Gomain (now 100% digraph-free!)

Substantial postings about constructed languages and constructed worlds in general. Good place to mention your own or evaluate someone else's. Put quick questions in C&C Quickies instead.
User avatar
Kaenif
Sanci
Sanci
Posts: 59
Joined: Tue Aug 18, 2009 8:03 pm
Location: Hong Kong SAR

Re: Gomain (prepositions 2.0, and more!)

Post by Kaenif »

Pekrïf is so absolutely gorgeous! The font is really, really well constructed.

I think the preposition reform is great, and the change in meaning according to case is clever. I see languages like German vaguely doing a little bit of a similar thing on dative and accusative but didn't really think that it can be extended like this.

Sorry for the lack of suggestions, I have yet more to learn, perhaps a lot from your grammar! :P
疏我啲英文同語言學一樣咁屎!
[sɔː˥ ŋɔː˩˧ tiː˥ jɪŋ˥mɐn˧˥ tʰʊŋ˩ jyː˩˧jiːn˩hɔk̚˨ jɐt̚˥jœːŋ˧ kɐm˧ siː˧˥]
sor(ry) 1.SG POSS English and linguistics same DEM.ADJ shit

User avatar
Jadyndar
Sanci
Sanci
Posts: 60
Joined: Sat Sep 04, 2004 7:06 pm
Location: Behind the Orange Curtain
Contact:

Re: Gomain (prepositions 2.0, and more!)

Post by Jadyndar »

Well, long time, no see, folks. This may be my first update in over three years, but I've been working on Gomain plenty in that time. In fact, I made a couple of significant changes recently, which prompted me to prepare a new edition of the reference grammar:
  • Predicate nominals and adjectives work a bit differently now. In particular, predicatives now agree in case with their subject, whether it is the subject of the clause or not. A more thorough discussion with examples is in section 4.2.7 (page 38).
  • The Latin orthography has been overhauled to eliminate all digraphs, which there were plenty of for consonants. In so doing, I have sought to use the new diacritics consistently: the cedilla marks fricatives, the háček marks postalveolars, and the circumflex marks voiceless sonorants. As a result, I changed the representation of /ʤ/ from ‹jh› to ‹ǯ›, which has this value in Skolt Sámi. I also adjusted the vowel diacritics so that all irregularly-stressed vowels are now marked with an acute accent.
I've also begun including a Gomain-English dictionary at the end of the grammar. However, I'm in the process of migrating the dictionary to FLEx, which I recently started using for my field methods class. Once I'm finished migrating it, I plan on publishing the improved dictionary on my site using the Webonary plugin for WordPress, which will let me make the dictionary searchable. That's still a ways off, though, since it's going to take me a while to migrate the whole dictionary to the new format.

The new, combined grammar/dictionary is available here. I'd appreciate some feedback on the new orthography in particular - anything from aesthetics to readability, and more. If you want a long text to better judge the orthography, my translation of Romans should suffice. Thanks!
Image
TomHChappell wrote:
Putrid wrote:There is no ɔ but o̞.
And œ is its prophet?

Post Reply