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Re: CHAT: query: where to start?

From:nicole perrin <nicole.eap@...>
Date:Wednesday, August 9, 2000, 18:25
Yoon Ha Lee wrote:
> > On Wed, 9 Aug 2000, Thomas R. Wier wrote: > > > Yoon Ha Lee wrote: > > > > > Anyway--I've been working on an ancestor language for a language in a > > > story (how's that for too many prepositional phrases?). I read an > > > article on Arabic morphological structure, and thought, What a neat > > > idea! So I've been using three-consonant morphemes, with affixes to form > > > root verbs, adjectives, etc. > > > > > > However, I *don't* know any Arabic except "salaam." :-/ My question > > > was, should I hold off on this until I can learn some Arabic in the > > > nebulous future, and stick to the languages I know something about? > > > > Not necessarily. Although it would help to learn more about the language > > (more info can always help), what's really important is that you understand > > patterns that occur across languages more than one language's patterns. What I > > personally find interesting is mixing and matching. Phaleran, for example, > > has a phonology looks kinda like Hindi and Georgian smashed together, > > while its syntax and morphology have hints of Quechua and Basque. > > (to see what I mean, go here: <http://www.angelfire.com/tx/eclectorium/phaleran/>) > > I've queried one of my Jewish friends; I'm *told* the consonantal > morpheme thing holds across the Semitic languages, and from what said > friend told me about Hebrew, it sounds at least true for Arabic and Hebrew. > > I stole some aspects from who-knows-were, and the probable mood from > Japanese; conjugations do look vaguely Japanese/Korean from my > standpoint, anyway. I'm borrowing elements from Latin where they fit. > > I'm trying for an Oriental-ish culture, so probably I'll lean more toward > Semitic/Japanese-Korean influences (wish I could tackle Chinese or > Indonesian or some *other* Asiatic languages, but those are the only two > I know anything about).
Well, if you want to learn some about the structures of other languages without reading a whole grammar on them, maybe you'd want to check out (or buy) a book like Comrie's The World's Major Languages or Lyovin's An Introduction to the Languages of the World. The former is the better book but they're both really neat. They have short essays on a whole bunch of different natlangs so you can learn about the more interesting parts of their grammars and then steal them! Nicole