Showing posts with label _paleoglot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label _paleoglot. Show all posts

27 Feb 2007

Linguistic conventions on Paleoglot

This blog strives to use the same established conventions as you would find in some snooty, ol' book in a university library. These snooty, ol' books have something that mob-rule sources of information like Wikipedia or Yahoogroups have never yet encouraged: long-term thought based on careful, logical reasoning. (Ouch!) Have you hugged your local librarian today?

In order to make this text visible online for readers with various computers and operating systems around the world, I need to use standardized fonts that you may not have installed on your computer yet. However, don't worry. They are available for free to download. If you see strange boxes instead of text, you might want to consider downloading these small font files and installing them for your ease.


Free downloadable fonts used by Paleoglot

  • Code2000 - Used for special linguistic symbols from the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) which I may use for topics concerning language reconstruction or phonetics.
  • Coptic - Used for writing the Coptic language, a direct descendent of Ancient Egyptian. It was spoken as late as the 17th century but it's still used today in the Coptic churches within Egypt.

Words with a single asterisk before them

This means that the word is reconstructed (eg. PUr *käxli 'tongue'). A reconstructed language is often called a proto-language and usually is the parent of one or more later languages. Some linguists attempt to reconstruct substrate languages in cases where a language is suspected to have been replaced by another, with indirect evidence such as loanwords in differing languages of the same area.

These languages are reconstructed in part to help linguists remember and understand the subtle phonetic or grammatical relationships between languages. They are also a beneficial complement to archaeology and historical facts since they give us added glimpses of the general society and way of life of the people or peoples who spoke these tongues in a way that other disciplines may not be able to provide.

As an example, Latin novem, Greek ennea and Sanskrit navá all mean 'nine' and these three languages are known to be related to each other. The reconstructed parent language of Latin, Greek and Sanskrit is called Proto-Indo-European, a language thought to have been spoken about 4000 BCE in the areas north-west of the Black Sea. The original form of the word is therefore agreed upon by academic consensus to be *(h₁)néwn̥ 'nine' due to a strict methodology involving such things as analysing sound correspondences. For more details on the "comparative method" that linguists use here, read this article: Language Families [pdf].


Words with two asterisks before them

A double asterisked word means either that the word is really conjectural or it's terribly unlikely. It implies that the form in question is not agreed upon by academic consensus but an open matter of debate. For example, one might suggest a light-hearted idea that since so many languages around the world often have 1st person pronouns starting with 'm' that perhaps they all derive from some common pronoun many thousands of years ago. Let's say for fun, something like **mui. In such cases, the double asterisks signals the informed reader that this is not a valid reconstruction based on careful examination of facts as is the case of Indo-European *(h₁)néwn̥ but rather an idle or whimsical conjecture meant by the author to stimulate further discussion. A double asterisk to a single asterisk is like a vague idea you thought of while showering to a carefully thought-out theory that you've been researching for months or years.

1 Jan 2007

Lingua Files

All of the following shared files will remain a work in progress and should be considered as such by the reader. I recognize the fact that all knowledge is in the end a "work in progress", therefore no idea is too sacred to alter or eliminate if Logic permits. All that matters in the pursuit of knowledge is Logic and the strength of the logical arguments in support of one's theories and hypotheses. I openly devote myself to a neverending search for new data to either strengthen my current conclusions or to eliminate any that prove to be unfounded.

Indo-European
Etruscan



Indo-European
Indo-European numerals (01 May 2010)

Indo-European verb (01 May 2010)

A revisal of the Indo-European sound inventory (7 April 2010)
Since the PIE sound system is at serious odds with modern phonology, my new system helps explain, among other things, its absence of
*b, the true nature of vowel colouring and a fresh approach to Satem Shift.
Diachronic development from Indo-Aegean to Indo-European
(07 October 2010)
The current state of my theory on Pre-Proto-Indo-European between the prehistoric period of 7000 and 4000 BCE.

Semitic loans in PIE (20 October 2008)
My pdf of possible loans from Proto-Semitic into Pre-Proto-Indo-European. This work is based on the premise that a prestage of Indo-European was in contact during the Neolithic period with Proto-Semitic to explain the source of widely recognized loans in PIE, such as the word for 'seven'. The nature of the loans (ie. three numbers, a reflexive pronoun) further suggest to me that the linguistic contact was rather intensive, similar to Norse contact with Anglo-Saxons, for example.

PIE Wave Theory
A conceptual experiment concerning "moving isogloss maps". This is meant to show an ever-changing linguistic landscape tracking early Indo-European, surrounding languages as well as conjectural "para-dialects" before 4000 BCE.




Etruscan

Online Etruscan-English dictionary

After being sick and tired of hokey translations, I took up the academic challenge and created my very own Etruscan dictionary applet in Flash. I continuously update this applet as I research into this ancient language and its inscriptions further.

Etruscan grammar [pdf] (04 Oct 2011)
A concise grammatical sketch of the Etruscan language. It should also be instructive for the near-identical Lemnian dialect as well as for Rhaetic.

Extras

Handy progs
Online Etruscan-English dictionary
Frustrated by many historians employing ad-hoc methods of translation by appeal to Latin look-alikes without in-depth analysis, I decided to create this online Flash-based applet that translates an Etruscan word or phrase into English. I continually update it based on new information. Enjoy.

Ancient games online

Sinat
This is an ancient Egyptian two-player boardgame using a 3x10-square board and four casting sticks for dice which I programmed myself in Adobe Flash. (Valuable input from readers like you helped a lot!)


Royal Game of Ur
A two-player Babylonian game played on a 20-square board arranged in an unusual form - shaped like an abstract guitar, one might say.

July 7/09 - Currently I've programmed into it only basic functionality. However, this allows one to move pieces and roll the special "binary dice" according to whatever proposed rules of the game one likes. Enjoy. I'll improve on it again soon as I have time.