Re: Unilang: the Phonology
From: | Tommie L Powell <tommiepowell@...> |
Date: | Wednesday, April 18, 2001, 5:35 |
On Tue, 17 Apr 2001 David Peterson replied to Oskar:
> If you're looking for opinions, I have one (among several).
> First off, I think if you really truly wanted to make a truly
> universal language for everyone, you'd have to leave all
> liquids out completely. In languages that have some sort
> of a trill or flap (or approximant), the pronunciation is to
> varied to give it one orthographic representation. But, you
> did mention this, so let's say that's all right. What about
> native speakers of Chinese and Korean whose closet
> approximation is [l]? And then what about the languages
that have no [l], where the sound [l] has changed to [d]
> over time or [w] or even [n] I've heard of? I would leave
> [f] out, too, due to its odd, labio-dental nature.
>But, that's just me.
Not just you: I'd say that l and r and f are just too damn
unstable for any universal language. -- Tommie