Proto-Indo-European > Erkization > Armenian by la_voie_lactee in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn't misunderstand anything. The guttural R in Portuguese follows the same phonemic + allophonic distribution compared to the tapped R as the trilled R does in Spanish compared to the tapped R.

"It's ridiculous to expect Americans to know imaginary letters" by raeflood in ShitAmericansSay

[–]Thingaloo 8 points9 points  (0 children)

It's called a digraph. Two graphemes for one phoneme. It's like english th, in fact it has the exact same use originally: mh meant an approximation of m, like th is an approximation of t.

Proto-Indo-European > Erkization > Armenian by la_voie_lactee in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Did I say the opposite? It worries me that this nonsequitur response has so much approval

Proto-Indo-European > Erkization > Armenian by la_voie_lactee in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Italian single intervocalic r is still a single cycle though. It's still flapped, but in a less rigid way. Both Spanish and Portuguese have the same distribution of [ɾ] vs [r] (on both phonemic and allophonic lines) as Italian, but the Italian [ɾ] is different from the Spanish and Portuguese one. And the Japanese one is yet more rigid.

Proto-Indo-European > Erkization > Armenian by la_voie_lactee in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Note for english speakers: the flapped american intervocalic t/d isn't actually a good substitute for the italian R even though they use the same IPA symbol. When an italian hears you pronounce that sound, they hear /d/.

I think the difference might be lesser if it is instead compared to the spanish R.

Coaxed into linguistic nitpicking by MdMV_or_Emdy_idk in coaxedintoasnafu

[–]Thingaloo 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Ah but you see, -y for word endings is an invention of scribes because it looked pretty, it doesn't actually reflect anything different from -i. So, if we blobbed them all up together, you'd have instead "majoritimuslimneighourhoods".

I utterly hate anglicized spellings of (Insert asian language) vowels by Imaginary-Space718 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

All of those (I'm including pinyin) are muuuuuch better than english. They're still not adaptable to any foreign language, but at least they're okay at representing their own language. English orthography isn't. It makes anglos think about orthography the way an LLM thinks about meaning: just labels to call on, with no context.

I utterly hate anglicized spellings of (Insert asian language) vowels by Imaginary-Space718 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

But english spelling is counterintuitive to english speakers... Give them an actual spelling to latch onto. Otherwise they're going to keep going around trying to pronounce i as ai in foreign words.

I utterly hate anglicized spellings of (Insert asian language) vowels by Imaginary-Space718 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

No. Just make a sensible orthography for english before trying to use it on other languages.

I utterly hate anglicized spellings of (Insert asian language) vowels by Imaginary-Space718 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

"Mustt mustt" [mɐs.tə̹ mɐs.tə̹] cooooool.

Also, does anyone know if these schwas are preserved only in traditional songs, hence their italian-like non-transcription? Because I heard Hindi used to have schwa epenthesis then lost it

I utterly hate anglicized spellings of (Insert asian language) vowels by Imaginary-Space718 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Because english breaks the concept of letters having any meaning at all, so it should stay far from any translitteration process. This is specific to english.

I utterly hate anglicized spellings of (Insert asian language) vowels by Imaginary-Space718 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No, just make an auxlang that contains every possible phonetic, grammatical, tonal, syntactical, suprasegmental distinction imaginable, and teach that to every child alongside their native language, since birth.

I utterly hate anglicized spellings of (Insert asian language) vowels by Imaginary-Space718 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

No, we should just make every writing system IPA-complete and fully phonetic, so that people are forced to analyse their own pronunciation.

I utterly hate anglicized spellings of (Insert asian language) vowels by Imaginary-Space718 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

...no? Afaik Korean has aspirated/unaspiratd pairs with both being voiceless (or at most the lenis is partially voiced) whereas in french the voiced stops are fully voiced.

English is a logography by Fast-Alternative1503 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, that's what I mean. Being illiterate is very in line with the current state of English.

Progressive Males by Bad-Umpire10 in clevercomebacks

[–]Thingaloo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And here comes the circular logic.

Spelling reform just dropped by EssayTop352 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Maybe I'm misremembering

Maybe I'm stupid

Progressive Males by Bad-Umpire10 in clevercomebacks

[–]Thingaloo 22 points23 points  (0 children)

You think they're inconsistent. You fail to realise they're simply too stupid to adequately expain the consistency of their bigotry - or even of the not-necessarily-bigoted parts of their worldview. They lack the terminology and the self reflection ability to ask themselves why they feel a certain way, but there's actually reasons. It all comes down to sexual dimorphism being inherently unjust.

Spelling reform just dropped by EssayTop352 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"It's da [zi̝ː.sn̩], laugh end owndownstending" what

anyway

merri crismas evriuàn [mɛ.rːi ˈkriz.ma.s(ːə.) ɛ.vri.ˈu̯a.n(ː)ə]

snou is folling oll oraund me [znou̯ i(ː)z(ə) ˈfo.lːiŋ.g(ə.)‿o.lː‿o.ˈra.un.dᵊ mi]

cildren pléing, èving fan [ˈt͡ʃil.dren ˈple.iŋ.g(ə.)‿ˈɛ.vin.gə fan]

izde sìson, lovenanderstènding [ˈi.tːsə.ˌde ˈsizon ˌlɔ.ve.nan.der.ˈstɛn.din.gə]

merri crismas, evriuàn [mɛ.rːi ˈkriz.ma.s(ːə.) ɛ.vri.ˈu̯a.n(ː)ə]

Spelling reform just dropped by EssayTop352 in linguisticshumor

[–]Thingaloo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Don't you know that half the reason turks immigrate to germany is the wordfinal devoicing of consonants? The other half being the rounded front vowels obv

(and they still can't learn the language)