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Re: [romconlang] Re: Introduction to myself and Pelsodian



How does that work? The innovated genders, that is. I'm guessing -a & -o stem human-referent nouns (like puella/ puer) would be noble while all others (like sedilla & librum) would be common. Same for other stems: liberator = noble; actuator = common? What's the morphology like?

By native speaker intuition in orthography do you mean an amount of "historical baggage" retained?

On Sunday, 28 October 2018, 18:24:32 GMT-4, dormouse559@hidden.email [romconlang] <romconlang@yahoogroups.com> wrote:


 

Oh sorry, the encoding got messed up at some point. Here's the corrected link: http://cbb.aveneca.com/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=4938

Silvish is a Gallo-Romance-ish language spoken in the French Alps. It has maintained three grammatical cases, though no single noun distinguishes more than two. It also has innovated two genders — called "common" and "noble" — which overlap the inherited masculine and feminine; they are loosely based on animacy, so that all noble-gender nouns refer to humans but not all human nouns are noble-gender.

Let's see. Here are some other things:
  • Silvish is strongly reminiscent of French, sound-wise, but stress is more salient.
  • I haven't talked about it on my CBB thread, but morae play an important role in allophony and other phonological processes.
  • The orthography is quite regular but also assumes a certain amount of native-speaker intuition.