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Re: Word orders in comparative constructions

From:Jim Henry <jimhenry1973@...>
Date:Monday, December 8, 2008, 20:49
On Mon, Dec 8, 2008 at 3:30 PM, Philip Newton <philip.newton@...> wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 8, 2008 at 19:09, Jim Henry <jimhenry1973@...> wrote: >> 1. Does anyone know of any natlangs or conlangs with >> a word order other than QMS or SMQ?
> I think Klingon doesn't really have a marker at all; comparatives work > like this: > > "The idea of something being more or greater than something > else (comparative) is expressed by means of a construction > which can be represented by the following formula: > > A Q {law'} B Q {puS} > > "In this formula, A and B are the two things being compared > and Q is the quality which is being measured. The two > Klingon words in the formula are {law'} <be many> and {puS} <be > few.> Thus, it says <A's Q is many, B's Q is few> or <A has more Q > than B has> or <A is Q-er than B.>"
Yes; Payne mentions this strategy. I should have mentioned that the QMS/SMQ ordering only applies to languages with a M element at all. Toki Pona does much the same: jan Lisa li suli mute. jan Ken li suli lili. Lisa is very tall. Ken is not very tall.
> Lojban doesn't have a marker, either; comparatives and superlatives > are (in my experience) typically realised as a relation including the > morpheme -mau (<zmadu) "more", -me'a (<mleca) "less", or -rai (<traji) > "superlative", with the comparee and the standard simply being > arguments of that relation. Alternatively, using one of those three > root words and adding the relation as a third argument.
I've read somewhere recently (not sure where, online rather than in Payne or Hawkins -- maybe the WALS articles?) that many natlangs express comparison with a verb meaning "to surpass or exceed". I wonder if the data that the SMQ/QMS ordering generalizations are derived from includes those languages, with the "surpass" verb considered the marker? Some other languages show comparisons with a locative expression, e.g. X is tall beside Y, or is tall from Y. (Toki Pona has means to do this as well; though I don't know if it's been done before I think it would be clear at a glance to any fluent speaker: jan Lisa li suli poka jan Jen.)
> And with specific excess: {la djan. bramau la meris. lo centre be li > pa re} / {la djan. zmadu la meris. lo ka ce'u barda ku lo centre be li > pa re} "John is bigger than Mary by twelve centimetres" (lo centre be > li pa re = something which is this many hundredth-metres in length: > one two).
Interesting; so is "centimeter" the basic length-measure term in Lojban and "meter" is derived from it, or is there another root word for "meter"...? In gzb I mostly lexicalize the same units of measure that are basic in the metric system, but I have a root for "kilogram" from which "gram" is derived, and as expressions for volume are fairly verbose, I"m thinking of adding a root for either "liter" or "milliliter"; not sure which would be most common. -- Jim Henry http://www.pobox.com/~jimhenry/

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Philip Newton <philip.newton@...>