>Jeff Jones:
><<
>Has anyone done a polysynthetic lang with a small phoneme inventory?
>I'd like
>to see what you've done.
> >>
>
>Oh, I guess my polysynthetic language counts. I always think
>of the inventory of phones rather than the inventory of phonemes.
>Here are the phonemes:
>
>Stops: p, t, k, q
>Fricatives: P, s, X
>Nasals: m, n
>Approximants: l, w, j
>Vowels: a, i, u, @
>
>Technically, that's it for the phonemes (and actually, /w/ and /j/
>might not be phonemes in the historical sense...). That translates
>synchronically into 22 different consonants and 10 vowels, but it
>at base it's 12 and 4.
>
>This is the main page for the language:
>
>
http://dedalvs.free.fr/epiq/
>
>Jeff:
><<
>Aspects (special or not), mood, tense, personal agreement, including
>adjectival and adverbial uses -- and how they interact with the
>phonology.
> >>
>
>All this information is detailed in the verbs section, primarily:
>
>
http://dedalvs.free.fr/epiq/verbs.html
I read the verbs section two or three times. I've considered using the root
vowels (both of them, not just the latter one) for the verb classes in Poly9;
my classes are different from yours though. However, I'll more likely go with
Poly8 and not mark the classes, but only mark derivations, using consonant
infixes before the latter consonant.
I've forgotten what else I was going to say.
>Generally, you start with a noun, then use a specifier...
>
>
http://dedalvs.free.fr/epiq/specifiers.html
>
>...to turn it into some kind of verb. Then you add all the verbal
>stuff.
>
>-David
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