Re: Can realism be retro-fitted?
From: | Benct Philip Jonsson <conlang@...> |
Date: | Friday, January 19, 2007, 17:42 |
Adam Parrish skrev:
> On Jan 19, 2007, at 6:19 AM, Benct Philip Jonsson wrote:
>> This makes a reconstructed protolanguage a rather special
>> thing, and different from the actual prehistoric
>> language(s) that once existed in that you can only
>> reconstruct the regularities and those parts of structure
>> which survive -- or leave a mark, the technical term is
>> "leave a reflex" or "be reflected" -- in the descendant
>> languages. Any irregularities and anything which analogy,
>> phonetic loss ('merger with zero'), syntactic and
>> morphotactic change [...] has done away with cannot be
>> reconstructed, so a protolanguage ( '*asterisk language'
>> ) is only a subset of the actual prehistoric language.
>
> This is a very interesting point. I don't think I've ever
> heard it explicitly formulated in this way. Thanks!
Thanks for the prize! I must have read it stated somewhere,
or parts of it in different places. I suspect I got the core
of it from Roger Lass.
I might add / revise that complete mergers, whether with
zero or something else, aren't recoverable. E.g. there is no
way to tell that Old Swedish had a /T/, since its allophones
have merged completely with /t/ or /d/, (in the dialects
also with zero, where it was intervocalic or word-final.)
I must say I'm impressed that my rather convoluted syntax
was parseable. I don't know why it gets that way! :-)
Probably my thought processes are convoluted. They surely go
down side tracks all the time, which is why I get precious
little finished...--
/BP 8^)
--
B.Philip Jonsson mailto:melrochX@melroch.se (delete X)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Truth, Sir, is a cow which will give [skeptics] no more milk,
and so they are gone to milk the bull."
-- Sam. Johnson (no rel. ;)
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