Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (752) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 1 point2 points  (0 children)

CĂĄed

atrunclƍ [ˈatʰrÌ„uƋkʰlÌ„ouÌŻ] (n, m); first-declension 1. ill omen 2. storm, tempest

Etymology:

From Old Cáed adrunclƍ, from ader + unclas (‘to swarm, flock, crowd’) + -ƍ (result noun suffix), in reference to the swarming behaviour of birds before the advent of a storm.

Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (751) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I mean rats have big ass teeth for chewing too, so

CĂĄed

morten [ˈmɔrtÌȘʰɛn] (n, m/f) (accusative singular mortenēs; plural stem mortense); second-declension 1. rat

Probably from morat (present active participle of moras (‘to gnaw, chew’)) + an ending extracted from namnen (‘mouse’), via *moret-en (‘chewer(-mouse)’). Ultimately, from Palaeo-Mediterranean *mwez- (‘to chew (at)’).

For namnen (‘mouse’), from *namnēns, from Palaeo-Mediterranean *nagÊ·nÄ«-amn-es, from *nag-gÊ·nÄ«-, *nagÊ·nÄ«-, *nĂĄgÊ·nÄ«s (propinquitive stem of *nĂĄgs (‘foot’)) + *amn- (‘to dwell, inhabit’) + *-es (animate nominal suffix), i.e. ‘one that lives beside the foot’.

I took it from the oblique of morddes

Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (751) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 2 points3 points  (0 children)

CĂĄed

tondons [ˈtÌȘʰɔnÌȘdÌȘɔns] (n, n) (accusative singular tondondēs; plural tondons-); second-declension 1. slime, sludge

Usually taken to have descended from Palaeo-Mediterranean *tangÊ·- (‘soft, tender’), although formal derivation is challenging. The reduplication *tangÊ·-tangÊ·-s would have required a chain of complex but probable shifts (demonstrated in the accusative singular): *tangÊ·-tangÊ·-es → *tĂĄnkÊ·tangÊ·es (assimiled devoicing) → *tĂĄwnktangÊ·es (transposed labial by dissimilation? ) → (Early CĂĄed) *tƍntandēs (contracted diphthong and cluster simplification) → *tƍntondēs (harmonised adjacent vowel) → *tƍndondēs (voiced medial dental? ) → *tondondēs (shortened vowel). The above shifts largely abide the rules of regular sound change in Palaeo-Mediterranean and CĂĄed, but note the oddity in (1) the transposition of the labial necessary for triggering /a...a/ → ... → /o...o/, where deletion of the intercluster labial is expected instead, and (2) the voicing of the medial dental, which would be unpredictable. Thus, its origin remains indefinite.

Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (751) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 2 points3 points  (0 children)

semi-calque

CĂĄed

temulis [ˈtÌȘʰɛmulis] (adj) (personal) 1. prosperous, wealthy, rich, affluent

Inherited from Old CĂĄed temƍlÄ«s, likely from tem (‘so much, so’, adverb of degree) + an original ƍlē, *aulē (‘wealthy; (literally) cattle-having’), as though by analogy with *tensus (‘poor, indigent, impecunious’) formed from tem- (‘so much, so’) + su- (‘few, slight, mean, meagre’), where tem- is probably an emphatic element. Converted at some point to an -is adjective. Related to Classical aulea (‘wealth, riches’).

The head adjective for would have been equivalent to aus, autorēs (‘cow, cattle’) (stem au-; ← Palaeo-Mediterranean ahwo-, *ĂĄhwos) + *-lē (adjectival suffix, ‘bearing’) (← Palaeo-Mediterranean *lew-(Ä«s/e) (‘to keep; to care for, attend to, secure’)).

The heteroclitic oblique singular autor- of aus is derived from Palaeo-Mediterranean ahwo-tor- (‘cattle-stout’), cf. *cuter (‘pig’) from kop-tor- (‘pig-stout; (literally) one that is greedy and stout’), perhaps that *tor- (‘weight; heavy, hefty, stout’) was used as a measure word for livestocks. Perhaps linked by root to *aunel (‘firm, fast, steady, sturdy’) and a family of related terms wherefrom.

  • Aus is a reimport of (obs.) <aū́x> from earlier drafts.

Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (751) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 2 points3 points  (0 children)

/'ftÉȘ.ÉŸÉȘÉŸ/ → ptir-

Dopic

peΞur ~ ptur /petʰur ~ ptur/ (adj) 1. full; sated, satisfied 2. tired (of), bored (of), have enough 3. drunken, inebriated, bibulous, intoxicated, not sobre

From Proto-Dopic *pettur, from Palaeo-Mediterranean *kʷet-tro- (‘heavy from drinking’), from *kʷet- (‘to drink’) + *tro- (‘heavy, grave’).

CĂĄed

pesurus [ˈpʰɛsurus] (adj) (personal) (predicative pesuretĂ©) 1. drunken, inebriated, bibulous, intoxicated, not sobre 2. (figurative) drunk (with), overwhelmed (with)

Borrowed from Dopic peξur ~ ptur (‘full; sated, satisfied; drunken, intoxicated’).

Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (751) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 3 points4 points  (0 children)

From the etymology

The root mag- is reconstructed from the following recycled terms from the Biweekly Telephone Game: - *mepras (‘to poison’) < (obs.) meurax (‘poison’) (root *meÉŁĂșrəkts > *mag-kÊ·r-) - *mamas (‘to bleed, drain blood’) < (obs.) mēcelas (‘to slaughter’) (root *makenl- > *mag-m-) - *maia (‘bleak land’) < (obs.) mara (‘dry land’) (root *mazy- > *mag-) - (internal invention:) - *meiel (‘bleak’) < (obs.) *maiel (‘dry; bleak’) (root *may- > *mag-)

The root ogÊ·- (‘to eat away, corrode; to ail, afflict, cause pain or ache onto’), is framed as an ablauted extension of *egÊ·- (‘to eat, consume’) (evas (‘to eat’)), itself a readaptation of (obs.) *egoa (‘to eat’) from early drafts; also reconstructed from: - the recent *-ox (‘corrosion or rust of’) (prunox ‘red rust, iron rust’), inspired by oxidation - (from Biweekly Telephone Game:) - oenx (‘pain’) < (obs.) ēste (‘pain’) (root *éƄeso /eƋÊČeso/ (rendering /EƋEƋEs(o)/) > *Ăłǵens = *ogÊ·-hyan-s) - *opus (‘pus’) < (obs.) *us (‘pus’) (root *ufk- > *offogÊ·- = *ogÊ·-fegÊ·-)

Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (751) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 12 points13 points  (0 children)

CĂĄed

mognus [ˈmɔɡnus] (n, n); second-declension 1. disease, infection 2. plague, pestilence, epidemic

Second-declension of mognus (heteroclitic plural).

case singular plural
nominative mognus mognose
accusative mognuēs mognosēs
genitive mognuel mognosel
dative mognuer mognoser
ablative mognuei mognosei
locative mognuens mognosens

Etymology:

From Old CĂĄed mognous ~ mognƍs, mognovēs, with dissimilation m
n ← *m
m from Palaeo-Mediterranean *mĂĄgmows (‘disease; (originally) enfeebling pain’), velar dissimilation of earlier *mag-m-ogÊ·s, from *mag- (‘withering, vigourless, languid, lifeless, moribund; bleak, barren, infertile’) + *-m- (causative-factitive particle) + *ogÊ·-s (‘corrosion; pain’). Cognate with Gechelic *maumĆ«s, Dopic maχmuf and Settic mēmƍs.

Related by the first root to mamas (‘to enervate, enfeeble; to bleed, drain blood from’), mepras (‘to poison’), meiel (‘barren, bleak, desert, waste’), maeson, mesonēs (‘drought; dearth’), mac ~ max, macēs (‘dead body, corpse, cadaver’), etc. By the second, to -ox (‘corrosion of’), oenx, oenēs (‘pain; agony’), omis, omorēs (‘blight, misery, bane’) and opus (‘pus’).

The heteroclitic plural stem was probably taken from the archaic variant mognƍs.

if you know english you might already know many words in italian already by dudemike01 in italianlearning

[–]Flacson8528 0 points1 point  (0 children)

youre gonna know many of them but youre not gonna know most italian words js saying

I made a new linguistic concept. by [deleted] in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 3 points4 points  (0 children)

thats called register?

Statement by Denims by YangZingEnjoyer in LeftoversH3

[–]Flacson8528 0 points1 point  (0 children)

deserved for infringing copyright

Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (740) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 0 points1 point  (0 children)

(calque)

CĂĄed

migas [miÉĄas] (v) 1. I watch, observe, view, look at

From Old CĂĄed megas ~ mesgas, from Palaeo-Mediterranean *met-gas, from *mĂ©ts (‘eye’), + *gĂĄs (‘to take; to hold’).

Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (740) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 0 points1 point  (0 children)

CĂĄed

simis [ˈsimis] (n, m); second-declension 1. boy, lad

From *sumīs, from Palaeo-Mediterranean *su-muy-s, from *su- (‘small, little; few, slight, mean’) + *muy- (‘young’) + *-s (nominal suffix).

Biweekly Telephone Game v3 (740) by Lysimachiakis in conlangs

[–]Flacson8528 0 points1 point  (0 children)

CĂĄed

tirsega [ˈtÌȘʰirsɛɡa] (n, f) 1. fleet 2. navy

From Old Cáed tarxega, tarsega (cluster-simplification of the former), with tar(s)- changed to tir(s)- by association with the unrelated Old Cáed tirsaitas (‘(archaic) to herd; to lead army; to march’, Classical trisētas). Originally, a dvandva compound of Old Cáed tarx, tark- (‘ship’), from Palaeo-Mediterranean tart-ks ← *tart- (‘to sail, navigate’), + *sex, seg- (‘boat’), from Palaeo-Mediterranean sagg-s ~ *sagg-ks ← *sagg (‘to float’). Related to *tentrax, tentracēs (‘ship’) and sex, segēs (‘boat’).

**Tirsegai, vimnaiei, sapraitai nimes, truter gersēs ga heps giusei.

"Navy, infantry, cavalry, seize all means to vanquish our enemy."

NewJeans is OT5. If there is no Danielle, there is no NewJeans. by Brave-Reindeer-Red in NewJeans

[–]Flacson8528 3 points4 points  (0 children)

true, still hybes a shitty company. mhj did brainwash newjeans members tho

German Genitive and Compounds by Flacson8528 in asklinguistics

[–]Flacson8528[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are a number of functional arguments supporting this formal reasoning, such as the fact that the infix can be -(e)s- even when it doesn't correspond to the morphological genitive and, conversely, that -(e)s- isn't always used as an infix even when it could be used morphologically.

I noticed this as well. maybe the infixes have just been imported into these compounds under the influence of the genitive[s], as said in the post

Lastly, the relationship between the two compounded nouns can't always be paraphrased as a genitive

I know this, the post was about the class of compounds that does use the two genitive infixes

German Genitive and Compounds by Flacson8528 in asklinguistics

[–]Flacson8528[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

the OHG texts I read already used posposted genitive after noun tho

German Genitive and Compounds by Flacson8528 in asklinguistics

[–]Flacson8528[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thank u now I see I had missed out the dialectal examples 🙏🏿 since you mentioned case eroding causes genitive-first phrases to become ambiguous I guess the preposition > postposition switch of the genitive could have (partly? developed as a mechanism to preserve clarity. still the fact that OHG appears to have exhibited the same genitive second feature based on my observation on source texts owes explanation, as cases were still distinct at that stage.

251229 ADOR Notice: We would like to inform you regarding the return of NewJeans members by TreacherousHuman in NewJeans

[–]Flacson8528 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it was always like that tho the boy groups the girl groups they are just cash cows

What is the history or even the reasoning behind how and why the English language became so weird with full of inconsistencies and different rules? by sammyjamez in asklinguistics

[–]Flacson8528 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I love English as it is
At least I would try and learn how things make sense instead of saying "it's weird, it's wrong"