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Re: a "natural language" ?

From:Geoff Horswood <geoffhorswood@...>
Date:Monday, November 29, 2004, 8:25
On Mon, 29 Nov 2004 08:16:51 +0000, Chris Bates
<chris.maths_student@...> wrote:

>After English, Spanish and other Indo-European languages I am constantly >shocked by the regularity of some (especially agglutinating languages, >although Hungarian is a bit of an exception to this rule) like Swahili >and Basque that in the main don't have different noun declensions, large >numbers of irregular verbs/nouns etc... I don't think there is any >completely regular language, but its still surprising how regular some >languages can manage to be. Of course, very isolating languages are also >extremely straightforward when it comes to morphology, but that's just >because they don't have much. :) > I'm not saying that I think they seem fake but... sometimes I think of >naturalistic as partly meaning full of irregularities, which is one of >the reason I find some of my own (half finished) conlangs "fake", so its >nice to know that there are nice regular languages out there. >
Turkish, especially after the complex vowel harmonies of Kazakh, has always seemed more than a little artificial in its comparative simplicity; rather like a Turkic language pared down to the minimum and regularised for ease of use. Still, I guess the Ataturk language reform would do that- they did try to eliminate borrowings and regularise the language, so it _is_ partly artificial. Geoff

Replies

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