Duly noted. Yedzéowulú will live now in -860 YP.That still seems way too early for the level of civilization you've described here. I'd put it at least after -1000.
Relevant data be here
Duly noted. Yedzéowulú will live now in -860 YP.That still seems way too early for the level of civilization you've described here. I'd put it at least after -1000.
A New Yorker wrote:Isn't it sort of a relief to talk about the English Premier League instead of the sad state of publishing?
Shtåså, Empotle7á, Neire WippwoAbi wrote:At this point it seems pretty apparent that PIE was simply an ancient esperanto gone awry.
Where do you derive that from? Proto-Lukpanic hidib aŋi? The canonical outcome in Fu Pitão should be Himãi [Simãi], but you can of course posit that the refugees spoke a variant that did not nasalize /w/ adjacent to nasal vowels, but strengthened it to or [v] instead. This and the palatalisation of /hi/ to [Si] are the last two sound changes in Kpitamoa Lukpanic anyway, and might not have been fully completed by the time of the conquest.Arzena wrote:Hivãi 'Righteous Blood'
cedh audmanh wrote:That timeframe sounds much more plausible.
Where do you derive that from? Proto-Lukpanic hidib aŋi? The canonical outcome in Fu Pitão should be Himãi [Simãi], but you can of course posit that the refugees spoke a variant that did not nasalize /w/ adjacent to nasal vowels, but strengthened it to or [v] instead. This and the palatalisation of /hi/ to [Si] are the last two sound changes in Kpitamoa Lukpanic anyway, and might not have been fully completed by the time of the conquest.Arzena wrote:Hivãi 'Righteous Blood'
A New Yorker wrote:Isn't it sort of a relief to talk about the English Premier League instead of the sad state of publishing?
Shtåså, Empotle7á, Neire WippwoAbi wrote:At this point it seems pretty apparent that PIE was simply an ancient esperanto gone awry.
Hüwryaasûr, priestess of the four hegemons, wrote:Ryunshurshuroshan, the floating lizard
Yedzéowulú...let's say that by -860, his name has changed toArzena, I'm not sure about extending the time frame of Empotle7á that late-- unless you were to add some more sound changes for the later period. (To me it looks like a fairly conservative daughter already, even for -2000.)
A New Yorker wrote:Isn't it sort of a relief to talk about the English Premier League instead of the sad state of publishing?
Shtåså, Empotle7á, Neire WippwoAbi wrote:At this point it seems pretty apparent that PIE was simply an ancient esperanto gone awry.

XinuX wrote:I learned this language, but then I sneezed and now am in prison for high treason. 0/10 would not speak again.
Two thoughts about this name:Arzena wrote:Hmm, that diachronical explation sounds solid. Let's go with that. And yes, Hivãi is derived from hidib aŋi 'sweet blood'.
EDIT: maybe it's a social register issue at play here.
Hüwryaasûr, priestess of the four hegemons, wrote:Ryunshurshuroshan, the floating lizard

That's fabulous!thedukeofnuke wrote:Since information on the Isles languages was formerly lacking, I've made wiki pages for Thokyunèhòta and Naxuutayi with links to Legion's grammar sketches, and a new analysis of the sound changes from PI to Zele.
I've also brought the Zele grammar back online, courtesy of Basilius. Since SRCF at the university provides web hosting, I can host any other files that need a place to live.
Did you know?
Zeluzh is the reflex of Proto-Isles *dzuy dúy, meaning "dust sea".
Sumarušuxi comes from PI *tzúma dúydziws-i (lit. 'stone-seas'). If I understand the sound changes correctly, I think the Thokyunèhòta reflex of the same phrase should be Thumattuttu [θumaʈuʈu], which would still be a transparent compound.boy #12 wrote:Can we generate some different names for Sumarušuxi? It's such an important place that seems like it ought to go by a few different monikers. What's the Thokyunehota form? Then I think this and "Sumarušuxi" should be borrowed into Fáralo, which will spread it to the other Edastean languages.

XinuX wrote:I learned this language, but then I sneezed and now am in prison for high treason. 0/10 would not speak again.


XinuX wrote:I learned this language, but then I sneezed and now am in prison for high treason. 0/10 would not speak again.
I feel terribly sorry for delaying and delaying and delaying the simple task of writing down a sketch of historical phonetics of Affanonic and putting it online...thedukeofnuke wrote:Maybe the Affanons borrow "Thumapahìthì"... I think it might end up as Fumapahise.

XinuX wrote:I learned this language, but then I sneezed and now am in prison for high treason. 0/10 would not speak again.
Looked at your CS's for Zele - it's really cool to have them systematized! Cudos!thedukeofnuke wrote:Since information on the Isles languages was formerly lacking, I've made wiki pages for Thokyunèhòta and Naxuutayi with links to Legion's grammar sketches, and a new analysis of the sound changes from PI to Zele.
I've also brought the Zele grammar back online, courtesy of Basilius. Since SRCF at the university provides web hosting, I can host any other files that need a place to live. :D
Did you know?
Zeluzh is the reflex of Proto-Isles *dzuy dúy, meaning "dust sea".
!!!! you're right!thedukeofnuke wrote:Also, I've just realised that the /j/ > /Z/ sound change in Zele is probably spurious - it was almost cetrainly triggered "finally" by the nominaive suffix -i, which has since been dropped in many words. So *dzuy duy gives Zele, while *dzuy duy-i gives Zeluzh.
No, you couldn't know, I don't have them in readable form :(thedukeofnuke wrote:I didn't check the historical sound changes :oops: They all sound nice to me, particularly Summaparese.
That would make it ''Ãihib'' [ãi.ʃip]. cum grano salis1. Since it's post-classical Lukpanic, the modifier should really come after the noun.
The mixing of individuals from around the Lukpanic Coast would have resulted in the mixing of phonemes and other features of different dialects. The name though, Ãihib, reflects the original Kpitamoan dialect of the founders.2. /h/ and /v/ are phonemes in Siŋmeasita Lukpanic, so maybe that's influenced it somehow. (In true late SL it'd be something like Ãiyidzib though.)
A New Yorker wrote:Isn't it sort of a relief to talk about the English Premier League instead of the sad state of publishing?
Shtåså, Empotle7á, Neire WippwoAbi wrote:At this point it seems pretty apparent that PIE was simply an ancient esperanto gone awry.

XinuX wrote:I learned this language, but then I sneezed and now am in prison for high treason. 0/10 would not speak again.


Forgot to respond to this: Yes. Please do. Not sure what I want to tackle next in Lukpanic. I wasn't planning on doing a full grammar, but, who knows...Radius Solis wrote:You should put up lots on Lukpanic, if you have the inclination - given how much interest it has generated.If you like I would be happy to assist in making up vocab.

In case anyone's wondering, üšala is itself a transparent compound meaning "noble house" or "noble hearth". Aš-üšala is the genitive.Everyone has a given name, which is generally a transparent derivation of a Woltu Falla word. Typically it will be of one element; nobles often have two, but for commoners this is seen as above one’s station. People are also often named after historical figures, or virtues (especially in the case of the strongly religious).
Commoners generally have a patronymic, expressed as <name> aš <father’s name>.
Example: Alo aš Sečas, a woman called Alo whose father is called Sečas.
Nobles belong to a House (üšala) and their name is expressed as Ü <name> aš-üšala <House name>. (Ü is an honorific.)
Example: Ü Gamiga aš-üšala Hesidda, Lord Gamiga of House Hesidda.
XinuX wrote:I learned this language, but then I sneezed and now am in prison for high treason. 0/10 would not speak again.
Hüwryaasûr, priestess of the four hegemons, wrote:Ryunshurshuroshan, the floating lizard
Hüwryaasûr, priestess of the four hegemons, wrote:Ryunshurshuroshan, the floating lizard
You could make lenition of /p/ related to stress (e.g. only after a stressed vowel, which would give interesting alternations when you add more suffixes) and/or related to vowel quality (e.g. followed by a high vowel, not including PL /ia ua/ [ea oa]).Corumayas wrote:Siŋmeasita Lukpanic has been coming along nicely, but I'm stuck on some details of sound changes. The main question that keeps coming up is "do I do what Kpitamoa does, or something different?" Given that one of my goals is to make a realistic "middle" for the dialect continuum, and that the extant Lukpanic dialects already look very different from one another, I don't want to create unnecessary differences; but I'd also like it to be its own dialect.
The biggest question is whether it should share the Kpitamoa change p > f-- the pros and cons of this seem pretty balanced to me (the main con being that, given the outcomes I've decided on for the labiovelars, it results in a really weird distribution of [p]: only before [a] and word-final).
Any opinions?
