Xurnese
Xurnese
is finally done.
http://www.zompist.com/xurnash.htm
Endajué is pretty far along too, but Xurnese won the race. A very long race: my first description of Endajué goes back to about 1979, and the first version of the Xurnese grammar to 1988.
And while I was at it, I updated the Sounds page:
http://www.zompist.com/almeasounds.htm
http://www.zompist.com/xurnash.htm
Endajué is pretty far along too, but Xurnese won the race. A very long race: my first description of Endajué goes back to about 1979, and the first version of the Xurnese grammar to 1988.
And while I was at it, I updated the Sounds page:
http://www.zompist.com/almeasounds.htm
- So Haleza Grise
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- Herra Ratatoskr
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It came.
It saw.
It pwned greatly.
Read through the entire thing, and I just gotta say...
damn!
Nice job Zomp. Nay, excellent job. The Semantics and Pragmatics sections were particularly cool. I look forward to seeing the "runner-up" in that race of yours.
It saw.
It pwned greatly.
Read through the entire thing, and I just gotta say...
damn!
Nice job Zomp. Nay, excellent job. The Semantics and Pragmatics sections were particularly cool. I look forward to seeing the "runner-up" in that race of yours.
I am Ratatosk, Norse Squirrel of Strife!
There are 10 types of people in this world:
-Those who understand binary
-Those who don't
Mater tua circeta ibat et pater tuus sambucorum olficiebat!
There are 10 types of people in this world:
-Those who understand binary
-Those who don't
Mater tua circeta ibat et pater tuus sambucorum olficiebat!
- So Haleza Grise
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It may indeed be a mistake, but need not. Place names are not necessarily unique. For example, in Germany, there are two cities named Frankfurt.So Haleza Grise wrote:I'm confused though. . . the map seems to imply there are two Liraus?
...brought to you by the Weeping Elf
Tha cvastam émi cvastam santham amal phelsa. -- Friedrich Schiller
ESTAR-3SG:P human-OBJ only human-OBJ true-OBJ REL-LOC play-3SG:A
Tha cvastam émi cvastam santham amal phelsa. -- Friedrich Schiller
ESTAR-3SG:P human-OBJ only human-OBJ true-OBJ REL-LOC play-3SG:A
I'm reading it now - I hope you don't mind if I post questions, comments or what I think are typos along the way?
1) In the plurals table, you have:
-r // -ú; from the example it ought to be -rú ?
For -u // -ú your example is says // saysú, with no "u" in the sg.
2) Is "yes, yes, oyes" in the forms of the modern 2sg. pronoun an intended joke?
3) For the sufixes, you list:
4) For the suffix -ri you state that it froms present participles, but one example is
5) How are ordinals of higher numbers formed, e.g. 564th? Is only the last number ordinalised (like in most IE languages), or all elements? What are the ordinals of sigac and ezir?
That's all for today.
1) In the plurals table, you have:
-r // -ú; from the example it ought to be -rú ?
For -u // -ú your example is says // saysú, with no "u" in the sg.
2) Is "yes, yes, oyes" in the forms of the modern 2sg. pronoun an intended joke?
3) For the sufixes, you list:
with one of the examples being baus > busaudo ?-audo following a syllable containing a front vowel
4) For the suffix -ri you state that it froms present participles, but one example is
which looks more like a past (or perfective) participle.brešuac develop → brešuatri advanced
5) How are ordinals of higher numbers formed, e.g. 564th? Is only the last number ordinalised (like in most IE languages), or all elements? What are the ordinals of sigac and ezir?
That's all for today.
- Twpsyn Pentref
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Your RSS feed links to http://www.zompist.com/xurnash.[b]html[/b] rather than .htm, resulting in a 404 error.
Otherwise, fantastic job. Certainly it's one of the best (and first) semantics and pragmatics sections I've ever seen a conlanger grapple with. Makes me want to get back in the swing of conlanging.
Otherwise, fantastic job. Certainly it's one of the best (and first) semantics and pragmatics sections I've ever seen a conlanger grapple with. Makes me want to get back in the swing of conlanging.
-
Gremlins
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I'm getting a kind of Persian/Brazilian Portuguese-y vibe from it. This pleases me.
Also:
?
Also:
Having problems getting something publishedCu mul buma na pečrešey xauč šu!
[quote="dinnae"][quote="Sano"]I'm a Homo sapien, does that count?[/quote]
Only if you go Erectus in the presence of the same sex.[/quote]
Only if you go Erectus in the presence of the same sex.[/quote]
All I can say is... congratulations! I'm glad it's done... and given the long time it took, it obviously had a lot of work put into it!
I liked the remark about how Xurnese was used as an argument against the relation of languages. Kinda reminds me how the British would taunt the Grimm brothers about Gaelic. (Incidentally, the female patronymics are close to the Irish female form of O', which is Ni/Nic/Nig.)
Or, in my case, how frightening the Slavic languages look to beginners. Especially Polish, which looks scary as hell for people raised on Western European languages. And it's interesting how both Xurnese and Polish seem to be heavy on hissing sounds such as sh, ch, ts, and so forth. I expect the Grimm brothers got more than their fair share of Germans who swore that Polish could NOT possibly be related to German in any way...
(Barakhinei, not Xurnese, instead actually makes me think of Portuguese/Persian.
The Xurnese verb conjugation system does seem rather Portuguese-like, particularly with the loss of the second person forms, but otherwise... and I could go on a long rant about the B-V merger in Spanish. How I want to change their orthography to things like ber, bolar, beinte, Beracruz, escrivir, havlava...)
I liked the remark about how Xurnese was used as an argument against the relation of languages. Kinda reminds me how the British would taunt the Grimm brothers about Gaelic. (Incidentally, the female patronymics are close to the Irish female form of O', which is Ni/Nic/Nig.)
Or, in my case, how frightening the Slavic languages look to beginners. Especially Polish, which looks scary as hell for people raised on Western European languages. And it's interesting how both Xurnese and Polish seem to be heavy on hissing sounds such as sh, ch, ts, and so forth. I expect the Grimm brothers got more than their fair share of Germans who swore that Polish could NOT possibly be related to German in any way...
(Barakhinei, not Xurnese, instead actually makes me think of Portuguese/Persian.
- Serali
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*Speechless*
If it wouldn't kill you how would one say and write boingy in Xurnese? And I'm happy that it's up! More script examples please! It's so pretty!
YAY!

If it wouldn't kill you how would one say and write boingy in Xurnese? And I'm happy that it's up! More script examples please! It's so pretty!
YAY!

[quote="Zereskaoate"]I am, however a slave to the boingies. [img]http://i181.photobucket.com/albums/x180/Wapo_Gipo_Frogs88/Boingies/th_thsau222jpg-2.gif[/img][/quote]
[img]http://i181.photobucket.com/albums/x180/Wapo_Gipo_Frogs88/th_1-1.gif[/img]
[img]http://i181.photobucket.com/albums/x180/Wapo_Gipo_Frogs88/th_1-1.gif[/img]
-
Mornche Geddick
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I think I've found a couple more typos.
Under Syntax: Noun phrases:
cu xaney na nue: "the cat who fishes" should be cu xande na nue. Xaney is "fishes" noun plural.
And xaup tes xumi: "men without hats" should be xauvisi tes xumi. I'm not sure what xaup is, but "hats" is xauvisi.
Incidentally, what's the Xurnese for "friend"?
EDIT: Found it. pešayc.
Under Syntax: Noun phrases:
cu xaney na nue: "the cat who fishes" should be cu xande na nue. Xaney is "fishes" noun plural.
And xaup tes xumi: "men without hats" should be xauvisi tes xumi. I'm not sure what xaup is, but "hats" is xauvisi.
Incidentally, what's the Xurnese for "friend"?
EDIT: Found it. pešayc.
- roninbodhisattva
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Good catches, Mornche, thanks. Those are corrected now.
And you're right about the IPA, BGMan-- I'll get that next time.
I like things like ayu → wiw myself; the fun thing is when they come neatly out of the sound changes.
(For that matter, there are examples of inherently negative verbs-- Latin nolo, French ignorer, Old English nat. But these are more random lexical examples, rather than survivals of a previous negative mood.)
And you're right about the IPA, BGMan-- I'll get that next time.
I like things like ayu → wiw myself; the fun thing is when they come neatly out of the sound changes.
Negative moods for verbs, as in Axunašin, are common enough-- Japanese is an example. And retaining just a few remnants of an earlier inflectional category is common too (e.g. the English subjunctive showing up only in one verb; Latin having a locative for just a few words). It seemed pretty easy to put the two ideas together.roninbodhisattva wrote:What is the inspiration for the inherently negative verbs? Is there a natural language that inspired you in this or is just your own thing?
(For that matter, there are examples of inherently negative verbs-- Latin nolo, French ignorer, Old English nat. But these are more random lexical examples, rather than survivals of a previous negative mood.)
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English has a negative auxiliary, or, to be precise, a couple of closely related negative auxiliaries don't, haven't, won't, can't, shouldn't, wouldn't.roninbodhisattva wrote:What is the inspiration for the inherently negative verbs? Is there a natural language that inspired you in this or is just your own thing?
Japanese is one language with negative verbal inflections - I'm sure there are others.
Duxirti petivevoumu tinaya to tiei šuniš muruvax ulivatimi naya to šizeni.
- So Haleza Grise
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- Salmoneus
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Er... which English verb were you thinking of? I assume you mean the two subjunctive forms of 'to be', but there's also subjunctive forms of 'can', 'will', and 'shall' that are fairly common. [For me at least, 'might' has lost its subjunctive meaning, except perhaps in nuance]. That's just talking about morphologically distinct forms - past, present and pluperfect subjunctives of all verbs being common in everyday speech.zompist wrote:Good catches, Mornche, thanks. Those are corrected now.
And you're right about the IPA, BGMan-- I'll get that next time.
I like things like ayu → wiw myself; the fun thing is when they come neatly out of the sound changes.
Negative moods for verbs, as in Axunašin, are common enough-- Japanese is an example. And retaining just a few remnants of an earlier inflectional category is common too (e.g. the English subjunctive showing up only in one verb; Latin having a locative for just a few words). It seemed pretty easy to put the two ideas together.roninbodhisattva wrote:What is the inspiration for the inherently negative verbs? Is there a natural language that inspired you in this or is just your own thing?
(For that matter, there are examples of inherently negative verbs-- Latin nolo, French ignorer, Old English nat. But these are more random lexical examples, rather than survivals of a previous negative mood.)
I could even say: "Had I not been confused, I should not have requested that you explain; as it is, I ask that I be told which verb you have in mind!".
Blog: [url]http://vacuouswastrel.wordpress.com/[/url]
But the river tripped on her by and by, lapping
as though her heart was brook: Why, why, why! Weh, O weh
I'se so silly to be flowing but I no canna stay!
But the river tripped on her by and by, lapping
as though her heart was brook: Why, why, why! Weh, O weh
I'se so silly to be flowing but I no canna stay!
What are the distinctive subjunctive forms for can, will, and shall? Distinctive in the sense of being neither the same as the relevant present or past tense form? And I'm sure zompist is not thinking of a present subjunctive like "that I be told", which you'd find only in archaising language (if you count that, you can as well count forms like "thou X(e)st" as parts of Modern English), but of the distinction "I/he/she/it was" (past) against "I/he/she/it were" (subj.), which is at least still partially upheld in contemporary literary English.Salmoneus wrote:Er... which English verb were you thinking of? I assume you mean the two subjunctive forms of 'to be', but there's also subjunctive forms of 'can', 'will', and 'shall' that are fairly common. [For me at least, 'might' has lost its subjunctive meaning, except perhaps in nuance]. That's just talking about morphologically distinct forms - past, present and pluperfect subjunctives of all verbs being common in everyday speech.zompist wrote: Negative moods for verbs, as in Axunašin, are common enough-- Japanese is an example. And retaining just a few remnants of an earlier inflectional category is common too (e.g. the English subjunctive showing up only in one verb;
I could even say: "Had I not been confused, I should not have requested that you explain; as it is, I ask that I be told which verb you have in mind!".
As Hans-Werner suggests, I was thinking of 'be' and its distinctive form 'I/he were'. If it weren't for this one form, English wouldn't have a distinct morphological subjunctive at all— all other cases are identical either to the past or the infinitive (and thus may well be the past and the infinitive).
