Darren wrote: ↑Mon Sep 25, 2023 3:54 am
Page has very kindly sent me a copy of the Fayu grammar, so I'll shortly be posting an updated comparative wordlist with a lot more Fayu terms. (She also hints that a Fayu-based PhD thesis may be appearing in the future)
Great to hear! Could you send a copy to me too? (You should have my email already, I think.)
bradrn wrote: ↑Sat Sep 23, 2023 4:47 am
- For conlangers such as ourselves, it provides a way to quickly gain confidence as to which sound changes are attested or not.
- For historical linguists, it could act as reliable database with which to test phonological generalisations (as opposed to the unsupported claims I regularly see in the literature).
- For linguists more generally, it could be a place to make their diachronic work more widely known.
But I’m happy to hear other suggestions about what we should aim for!
I think your distinction of target audiences is important. I was assuming that this was mostly intended for conlangers rather than as a published work for academics, but I appreciate your more ambitious aims.
Yes, I’m very excited about the possibilities. If you poke around the literature, there’s already linguists who have tried doing something like this, but it appears their efforts petered out at some point. But we’ve already proven once that we can make big databases like this, so what’s stopping us from doing it for a larger audience?
Also, to get this
really big, we’ll need manpower. We can do quite a lot ourselves, but if we can appeal to the linguistics community at large, that would be extremely helpful.
(Incidentally, this stuff drove a lot of the choices I made in my Polynesian mockup. For one thing, having lots of duplicate changes is fine for conlangers perusing a website for ideas — but it would quickly mess up any kind of statistical analysis. Similarly, it’s nice to be able to restrict yourself to, say, ‘papers with ordered sound changes’ if you’re researching something where that’s relevant. And the quotes from the original sources make it clear when something is unclear or could be interpreted differently.)
I think it's fine for amateur work and curated sound changes like my LP work to stay on the board for fellow conlangers.
I reckon you can think bigger too — you’re doing high-quality work there, in my estimation. If there’s one thing I’ve learnt from being in my physics research group, opportunities for papers occur with surprising frequency.
bradrn wrote: ↑Sun Sep 24, 2023 2:10 am
I’ve finished my mockup of some Polynesian changes:
https://bradrn.com/files/polynesian-biggs-mockup.html. This is compiled mostly from Biggs 1978, plus the changes for Takuu, Nukumanu and Nukeria from Davletshin 2015. Please let me know your thoughts! (Comments on the sound changes themselves can go in the Polynesian thread, general comments can go here.)
I think this is a good format. The links for shared changes are a nice touch.
Thanks!
Note that hyperlinks are rather tedious to do by hand, so I couldn’t add all the ones that I want. (That’s why the table of contents is unlinked, for one thing.) I’m thinking of computer-generating the final version with a lot more links and cross-referencing: e.g. it would be nice to show the reconstructed realisations when hovering over the asterisked symbols.
One minor nitpick is that for *w, ‘was probably bilabial and possibly a voiced fricative rather than a semi-vowel’ implies to me [w~β̞~β] rather than just [w~β].
Fair enough; should be fixed now.