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Re: Most developed conlang

From:Jim Henry <jimhenry1973@...>
Date:Thursday, April 26, 2007, 21:09
On 4/25/07, Henrik Theiling <theiling@...> wrote:

> But we might agree that this type of math may be mainly for fun > anyway. :-)
Yes, at least I don't see any immediate use for it in one of my conlangs.
> > I think Alex Fink's suggestions were probably > > along the right lines, at least vis-a-vis lexicon > > counting: count only the outermost branching. > > But when the result of previous branching steps are not part of the > lexicon, e.g. because two morphemes are added to form a new word while > adding only the first one leaves you with garbage, then it's not the > best way, I think. However, I would propose to multiply all > boundaries not resulting in anything already in the lexicon so that > you get a recursive derivation tree. > > E.g. if you have ABC in the lexicon already and want to add ABCDE and > if ABCD does not exist, the either assign the operation +DE one score > and use this for a lexicon entry, or multiply the scores of +D and +E.
That makes sense. But what if you are adding a word that could be equally plausibly derived from more than one word already in the lexicon -- by more than one route? A trivial example is E-o "mal-varm-eg-a" -- OPP-warm-AUG-ADJ. It could come from "mal-varm-a" or from "varm-eg-a". I say "trivial" because in this case the degree of transparency and the meaning are the same in either case, but I suspect there are other less transparent, more ambiguous two-route compounds that are not coming to mind at the moment. -- Ah, here's one, perhaps a bit contrived: mal-mangx-em-a. Is it derived from "mangx-em-a" or from "mal-mangxi-i"? Does it mean "not tending to eat = not hungry" or "tending to vomit = nauseous"? ("Nemangxema" would not be ambiguous like this.) -- Jim Henry http://www.pobox.com/~jimhenry

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Henrik Theiling <theiling@...>