jmcd wrote:E, I'll admit I don't really know much about tone.
Hm, that might be a good reason to eliminate the tonal contrasts. Or do you want to learn by doing a tonal lang?
I'm sorry I took so long to answer.
No worries; it took me forever to work through the sound changes. Anyway I'm in no great hurry here.
Maybe we could even have two separate languages coming from it since the 2 sets are so different?
That thought had occurred to me. I don't know if there's room for two languages, though, unless half the Ayasthi-speaking population suddenly migrates somewhere fairly far away.
I was hoping we'd be able to take some changes from each list and kind of combine them, but that might be difficult since they're so different.
Homophones:
Not all of those are super problematic (e.g. where they're different parts of speech); but yeah. I didn't attempt any semantic shifts or suppletion or anything, and we should obviously do that.
(I also didn't post paradigms as that would take up way too much space, but I have the various stem forms for each word. Some of the ones whose citation form merged still inflect differently.)
In the 1st set, are we going to have voicing assimilation for words like ˈkɛfbɑs?
We probably should. Legion didn't indicate how to deal with those clusters, so I left them alone.
I do think that there's too much ˦ if it's going to be a tone language.
I definitely agree. There's a rule that changes low to high after a high; we should probably eliminate that rule. Without it, a large number of the current H-H words will become H-L.
There's also a dialect of Ayasthi where all words begin with L-H (instead of contrasting L-H with H-L). Maybe we should use that dialect as our starting point to have more L in initial syllables too.
I think reducing the extent of umlaut would help keep words distinct and have less /i/.
Yeah. Another possibility is using the diphthongization from the old rules to reduce the amount of /i/ (by changing some of it to /EI/).
Having phonemes deleted without them affecting the rest of the word at all is probably also a cause of the large amount of homophones.
Agreed, there should be less of that.
We definitely need more normal plosives. Normal as in not having half of them palatal. Could we be radical and just turn all nasal stops into voiced plosives and then from there into voiceless ones if they're in the right situation?
The old rules have that change (except for the devoicing part). It seems pretty drastic, though...
I think some of the consonant changes in the new rules are just too arbitrary. A lot of consonants shift to palatals for no apparent reason (except to create more palatals).
/T/ could go to /t/ as well.
It could; on the other hand it comes from Adata /t/ so that wouldn't be very interesting.
How can you get 2 tones on the same syllable like in oʃ˥˧ ? Or does it here mean high falling?
Yes, that's high falling. (For some reason, the two tone symbols display separately on the wiki, but on the board they merge into one... the board has better unicode implementation, apparently)
See in words like o˦ggɨ˦ where you have 2 consonants the same following a tone symbol, shouldn't it be better to make it either og˦gɨ˦ or o˦g:ɨ˦?
That would make sense. I was sloppy with that b/c it would've been way more work to move all the tone symbols to match the new syllable boundaries after all the syncope.
Is the 1st 'n' in vo˦bnbon˦ syllabic? If not, it seems a mighty cluster compared to the rest of the language. If yes, it seems to be the only syllabic consonant around.
etc.
Yeah; the syncope rules delete vowels without regard to what consonants there are or what order they come in, and they produce up to three-consonant clusters. It's very messy. My preference would be to drop vowels only V(C)_(C)V, so that only two-consonant clusters can occur. (The current rule is V(C)(C)_(C)V.)
ʒe˦ʝeʝ˧˩ and ɟe˥˧ʝʝɨ˨ seem especially overloaded in similar sounds. This can also be seen in the homophone examples above. Maybe there could be a dissimilation process so there's less palatals next to each other?
The j being retained in we˦ɲji˦ seems odd.
I agree. We could add some dissimilation rules and a rule deleting [j] after a palatal consonant. (We could also try creating fewer palatals in the first place and see if that helps...)