User talk:EmperorZelos

Linguistics Tutorial on Conlang
I was wondering if we (by this I mean I, unless you want to do it) could make a tutorial to linguistics. This would be a general overview of everything one would need to know about linguistics because, let's face it, linguistics are scary-looking and have a lot of vocabulary. Most people out there probably don't even understand the concepts of subjects, objects, propositions, etc. If we made this, we would become a more self-sufficient wiki; it's a shame we have to outsource so much about IPA, grammar, alignment, etc., especially if these could be on our own site (for the most part). Plus, it would help to have everything in one place.

I hope you'll consider this option. Thanks. A RMACHEDES 01:17, April 27, 2011 (UTC)

^+1 Razlem 04:27, April 27, 2011 (UTC)

If you look under the "Main Stuff" tab you'll find "Conlang Guide" where you can work for that The Emperor Zelos 05:03, April 27, 2011 (UTC)

I'm thinking it's a little less than satisfactory to have our guide just be a link to the similarly named conling wiki, especially since that page doesn't really contain any useful information. I'm a linguistics undergrad, and I'm sure there's others here with similar experience/expertise/insight in ling. We could make a much better guide. I'm taking the liberty of starting it up: Conlang Guide. Truedat 23:00, July 19, 2011 (UTC)

Please use the link already provided and enhance there, this is a conlang storage rather than linguistic database, the other is lingusitic database and learning The Emperor Zelos 06:43, July 20, 2011 (UTC)

C
Thanks for the advice, but I'm working with 25 different consonants, so I need all the symbols I can get. :) I could probably go with ś instead, but then that's just one more atypical accented character to worry about. (Romanization's never easy, is it?) KedaseDerragar 13:16, April 28, 2011 (UTC)

Nope it isnt but the issue with using C is that you get people missreading it because they tend to read it like they do in english The Emperor Zelos 16:25, April 28, 2011 (UTC)

English speakers seem to figure out how to use the Cs in Italian, Sindarin, and Mandarin Chinese Romanization just fine, so I'm not too worried about it. I don't use this Romanization for ease of reading by Anglophones; I use it because it minimizes the number of special characters I need to type while mass-inputting information while still more or less accurately representing most of the language's sounds. KedaseDerragar 19:55, April 28, 2011 (UTC)

Example unbinaryied
'''Sa'næz'nim, dekni da'nar, kæsha se'næmi, denktai irænoseni hanake, sirnokeni, serena-otas, denktai ihe uenam, æka denktai derahe uenam; kareno okæt ktei. Da'mar marad kæ'æd, kare sæha kozhæn.''' Æka distei iræke'kti, s'neami irænokena, iraina æra metu'kozhænai.

1

Aræke'tur' i'zahetai; okare æd okare; Ækake ætashama koros soha!

Koros marat za'akesi dara'hased a'ar, '''Koros marad dokeriso derahas Uenam morezoren dira'ezahetan Sar'nokam da'mareha-okat adenis, Keinakare sæha; æd keam o kætata. Koros de ra'ezaheram tistae kozhænem, riakozea ah, dektai zahade rerim kurænem.'''

Ækake shæ'ahasen; k'noizahe korasazum Akasha z'mnekædorai mai k'nohasenim.

-Uenem Akasha Ktai

Don't know if I should include it into the example-text info Rostov-na-don ist deine herr Oberst ! 16:01, May 2, 2011 (UTC)

wth?
I don't know why you just deleted my page, but please do not do it again. Truedat 22:19, May 20, 2011 (UTC)

It looked like spasm/unserious stuff as it didnt conform to our template but now that it does I wont The Emperor Zelos 06:16, May 21, 2011 (UTC)

Editor will not save created tables
This has happened every time I try to save a table, but it will only happen if the table has things typed in it. If I save the table and go back and try to re-save it with something in it, it doesn't save the table, or anything else in the section.

works fine for me, dont forgetto sign The Emperor Zelos 01:34, June 5, 2011 (UTC)

I'll see if I can update my browser, flash might need updating, too, thanks for your help Jimbo4567 21:30, June 5, 2011 (UTC)

Tesipa
How do you think it's coming, and do you have an recommendations? I'm mostly done, except I still need to add subclause grammar. —TimeMaster (talk • contribs) 14:53, June 24, 2011 (UTC)

I think the exclusion of other voices is rather odd as languages do tend to have other voices to promote the less important in a sentence structure to the more important position "I ate the cat" vs "The cat was eaten by me"

You need an affix hierarchy, is mood or tense/aspect the one going on first or last?

The n- prefix indicating opposite action is nota negation marker because ANY negation marker will instantly be a negation, if a verb means an action does occure or have occured or whatnot its negation must intransicly per definition be the negation of it, namely the action does not occure, the n- prefix becomes merely a morphological way to derive forth a new kind of verb, verb vs nverb becomes 2 different verbs not related through negation.

Where is the phonotactics?

Nom-Acc has a case hierarchy where Genetive must be present prior to the occurance of dative.

If nouns uses case in any extent the pronouns MUST have the case because pronouns are most used and therefor will acquire it first of all and lose it last, like neglish I vs Me

The pro-adverbs are unusualble for you because you arent using adverbs, you need to circumvent it somehow

Best regards The Emperor Zelos 16:59, June 24, 2011 (UTC)

1. Yeah, but I don't have a way to know the case except by sentence structure, so to make it less confusing I am only allowing active.

2. Well, tense/aspect is prefixes and mood is suffixes, so is it necessary? Or not really? The negative and neutral prefixes (n- and t-) go before every prefix, I think I wrote that though.

3. Ok. Now that I think about that the opposite of the verb makes no sense. ^_^

4. Under the phonotactics section. :P It a couple sections below the phonology, above stress and spelling.

5. I don't understand what you mean. I don't have declension for case, it's determined by word order and prepositions (and the particle uf).

6. No cases. Only word order.

7. I am using adverbs, though.

Thanks. —TimeMaster (talk • contribs) 18:26, June 24, 2011 (UTC)


 * 1) Confusion is rarely a problem in a language, you could do like english you know
 * 2) THen I misread, if you got multiple you need to make a hierarchy of which is most important
 * 3) good
 * 4) My bad
 * 5) if you got a proper dative case you must have some sort of proper genetive case, aka if you have some kind of declension/particle for dative case genetive must have the same
 * 6) I read it said about Dative, Nom and Acc and genetive
 * 7) I thought you said it didnt have adverbs "Unlike english it doesnt have adverbs"

1. I could, but I don't want to. ^_^ This is the first language I'm intent on finishing, I'm trying to make it very simple so it won't take several decades to learn like Umbrean. xD

2. Ok, that goes under syntax right?

5. No proper cases, just word order. Although genitive has a particle, which is used in syntax like it is in Umbrean.

6. It does have dative, nom, and acc, but they are formed by word order, not declension.

7. No, it said that somewhere else. In the verb section, it said "instead of having the adverb "not", it has the prefix n-," sort of like French.

Anything else? I have another question also, what is the simplest way to make correlatives? Could you only use one time of quantifier and then use prepositions to make it universal, negative, elective, etc? —TimeMaster (talk • contribs) 21:02, June 24, 2011 (UTC) 1: Languages are rarely simple unless they are pidgins or creols =) and very funny :P Ive simpålified it recently 2: it would go under syntax yes 5&6: then it doesnt have any of those it just uses word order. it got "Direct" Morphpsyntax 7: my bad The Emperor Zelos 01:34, June 26, 2011 (UTC)

You deleted my page! It's not a real life language! How can I retrieve it? Mamûnám ontā́ bán 12:21, July 29, 2011 (UTC)

Retrieve deleted page!
You deleted my page!! It's not a real life language! How can I retrieve it? Mamûnám ontā́ bán 12:23, July 29, 2011 (UTC)

I managed to get my data back by pressing "back" a few times on my browser, please don't delete my page again, unless you feel you have a good reason, in which case please leave me a message on my talk page first. Mamûnám ontā́ bán 12:41, July 29, 2011 (UTC)

MSN
I seriously fucked up. Sorry :P Rostov-na-don ist deine herr Oberst ! 17:10, July 29, 2011 (UTC)

what now? The Emperor Zelos 17:14, July 29, 2011 (UTC)

As if I know... Skype? Well, I'll also be off until the 17th as I'm going on a vacation :D {insert SEEYASUCKERS here} Rostov-na-don ist dein herr Oberst! 18:13, July 29, 2011 (UTC)

agan? whats your skype? The Emperor Zelos 04:49, July 30, 2011 (UTC)

Blocking IPs
Why? The ones that are coming and working on a language are doing no harm to the wiki, and it is most certainly NOT against community guidelines to allow them to edit. Wikis are supposed to be places that anyone (except vandals) can edit, not that registered users can only edit. —TimeMaster (talk • contribs) 22:57, October 2, 2011 (UTC)

It was established long time ago that a constant usage of IPs are not appriciated and that is so you get an identity.

as it is now no one can claim its their conlang for example because an IP can easily change or anything.

The Emperor Zelos 05:00, October 3, 2011 (UTC)

It is against Wikia guidelines to block IPs from editing. I would prefer to turn this into an edit war, because no IP deserved to be blocked for no reason. If some IP decides to come and work on a ocnlang that hasn't been worked on in a year, it's ok. It can be reverted anyway. —TimeMaster (talk • contribs) 11:01, October 3, 2011 (UTC)

Okay. . . I had responded to you earlier, but I guess it didn't go through. :/ Anyway, if that happens, and the original contributor wants it reverted, so be it. Just a few clicks of a button. I'm mainly concerned about blocking them for creating an entirely new language, though, not hijacking someone else's. —TimeMaster (talk • contribs) 11:03, October 4, 2011 (UTC)

Sounds good, but don't block them for creating new conlangs. —TimeMaster (talk • contribs) 20:19, October 4, 2011 (UTC)

Visual Editing
The visual edit mode won't work because I submitted the page, and now it says that rich text editing won't work because of complex code. I'm new to this, so the visual mode would be appreciated. What should I do?

Djadechu

I suggest you remove some tables and such then, if you got to complicated stuff on the page the visual one will be automaticly disabled

Help?
Hello EmperorZelos, you seem to know a lot about languages and I was wondering if you could help me with some of the tables on the page for my language. I know a lot that is already going to happen but have no idea what each thing specifically means, especially with the phonology sounds. If you can, thanks!

I can help, do you have any IM? The Emperor Zelos 15:31, November 25, 2011 (UTC)


 * I have Skype, email, or phone(text), just email me at MJCLetourneau@gmail.com and I can give you info there.

Some Swedish thing you might know of...
If I remember correctly, you were Swedish, so I was wondering if you know how or where the neuter possessives in Swedish come from(i. e. "mitt", "ditt", "sitt"). I find these forms in the North Germanic languages but not in West Germanic and want to incorporate them into my language which has a common-neuter gender system now. I read that it comes from basically he exact same word in Old Norse, but I find no equivalents in Old English or reconstructed Proto-Germanic root. Sorry for the wall of text good sir. OlykoekSlayer 06:49, November 26, 2011 (UTC)

I honestly dont know where it comes from but considering their closely related structure it is doubtful it has only been pphonological changes but probably so that its a case of words comming into existence/changing for analogical reasons, as a common word (maybe "mitt") came from phonological reasons and due to its commonness it structure the structure was over applied to the other forms aswell to make htem all analogogous.

Though I am not certain on it and its nothing but a guess.

The Emperor Zelos 08:45, November 26, 2011 (UTC)

Thanks for the info; I get what you mean. Just for some speculation, I was also thinking (maybe) that the first "itt" word came from the same root as English "it". Because Dutch uses the congnate of "it" as a definite article "het", maybe the North Germanic languages applied it as a suffix to genitive determiners. Just a thought, haha OlykoekSlayer 19:43, November 26, 2011 (UTC)

I dont think its from english as its going back to old norse and more so I doubt its origin is english The Emperor Zelos 19:44, November 26, 2011 (UTC)

I didn't mean from English, but from the same root that English has for "it". Because if we can use it as a pronoun and the Dutch can use their cognate as an article, it wouldn't be suprising if the Norse could use theirs as a suffix. But then I suppose we'll never know anyway OlykoekSlayer 20:55, November 26, 2011 (UTC)