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Re: On orthgraphies



--- In romconlang@yahoogroups.com, "Cuius Ficus" <madyaas@...> wrote:
>
> On 17/05/06, Peter Collier <petecollier@...> wrote:
> 
> > Thing is, I can't imagine how best to transcribe a word-initial 
velar fricative (other than the Swiss <kch_>, which just looks too 
non-roman) - and I have plenty of them.  In other positions I used 
<ch>, which seems fine to me (not too far away for example fom the 
French <ch> for /S/).  I've thought of maybe <c>, or <c-cedilla>, or 
even <hch> (c.f. German <sch> and <tsch>), but they don't quite seem 
to fit.  Maybe just use <ch> in initial position too, althouh that 
looks 'wrong' to me.  Does anyone have any idea how those poor 
mediaeval monks, schooled in classical latin, might have tried to 
write an initial /x/ ?
> >
> 
> In modern Spanish, the uvular fricative is written with j, and x
> before all vowels, and g before i and e, but these letters didn't
> originally indicate that sound, of course. You'd have to think 
about
> the broader scope of your intended language.
> 
> 
> > And then that led me to wondering to what extent the romance 
languages' orthographies tend towards being conservative, (in 
preserving the original latin to some extent or another).  
Pronununciation in Castillian has moved quite some way from latin, 
but the orthography is much more 'latin-conservative' than say, 
Italian, which while perhaps phonologically closer to latin, has 
changed it's spelling a lot (e.g.  Castillian <qué> vs italian 
<che>).  What are your thoughts?  Stamp your mark on the nascent 
Northern Romance languages! Should they be more latin looking, or 
more germanic!?
> 
> I prefer things look more Latin looking, mainly because it's feels
> much more "right" to me.
>

Well, at least you can justify a Latin look to your language by 
blaming stuffy academicism. I had to adjust Uchunata (Fortunatian) 
orthography because the letter-values were drifting too far from the 
Roman/Romance. And the folks here can tell the Uchunataux are a very 
conservative people!