zompist wrote:Torco speaks words of wisdom. Ash, you're kind of starting off on the wrong foot, I advise you to listen to the man.
I'm listening, both appreciatively (thank you, Torca) and critically (why list 'off topic' as grounds for reporting if it's a passtime? ...and so on)
zompist wrote:I think there's a bit of a disconnect here, because your message is more or less "You don't need to know a lot of grammar and words to use a language!" Which is true as far as it goes. But you're on a board filled with people who enjoy and value knowing a lot of grammar and words
No, that's not really it. In a nutshell, it's this: "With a vocabulary so small that a child could learn it in a week using a flashcard program, and a morsel of grammar learned the same way, you can learn enough of a language (including one that you've made up yourself) to start speaking it with a freedom that will propel your understanding forward at a greatly accelerated rate (and if it's your own conlang, speaking it will bring it alive in new ways)". This message is not addressed to linguists who prefer their own methods, but to other amateurs and non-specialist language learners.
Although I arrived with the assumption that a conlang forum would be filled with conlangers, I realised early on that this place is
more about linguistics (recreational linguistics, even?) than conlangs. This was evident from the fact that I posted my conlang, and it was ignored (although the pdf was download dozens of times - perhaps by visitors?). So, it's an odd sort of conlang forum - how would a Jabba-inspired kid with a language of 50 words get on?
But, this 'Rosenfelder Challenge' topic turned out to be of much more interest to the community. Great. It's just unfortunate that individual egos (including mine, plus the collective ego of expertise) somewhat marred the atmos' here. I think the best thing I can do is find a way to continue the conversation with Grinning Maniac and others (here and elsewhere) who
are enthusiastic, so that we aren't distracted by all that.
There is another disconnect as well, between the kind of language teaching/learning that continues to be espoused by linguists and practised in educational institutions (in which I trained and worked as a language teacher), and the experiences of the lay public who have been taught to find language learning baffling. Relieving that bafflement by bypassing the current orthodoxy and showing people who have never heard of Ogden that languages
can be learned easily
is worthwhile. Maybe it's something that only an amateur
can do.
Lest you suspect that I came here with ulterior motives, "oversell" and "monetize"? How vulgar.
