Flaidish ba7se 7empo

Questions or discussions about Almea or Verduria-- also the Incatena. Also good for postings in Almean languages.
butsuri
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Post by butsuri »

I can't find anything about these Arabist half-circles, unless you mean the characters given in Unicode as MODIFIER LETTER LEFT HALF RING (U+02BF) and MODIFIER LETTER RIGHT HALF RING (U+02BE), used to transliterate the ain and hamzah respectively. These are superscript characters and look more like an apostrophe than a letter, so perhaps that's not what you're talking about. But in Arabic, you have a lot of sounds that can't be conveniently expressed in Roman letters without diacritics and other additions, so they're bound to go beyond common characters from the beginning.

The fact remains that an apostrophe (or reversed apostrophe, or similar symbol) is the most common strategy for representing a phonemic glottal stop in roman script. If it does not catch the eye as a letter, then at least it does not catch the eye as a numeral, dragging that numeral's name into the mind with it. The apostrophe is designed, typographically, to be inserted into words; the numerals are designed to stand out from them.

Yes, there's some cross-linguistic ambiguity, but that's true of many letters, and it doesn't prevent you from using <c> or <h>.

And, to an English speaker at least, as a sound the glottal stop is hardly there at all - what better character to represent it than one that is very small, and normally silent? (This last is admittedly something of a mixed blessing, as it may not impress on the reader the equality of the glottal stop with other phonemes, but remember that the Arabic hamzah is not a normal letter either.)

But seriously, I don't mind the 7s. I just think it's eccentric not to use the more standard option when Flaidish has no other use for it.

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Post by zompist »

butsuri wrote:I can't find anything about these Arabist half-circles, unless you mean the characters given in Unicode as MODIFIER LETTER LEFT HALF RING (U+02BF) and MODIFIER LETTER RIGHT HALF RING (U+02BE), used to transliterate the ain and hamzah respectively. These are superscript characters and look more like an apostrophe than a letter, so perhaps that's not what you're talking about. But in Arabic, you have a lot of sounds that can't be conveniently expressed in Roman letters without diacritics and other additions, so they're bound to go beyond common characters from the beginning.
Those are probably the Unicode points. Remember that fonts vary; the examples I have to hand (The World's Writing Systems) and Bernard Lewis's The Middle East) both present them as rather larger and less mathematical-looking than the examples in my Unicode manual. I've also seen them as very large but sans-serif.

They're pretty obviously adaptations of the apostrophes used traditionally, precisely to make them look more like letters, and to allow use of the ordinary apostrophes. There's nothing about Arabic that requires those particular transliterations; The World's Major Languages and Lyovin's Introduction to the Languages of the World use the IPA glottal stop symbol and the Maltese barred h.

Beyond that, all I can say is that your arguments don't address any of mine (and perhaps you feel the same). Yes, the apostrophes are traditional; and it's also traditional for non-scholars to simply ignore and omit them. (How many news sources ever mentioned that the first letter of the name Iraq in Arabic isn't an I?) Instead of clinging to a system that doesn't work, I'd rather (like the Arabists and the inventors of pinyin) find one that works better.

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Post by Raphael »

The representation of Arab in the Latin alphabeth is to be furtherly complicated by the tendency that at least names are written differently depending on wether the country from wich the person or place comes was under British or French rule in colonialist times. (At least, that's what I've noticed in texts written in German; perhaps it's different in texts written in other languages).

I don't know about glottal stops in general and what options you have for webpages, but as for the glottal stop in Arab, if the Maltese use a barred h for it, why not follow them in situations where it is possible? They are after all, AFAIK, the only people speaking a language extremely close to Arab who use the Latin alphabeth in daily life.
zompist wrote:
Raphael wrote:BTW, you've told us a bit about Flaid-human relations, but how is the relationship between Flaids and Ilii?
More cordial than that between humans and ilii. The flaids view the ilii with great respect. The religious difference is papered over: the ilii consider Irreanism to be on the right track (they equate Good with God). The flaids think they go a bit overhead in taking the names of gods seriously, but they like the stories.
That much about how they think about each other- but how much contact is there between them? Is it perhaps more than between Ilii and humans, since the Flaids live on an island and the Ilii have a higher opinion of them than of most humans?

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Post by Julao »

Its funny that this thread is number 777. How would you pronounce that... to close your glottis three times without releasing any air...

It is interesting that the Flaids walk backwards through time, so the future is behind and the past is ahead.
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Post by Glenn »

Julao wrote:It is interesting that the Flaids walk backwards through time, so the future is behind and the past is ahead.
I have heard more than once over the years that at least one real-world culture employs this same metaphor for time--almost exactly as the flaids do (one of the South American peoples, I believe). In particular, at least one writer explaining the idea compared trying to guess the future to "looking over one's shoulder." :wink: I don't have any solid information on these cultures, however, or even any proof that they exist (as opposed to being simply a philosophical construct). Does anyone know anything about this?

p@,
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P.S. I should add that I really enjoy the Flaidish preposition system--the way in which suffixes can be added to the preposition itself (as opposed to the noun) to give locative, allative, and ablative meanings. (I had to read that section several times before I actually understood how it works--just slow, I guess. :? )

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Post by eodrakken »

Julao wrote:Its funny that this thread is number 777. How would you pronounce that... to close your glottis three times without releasing any air...
I don't know about not releasing any air, but if I aspirate it, I can pronounce three in a row pretty easily. Maybe it's because I'm used to Klingon, where two in a row isn't uncommon.

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Post by zompist »

Glenn Kempf wrote:I should add that I really enjoy the Flaidish preposition system--the way in which suffixes can be added to the preposition itself (as opposed to the noun) to give locative, allative, and ablative meanings. (I had to read that section several times before I actually understood how it works--just slow, I guess. :? )
Heh, I borrowed that feature from those exotic languages, English and French. Of course, neither of them generalizes it to all locative prepositions, as Flaidish does.

Raphael-- the ilii do have more contact with the flaids, to the extent that the flaids are perhaps the only Thinking Kind that doesn't consider the ilii to be standoffish.

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Post by butsuri »

zompist wrote:Beyond that, all I can say is that your arguments don't address any of mine (and perhaps you feel the same).


Not all my points directly addressed yours, and I may have left some of yours uncontested, but there were other correspondances. I'm not going to try to prove it by matching up text from the two posts, which would be tedious both to write and to read.

If you really think roman letters plus <7> is a better orthography than roman letters plus <'> then by all means use it, but for the reasons I gave above I don't see the advantage.

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Post by zompist »

butsuri wrote:
zompist wrote:Beyond that, all I can say is that your arguments don't address any of mine (and perhaps you feel the same).


Not all my points directly addressed yours, and I may have left some of yours uncontested, but there were other correspondances. I'm not going to try to prove it by matching up text from the two posts, which would be tedious both to write and to read.

If you really think roman letters plus <7> is a better orthography than roman letters plus <'> then by all means use it, but for the reasons I gave above I don't see the advantage.
Well, as I said before, I want people to get past this-- yes, I realize the 7's annoy some people-- OK, noted. I only responded again because of the implication that my only reason was that I'd read too many bad comics. Abuse of the apostrophe by bad conlangers is one reason to avoid it, but I've given quite a few others.

Raphael, the barred-h isn't used in Maltese for the glottal stop; so far as I can see from some quick web searches, it uses q instead. Q wouldn't be a bad choice, but to me it suggests [q].

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Post by Penelope »

Glenn Kempf wrote:I have heard more than once over the years that at least one real-world culture employs this same metaphor for time--almost exactly as the flaids do (one of the South American peoples, I believe). In particular, at least one writer explaining the idea compared trying to guess the future to "looking over one's shoulder." :wink: I don't have any solid information on these cultures, however, or even any proof that they exist (as opposed to being simply a philosophical construct). Does anyone know anything about this?
Like I said on the last page, the Romans were one. I found the reference in my old Latin class textbook - this is from As the Romans Did by Jo-Ann Shelton, quoting a description of a triumph:
...a public slave rode in the chariot with the general, holding above his head a crown with precious gems set in gold. And the slave kept saying to him, "Look behind!" warning him to consider the future and events yet to come, and not to become haughty and arrogant because of present events.
And this sentence gets a footnote:
The Romans thought that the future came up on you from behind, catching you unaware if you had not looked behind you. Today we think the future is ahead of us; we speak of looking ahead.
It really doesn't seem like that unusual a metaphor to me. You know what happened to you in the past, you can see it, so obviously that's the direction you're facing; the future sneaks up on you, from behind.

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Post by zompist »

Penelope wrote:It really doesn't seem like that unusual a metaphor to me. You know what happened to you in the past, you can see it, so obviously that's the direction you're facing; the future sneaks up on you, from behind.
Hey, the flaids are sensible people.

I'm pretty sure I got the idea from George Lakoff (who's devoted a large part of his career to exploring families of metaphors).

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Post by Raphael »

Ok, I know this thread is about the Flaidish language, but it's the newest one on a Flaid-related topic, I have one more question about Irreanism, and I didn't want to start another thread.

What's the Irreanist position on work ethics? Of course one cannot compare being lazy to torturing or oppressing people, but on the other hand, if everyone would be lazy, nothing would be produced anymore, and everyone would starve. So do the Flaids see lazyness as evil or not?

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Post by zompist »

Raphael wrote:What's the Irreanist position on work ethics? Of course one cannot compare being lazy to torturing or oppressing people, but on the other hand, if everyone would be lazy, nothing would be produced anymore, and everyone would starve. So do the Flaids see lazyness as evil or not?
Jeerio's mother would have some pretty strong opinions on the subject, none of which have registered with Jeerio yet.

The usual Irreanist analysis is that laziness isn't an evil in itself, but it can be one indirectly. If you're not doing anything productive, well, you're not doing anything good, and your inaction may be allowing evil things to develop. And it's certainly a bad thing (if you're able-bodied) to let other people take care of you.

They'd also point out that work itself isn't an unmixed good. If you're doing evil, after all, then working hard at it is no virtue.

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Post by DF »

Zomp, how long had you been working on Flaidish before it was put on VV? How long did it take?

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Post by zompist »

DarkFantasy wrote:Zomp, how long had you been working on Flaidish before it was put on VV? How long did it take?
I had a short wordlist for a long time, but only started serious work on the grammar in January or so. So it took about five months.

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Post by Warmaster »

zompist wrote: I had a short wordlist for a long time, but only started serious work on the grammar in January or so. So it took about five months.
I wish i could create that fast :( i'm at three years and counting :( :?
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So Haleza Grise
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Post by So Haleza Grise »

I have a question: Are Flaidish long vowels pure? This would mean that English-speakers would have to be a little bit careful about how they pronounced them.

Secondly, what vowel combinations are permitted in Flaidish? I was surprised to see that seo was a valid word; i would have thought it would have to have been se7o.

A couple of assorted typos:

Shouldn't the Flaidish spelling of Luke be Look, not Luuk?

In the gloss for the conditional sentence "If you cooked catfish . . .", the word garchet isn't glossed.

In the sentence ?It?s a wise flaid who studies Irreanism?, the word for Irreanism appears as Irreanattet rather than 7irranattet.

I'm starting to get quite attached to those sevens now . . . ;)

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Post by Guest »

So Haleza Grise wrote:I have a question: Are Flaidish long vowels pure? This would mean that English-speakers would have to be a little bit careful about how they pronounced them.
I'm inclined to think not. Then for once I can leave out the little warning to English speakers to purify their vowels.
Secondly, what vowel combinations are permitted in Flaidish? I was surprised to see that seo was a valid word; i would have thought it would have to have been se7o.
Unless I've slipped up somewhere, all adjacent vowels are borrowings. There are enough of them, however, that they are tolerated in Flaidish. Seo is a learned borrowing; more popular words like leste7o 'restaurant' are likely to be nativized with the glottal stop.
Shouldn't the Flaidish spelling of Luke be Look, not Luuk?
You know, listening to my own speech, I have a hard time deciding if a particular word has [ju] or not, and I think I'm prone to hypercorrection. AHD at least agrees that it's [luk].

Thanks for pointing out the typos!

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Post by zompist »

Silly Edit feature looks like it allows me to change the user but doesn't do it. That was me, if it's not obvious.

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Post by So Haleza Grise »

zompist wrote:
Unless I've slipped up somewhere, all adjacent vowels are borrowings.
I think you might have - what about the -io ending in eg. Jeerio?

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Post by zompist »

So Haleza Grise wrote:
zompist wrote: Unless I've slipped up somewhere, all adjacent vowels are borrowings.
I think you might have - what about the -io ending in eg. Jeerio?
Oh, right. OK, how about "all adjacent vowels, except at the end of the word." :)

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Post by Ghost »

Ghost wrote:I like the forming of prefer (morntech) as first-like. So much in fact, that I may have to steal it. :wink:
But it would be better as favourite./ Prefer should be like-comparative.

Just little me. Ignore :wink:

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Post by con quesa »

OK, Zomp isn't going to use ' to represent a glottal stop. But surely there must be something better than 7?

By the way, I would also like to see the full text of Jeerio Tries to Find a Job , prefably published online. Do you have any plans for that? [/i]

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So Haleza Grise
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Post by So Haleza Grise »

con quesa wrote:OK, Zomp isn't going to use ' to represent a glottal stop. But surely there must be something better than 7?
Dude, it's been done. This topic has just about exhausted itself.

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Post by Shades Of Grey »

Indeed

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