To be blunt, this sounds like a programmer-led project more than a conlanger/linguist-directed one.bradrn wrote: ↑Thu Feb 15, 2024 7:04 pm The point is that this is a database, not just a bibliography. It’s comparable to other databases, like WALS and PHOIBLE.
And the key thing about being a database is that it combines all the data from all these different sources, in a consistent and searchable form. That makes it possible to answer questions which cannot otherwise be answered: for instance, ‘what are the attested sources of /ŋ/?’. Or, ‘under what conditions has /t/→/s/ occurred?’. Or, ‘which languages in this family have undergone sound change X→Y?’. Or… anyway, you get the idea, hopefully.
I'm kind of with Moose on this -- I'd be fine with a lightly annotated bibliography, and probably find it more useful in the long run. You mention WALS and PHOIBLE, but after playing with them excitedly for an hour or so, how often have I ever gone back to either one? Never.
Yes... technically. But unless I'm missing things entirely (which is entirely possible), not in a way that really moves the needle significantly. There's new and better stuff coming out these days, though, so maybe checking back in a couple years would pay off. (Sounds weird to say, but, really!)Even if there’s no single monograph, surely there’s at least individual papers which set out the sound changes for individual languages or subgroups? That’s what we’ve mostly been relying on for the other families.