Search found 49 matches

by Ċeaddawīc
Tue May 16, 2017 3:00 pm
Forum: Conlangery & Conworlds
Topic: Lexicon Building
Replies: 4308
Views: 791844

Re: Lexicon Building

In my new language, Púkusa.

wupaqqú ˌwʊ.pɐqˈquː (N) dish of sweet tuber (ispáq) fried in animal fat with sweet spices

ispáq ɪsˈpæːq (N) type of sweet tuber
  • reduced form: -paq -pɐq


:> next: fang, canines, eye-tooth
by Ċeaddawīc
Tue May 16, 2017 1:36 pm
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: Help your fluency in a nifty way
Replies: 4604
Views: 1123999

Re: Help your fluency in a nifty way

No vi el concurso propio, pero ayer escuché un clip de la canción portuguesa por la radio y me salió muy linda. Y además al esuchar el hombre cantar con su hermana... me dio escalofriós. Eso me mejoró el día :-) I didn't watch the contest itself, but yesterday I heard a clip from the Portuguese song...
by Ċeaddawīc
Sun Jun 09, 2013 2:36 am
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: [r]
Replies: 24
Views: 5083

Re: [r]

It looks like your first problem is that you're trying to trill an English "r"... or else you wouldn't be getting retroflex fricatives. Try trilling a "d" instead or something. Nah, I get the place of articulation. I just do the retroflex to best approximate erre's sound in Spanish. I'm a fucking a...
by Ċeaddawīc
Sun Jun 02, 2013 1:54 am
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: [r]
Replies: 24
Views: 5083

[r]

I apologize if this is intrusive, as this very well may be an annoying L&L quickie, but I'm trying to delve deeper into the intricacies of the ever-elusive [r]. Partly I'd like to pronounce it, since I'm learning Spanish pretty far along now but still can't say "ferrocarril" without saying [ˌfe.ʐo.k...
by Ċeaddawīc
Mon May 27, 2013 3:59 pm
Forum: Conlangery & Conworlds
Topic: Sound Change Game
Replies: 2673
Views: 501028

Re: Sound Change Game

Kócuok rièrsi [ˈrì̯èrɕi] > Śesda ḃdìdz [t̼ti̤tz̃]

P.S., that's a lingolabial stop on the first T.
by Ċeaddawīc
Mon May 27, 2013 1:47 pm
Forum: Conlangery & Conworlds
Topic: Himmaswa language
Replies: 112
Views: 195280

Re: Himmaswa language (now over 1000 chars)

Well, that turned out being super duper more interesting than I thought. You literally type the Japanese... and then BAM change it to Fkeushwa (or whatever it's called; that's my best guess, and I'm super duper tired). Anyways, thanks for responding to my inquiries! Also, I love your romanization as...
by Ċeaddawīc
Sat May 25, 2013 6:29 pm
Forum: Conlangery & Conworlds
Topic: Himmaswa language
Replies: 112
Views: 195280

Re: Himmaswa language (now over 1000 chars)

Once you know how you're going to make the glyph look, what programs do you use to draw it and organize it? That's mainly the part that stumps me. I guess I could just get better at making paths and after determining some of the base sets of strokes like you did manipulate them into their own glyphs...
by Ċeaddawīc
Fri May 24, 2013 8:52 pm
Forum: Conlangery & Conworlds
Topic: Himmaswa language
Replies: 112
Views: 195280

Re: Himmaswa language (now over 1000 chars)

Just got to this thread, and it is, indeed, beautiful. I also mainly like to dabble in logography myself, so I must ask: How do you do it? What's your process? From the realization you need a new word to the conceptualization of a new glyph to the creation and implementation of the whole thing, how ...
by Ċeaddawīc
Fri May 24, 2013 5:11 pm
Forum: Conlangery & Conworlds
Topic: Post your conlang's phonology
Replies: 2278
Views: 504010

Re: Post your conlang's phonology

No. I always transcribe voiced dental nasals as <b>. You don't?

I'm fixing it.
by Ċeaddawīc
Fri May 24, 2013 5:03 pm
Forum: Conlangery & Conworlds
Topic: Post your conlang's phonology
Replies: 2278
Views: 504010

Re: Post your conlang's phonology

/ p pʰ t̼ t̼ʰ t tʰ k kʰ / < b p ḃ ṗ d t g k > / < b p dw tw d t g k > / ɸ s̺ s̻ʰ / < f s ś > / < f s ss > / β̰ z̃ ɣ̃ / < v z ǵ > / < v z y > / m̥ m n̥ n / < ḿ m ń n > / <mh m nh n > Those seagull /t/s are linguolabial stops. The /s/ has an apical/laminal distinction. with the laminal /s/ being very ...
by Ċeaddawīc
Fri May 17, 2013 6:00 pm
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: Re: Help me with semantic examples! (from Zomp's blog)
Replies: 218
Views: 40228

Re: Help me with semantic examples! (from Zomp's blog)

This is probably closely tied to geography, but it seems like terminology for water bodies can vary a lot, like in American English. In my personal experience, living in Utah, any flowing body of water larger than 6-ish feet wide is easily called a river. I, myself, am not really familiar with big r...
by Ċeaddawīc
Tue Dec 13, 2011 9:07 pm
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: Homonyms which are nearly antonyms
Replies: 62
Views: 9213

Re: Homonyms which are nearly antonyms

Continuing with the "can" and "can't" pair, I'd just like to input my two cents. Everyone transcribes "can't" with a glottal stop after [n], but to me it seems that when people say "can't", it's more like [kæn̥] or maybe even [kæn̆n̥̆]. So: [kæn] and [kæn̥], although I'd like to point out that I hav...
by Ċeaddawīc
Tue Oct 25, 2011 3:43 pm
Forum: C&C Archive
Topic: The Semantic Drift Thread
Replies: 127
Views: 47713

Re: The Semantic Drift Thread

barn > place in which animals reside > place in which mammalian quadrupeds reside > place in which cows reside > place characterized by many cows or cow-like qualities > (two separate words or senses of the same word) place with lots of cows (> [cow] pasture) / speckled, dotted, splotchy (> separate...
by Ċeaddawīc
Fri Mar 11, 2011 7:15 pm
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: French lessons
Replies: 109
Views: 17895

Re: French lessons

MOAR
by Ċeaddawīc
Thu Mar 03, 2011 8:01 pm
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily
Replies: 322
Views: 55765

Re: Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily

Okay, here's a recording of my basic, syllabic /l/ found in words like "bull" and "table." I'm not quite sure exactly of it's normal, un-though-about, in-casual-speech form, so I did a couple of possibilities. The first is a sound with an alveolar contact, which I'm pretty sure I don't have. The sec...
by Ċeaddawīc
Thu Mar 03, 2011 12:23 pm
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily
Replies: 322
Views: 55765

Re: Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily

I've always had no idea about my coda /l/s. It seems to be that there is usually no contact of the tongue and the mouth, and no movement of the tongue. It seems very vowel-like...

Maybe it's a lowered velar lateral...
by Ċeaddawīc
Mon Feb 28, 2011 10:06 pm
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily
Replies: 322
Views: 55765

Re: Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily

Ooh, what bad luck. I'm going to kill you if you don't. I have 14 bombs placed strategically around your house. Pronounce a series of breathy and creaky voiced vowels and consonants or the bombs will go off.

You have 3 hours.
by Ċeaddawīc
Mon Feb 28, 2011 12:05 am
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily
Replies: 322
Views: 55765

Re: Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily

I don't know what any of you are talking about. My [ð] and [θ] are very different, and are certainly not merging in any respect, although they aren't perfect (/ð/ is usually something approaching [d̪ð] non-word-finally, but just barely, nowhere near a true affricate). You guys are freaks. They're in...
by Ċeaddawīc
Sun Feb 27, 2011 2:42 am
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily
Replies: 322
Views: 55765

Sounds That You Can/Can't Pronounce Easily

What sounds can you pronounce very easily that you're proud of, and what sounds can't you produce that make you feel stupid? I, for one, can pronounce ejectives, the uvular and bilabial trill (voiced and unvoiced), and implosives (voiced and unvoiced) easily, but I can't pronounce, for the life of m...
by Ċeaddawīc
Sat Feb 26, 2011 6:31 pm
Forum: Conlangery & Conworlds
Topic: Lexicon Building
Replies: 4308
Views: 791844

Re: Lexicon Building

napkin - [na'pkĩːn] - n. small piece of cloth used to wipe substances, especially food, off of one's hands; scapegoat, sacrificial lamb; adj. smallish and white, esp. when referring to cloth (from na- [diminuitive] + apkin (short for bignap kin 'large handkerchief' (I guess a parallel in English wo...
by Ċeaddawīc
Thu Feb 24, 2011 9:08 pm
Forum: Conlangery & Conworlds
Topic: Lexicon Building
Replies: 4308
Views: 791844

Re: Lexicon Building

In Aneimd : klur - adj. broad and flat rurul - adj. broad for its size and tall for its size; all-encompassing I didn't know my roundabout manners of speaking would cause such a ruckus. The Nextussians are still disappointed that the next poster hasn't a word for "multicolored; two-colored."
by Ċeaddawīc
Wed Feb 23, 2011 7:23 pm
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: French lessons
Replies: 109
Views: 17895

Re: French lessons

* ͜ *

I am satisfied. I'm excited for the next one!
by Ċeaddawīc
Wed Feb 23, 2011 2:55 pm
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: French lessons
Replies: 109
Views: 17895

Re: French lessons

I'm just saying that it's not the universal second language.
by Ċeaddawīc
Wed Feb 23, 2011 1:06 am
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: French lessons
Replies: 109
Views: 17895

Re: French lessons

You are officially bugged to complete such lessons. I’m puzzled as to why you need Legion to teach you French, when there are tons of books out there, both new and used. It’s not as if French is an obscure language, even to Americans. Au contraire (tee hee!), French is quite an obscure language as f...
by Ċeaddawīc
Wed Feb 23, 2011 12:36 am
Forum: Languages & Linguistics
Topic: Multi-Person Possession in English
Replies: 45
Views: 7094

Re: Multi-Person Possession in English

"the motor-powered automobile belonging to and of me and belonging to and of my sister, as in it is my car and also and additionally it is my sister's motorcar, which belongs to us, my sister and I, who both individually and collectively own said motor-powered automobile" That's probably most natura...