User:Praimhín/Condialects: Difference between revisions
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Skt CiCāCa gets borrowed as Stem III | Skt CiCāCa gets borrowed as Stem III | ||
=== "Indian MSA analogous to Indian English" === | === "Indian MSA analogous to Indian English" === | ||
2 b Th t j h kh(emph) D d r z~jh s š s(emph) d(emph) t(emph) d(emph) 2 gh(emph) f k(emph) kh l m n h v y | 2 b Th t j h(phar) kh(emph) D d r z~jh s š s(emph) d(emph) t(emph) d(emph) 2(phar) gh(emph) f k(emph) kh l m n h v y |
Revision as of 12:40, 27 July 2022
Irish reading tradition for an Indic language
-h's interpreted as lenition
retroflexes are ignored but Th and Dh become dental fricatives
should be for a middle Prakrit (a liturgical form of Sauraseni)
Jamaican/Finnish Latin
- Ecclesiastical Latin ti -> tsi gone wild: in this dialect it becomes si
- Reflexive pronouns disappear (since tibi and sibi merge)
- ē, ō -> ie, uo (the opposite of Romance languages)
- could create interesting false friends with Romance languages like "bacon"/"beer can"
Tonal Latin
- louksnā -> lū̀ˀna
Traditional English pronunciation of Sanskrit
Idea: "What if Sanskrit had a reading tradition from Medieval England"
- "Cerebrals" merge with dentals as in southeast Asian languages
- Word-final nasal -ṃ merges with -m as in the traditional reading of Latin
- Miraculously final -aḥ and -o merge into /-oʊ/, the former is an independent development from Prakrit languages -- it comes from the usual assimilation of "silent gh"
Rigveda
/ægnɪmaɪli pəroʊhitəm jædʒnəsjə diwəm əɹtwɪdʒəm hoʊteɪɹəm ɹætnəðeɪtəməm/
Indo-Arabic
"Arabs assimilate to Indian culture"
q k g ğ ng (g is a foreign phoneme) C c j ž ny (zh is also foreign) T t d δ n P f b b m (P is added) y r l w š S s h
Skt CiCāCa gets borrowed as Stem III
"Indian MSA analogous to Indian English"
2 b Th t j h(phar) kh(emph) D d r z~jh s š s(emph) d(emph) t(emph) d(emph) 2(phar) gh(emph) f k(emph) kh l m n h v y