From: | Joseph Fatula <fatula3@...> |
---|---|
Date: | Wednesday, January 22, 2003, 21:12 |
----- Original Message ----- From: "Andrew Nowicki" <andrew@...> To: <CONLANG@...> Sent: Wednesday, January 22, 2003 8:54 AM Subject: Re: my proposals for a philosophical language> Andrew Nowicki wrote: > AN> It is easy to change pronunciation and add more > AN> root words, but it seems impossible to change the > AN> meaning of existing root words or to change Ygyde's > AN> prefix table. > > Garth Wallace wrote: > GW> It's hardly impossible. The meanings of words > GW> drift over time. "Hussy" used to mean housewife, > GW> now it means a rudely-behaved woman. It's not > GW> something you can really control. > > We are talking about *root* words. If you change > meaning of a root word, all the compound words > that use it will change their meaning as well. > For example, if "man" means "dog," "crafts-man" > means "crafts-dog."Not necessarily. To consider Garth's example, "hussy", it originally came from "huswif" (or something like that), literally "house-wife". The word changed meaning despite the fact that the roots didn't. So the meaning of a compound can be independant of the roots. Hopefully someone else can think of a better example.
Bryan Maloney <slimehoo@yahoo.com> <slimehoo@...> |