Basilius wrote:Does anybody object? Hey people, if you find it aesthetically ugly, or have any considerations concerning its linguistic plausibility, or can suggest a much better name for the continent - please don't keep silent, or
Dûhe is going to stick forever

My only objection really is that we don't have any evidence that postpositions can appear with a bare noun root like that. In the corpus the noun is always inflected for case; which is somewhat important actually, in that the case can be changed to modify the relationship indicated by the postposition.
I was thinking of designing (the sound changes for) an Isles language to be spoken in a short-lived colony in the Huyfárah area, with Dúyhaq reflected as Tysæ and borrowed to Fáralo as Tiwsæ...
It seems like such a language would likely be related to Legion's Isles lang, the one we don't know anything about yet...
Corumayas wrote:It turns out there is a parallel place-name, actually: the main island of Mûtsinamtsys is Ke'idû'ûs'as (n.I) < káy-i dúy-uys qas 'mountain by the sea' [...]
Thank you for pointing to this one!
It seems to suggest that adverbials-as-attributes were indeed allowed in PI and could be put to the right of their head, without any additional marking (like empty verb or somesuch).
However, I doubt if they declined in Mûtsipsa' as you suggest. Unless there is some textual evidence to the contrary, I'd suppose that case markers were attached to the head component, à la the (pseudo-)compound names of Classical Arabic:
ʕabdu-l-lāh(i), ʕabdi-l-lāh(i), ʕabda-l-lāh(i)...
Well, let me make my case further:
Ke'idû'ûs'as is listed as a Class I noun, with no comments about it declining differently than others. (Its presumed head,
ke, is class VI, so it's not inflected according to that.) Also, since the case of the head noun affects the meaning of the postposition I suspect that changing it might be avoided.
Also, I thought of using the word for 'east' (PI hápa, homonymous with 'sun' and 'day') instead of the missing 'land/place', but if we accept Dûhe or Dûheh this is not topical anymore.
"East of the sea" is a great name. OTOH there doesn't seem to be a postposition that quite fills the role of "of" in that phrase; nor is there one meaning "beyond" or "across", so we'd have to improvise something. "East via on the sea" (using the Mûtsipsa' NOM + postposition construction for "action through") seems plausible for that meaning, and looks quite nice to me:
Hefadû'i'un... but it's not short! OTOH maybe
Duu'i'un meaning "(land) across the sea"? (I'm guessing that
úy >
uu in initial syllables but
û elsewhere; I'm not sure this is correct, but it seems to explain at least some of the facts.) "Across the sea" is a pretty vague name though; "east across the sea" is much clearer...
Zhen Lin wrote:Corumayas wrote:They're pretty far apart geographically though...
Well, we have IE languages from India up to Scotland, so it's not that implausible...
True; but IE languages also fill most of the space between. These families seem to be isolated at pretty much opposite ends of the continent.
I guess we could create a story of their ancestral migrations, and it could be an interesting one if we decide to do that. But it seems like it would have to
precede the spread of the Westerners, since the Fishermannic people (at least) are already building cities before the Westerners get there. That would put it before -3000. Such an early expansion, over such a great distance, and without the advantage of the (newly domesticated) horse that let the Westerners move so quickly... it all seems unlikely to me.
Also, though admittedly not much has been set in stone about their cultures yet, what there is doesn't suggest that either group crossed high mountains and vast grasslands to get where they are now. They both seem fairly local in outlook, settled in smallish coastal cities, and very much oriented to the sea rather than inland. They don't sound like great continent-crossers to me.
That said, if a really good back-story was devised for it, I'd go along with them being related. (That would probably involve some other related langs scattered along the migration route, too...)