computer to do the fun bits for me? (And, if I want to describe languages created by someone else, actual linguistic fieldwork would give me far more inte...