Search found 50 matches

by Neon Fox
Tue Dec 29, 2020 7:31 pm
Forum: Ephemera
Topic: Random Thread
Replies: 3713
Views: 449073

Re: Random Thread

I would have loved to post this over in the "What are you reading, watching, and listening to"-thread, but unfortunately, I couldn't find a recording available online that really illustrates my point well. There's a version with English lyrics that my local radio station plays that sounds...
by Neon Fox
Mon Dec 28, 2020 1:08 pm
Forum: Ephemera
Topic: Random Thread
Replies: 3713
Views: 449073

Re: Random Thread

I would have loved to post this over in the "What are you reading, watching, and listening to"-thread, but unfortunately, I couldn't find a recording available online that really illustrates my point well. There's a version with English lyrics that my local radio station plays that sounds...
by Neon Fox
Thu Oct 29, 2020 11:45 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Reconstructing ancient US English
Replies: 42
Views: 39795

Re: Reconstructing ancient US English

Of course, we see the suffix -on , as found in Yukon, Oregon, Washington, Cimarron, Trenton, Carson City, Jefferson City, Jackson, Boston, Baton Rouge, Houston, Arlington It seems to have three allomorphs: -ton after s or a nasal, -son after s, r (possibly assimilated in Cimarron). Other common suf...
by Neon Fox
Thu Sep 17, 2020 10:29 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Conlang template
Replies: 90
Views: 48355

Re: Conlang template

I've got a set of sentences roughly like that - in fact I could have sworn I was pointed to it by someone here! 1. Birds sing. 2. Children play. 3. Dogs bark. 4. Bees hum. 5. Baby laughed. 6. The sun shines. 7. The wind blows. 8. The car started. 9. School began again. 10. The child ran quickly. Etc...
by Neon Fox
Sun Aug 23, 2020 11:29 am
Forum: Languages
Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Replies: 4664
Views: 2057005

Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread

I'm not sure why you'd call "all over the place" part of the aspect of the verb. "Bled" is the simple past; "all over the place" is a phrasal adverb. When you remove "all over the place", nothing about the tense or aspect of the verb changes. It answers the q...
by Neon Fox
Thu Aug 20, 2020 11:38 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Replies: 4664
Views: 2057005

Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread

Quick terminological question: what aspect would you call something like ‘he bled all over the place ’? (If it even has an established name, that is.) I’m guessing it’s an instance of the distributive, but I’m not too sure about that given that I’m pretty uncertain as to what the distributive aspec...
by Neon Fox
Tue Jun 23, 2020 11:32 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: What do you call ...
Replies: 413
Views: 1017901

Re: What do you call ...

I would call it a coffee cup. If it needed to be further specified it could be a lidded, travel, cardboard, or disposable cup. It's hard to tell in the picture if the blue band around the middle is a cup sleeve or an integral part of the cup itself; if the latter I assume it's made of plastic and is...
by Neon Fox
Wed May 13, 2020 4:23 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Lexicon Building
Replies: 429
Views: 374600

Re: Lexicon Building

masako wrote: Mon May 11, 2020 6:00 pm next: childish nature; infantile; juvenile; puerile (derogatory or neutral connotations)
xezevlu: childish
/ɬe 'zev lu/

ZVL: child, kid, youngster
1e23u: descriptive adjective
xe-: despective prefix

Next: naive; innocent in a way harmful to oneself
by Neon Fox
Tue May 12, 2020 8:31 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: What do you call ...
Replies: 413
Views: 1017901

Re: What do you call ...

IMO you shouldn't call it a Juliet balcony unless it's deep enough to actually stand on, which the one in the picture is not. I'd call it a fake balcony.
by Neon Fox
Thu Apr 30, 2020 3:44 pm
Forum: Ephemera
Topic: Random Thread
Replies: 3713
Views: 449073

Re: Random Thread

Who are these people that can't taste what they drink? I know the second I swallow what I'm taking in... 63 per cent of us don't? I guess I'm not really a "moderate drinker " at this point but I'd think that those people less habituated to it would notice the taste first. Maybe read the a...
by Neon Fox
Sun Apr 19, 2020 9:30 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Replies: 4664
Views: 2057005

Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread

English doesn't have zero-valent verbs, hence the dummy subject "it" in your example. Another example: "it's raining", compared to the zero-valent Spanish llueve , one member of the category of precipitation verbs that Qwynegold mentioned. (For this purpose I'll count verbs that...
by Neon Fox
Sun Apr 19, 2020 9:13 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: Linguistic Miscellany Thread
Replies: 4664
Views: 2057005

Re: Linguistic Miscellany Thread

If I correctly understand what 0-valent means, I think that English to be counts? "It was just as well that..." and similar constructions. But I may well be misunderstanding.
by Neon Fox
Fri Feb 28, 2020 9:58 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: Not in my dialect (words with different meanings)
Replies: 59
Views: 34725

Re: Not in my dialect (words with different meanings)

It is also the case in western Pennsylvania that the word soda is assumed to have an elided 'ice cream' in front of it.
by Neon Fox
Thu Feb 13, 2020 8:55 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: Not in my dialect (words with different meanings)
Replies: 59
Views: 34725

Re: Not in my dialect (words with different meanings)

Nortaneous wrote:I wouldn't call a passage wide enough to be driven on an alley.
Really? This isn't an alley for you?

Image
by Neon Fox
Tue Feb 11, 2020 11:08 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: Not in my dialect (words with different meanings)
Replies: 59
Views: 34725

Re: Not in my dialect (words with different meanings)

I wouldn't call a passage an alley unless it were at least nominally meant to be driven on. A 'breezeway' has to be covered in my idiolect, and preferably is a kind of tunnel through a building.
by Neon Fox
Sat Dec 28, 2019 12:25 am
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: 'Making Up Animal Names Without Referencing Other Animals' The Game
Replies: 54
Views: 37058

Re: 'Making Up Animal Names Without Referencing Other Animals' The Game

fruit-eater-DIM-DESPECTIVE

Next: mountain lion
by Neon Fox
Tue Nov 12, 2019 7:13 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: If natlangs were conlangs
Replies: 584
Views: 504595

Re: If natlangs were conlangs

Speaking of Irish, have you guys ever looked at the diachronics of it? They are just nuts. Like, kudos for effort, but no one could really speak this! I linked to that already in my original post . And it does actually say at the end: Sigh. By around 900AD, dissention was growing in the ranks at ha...
by Neon Fox
Tue Nov 12, 2019 6:55 pm
Forum: Languages
Topic: If natlangs were conlangs
Replies: 584
Views: 504595

Re: If natlangs were conlangs

Speaking of Irish, have you guys ever looked at the diachronics of it? They are just nuts. Like, kudos for effort, but no one could really speak this!
by Neon Fox
Sun Nov 03, 2019 7:25 pm
Forum: Ephemera
Topic: Random Thread
Replies: 3713
Views: 449073

Random Thread

Does it ever happen to anyone else that, when you've read something that was written a while ago, you find yourself thinking in old-fashioned language for a while afterwards? Let me tell you about what happened when I was in the middle of writing a piece in which all the dialogue was in Early Moder...
by Neon Fox
Sat Nov 02, 2019 10:55 pm
Forum: Conlangery
Topic: Blessed Cold: North America, Part 1
Replies: 20
Views: 14247

Re: Blessed Cold: North America, Part 1

No smallpox epidemic to attack Europe, no smallpox outbreak to attack the Americas. Maybe measles can develop from cattle-using civilizations over in the Western Hemisphere instead, their own particular breed of rinderpest going nuts and setting civilization back a bit before it regroups stronger t...