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{{Wiktionary|Wiktionary:Information desk}} {{Wiktionary|Wiktionary:Information desk}}
{{Wiktionary|Wiktionary:Translation requests}}


= January 27 = = December 20 =


== Sequences of aspirate stops in Ancient Greek and their reflexes as fricatives in Modern Greek? ==
== Is there a term for excluding "The" when alphabetically indexing things? ==


There are in Ancient Greek sequences of aspirate stops: for example khthoon (earth), etc. I think there are even sequences of identical aspirates (double aspirates) but I couldn't think of any off the top of my head.
For example, say I had an A-Z List of Books that ignored "The" at the start of their titles for how to alphabetize them, so '']'' would be under E and '']'' would be under S, but I had another list of movies where the T section was huge because The Shining and The Matrix and so on were all under T.


Now aspirate stop geminates or even sequences of aspirate stops are, I would think, fairly problematic from the point of view of phonetics.
It's pretty common to exclude "The" like this, but there is a word or term for doing so, that you could describe the first list as being?--] (]) 12:25, 27 January 2020 (UTC)
:There is not, as far as I am aware or can find with a search online, any specific word or phrase beyond the ones you have already used, to describe this concept. --]] 13:19, 27 January 2020 (UTC)


I guess you could posit that those were sequences of aspirate stops (or double aspirate stops) only in spelling and that in actual fact phonetically there was only one aspiration at the end of the sequence. The problem with this assumption is that those sequences produce sequences of fricatives in Modern Greek, which would seem to indicate in fact two aspirates?
: is a short but precisely written paper about the matter. It doesn't use any particular term. From this, I infer that if one wants to write about this, one doesn't have to trouble to think of (or dream up) technical terms for it. -- ] (]) 13:41, 27 January 2020 (UTC)


Or do people imagine more complex processes: where the 1st fricative was originally an unaspirate stop that became a fricative under the influence of the 2nd fricative (assimilation) but that only the 2nd fricative goes back to an Ancient Greek aspirate stop?
In morphological analysis (not the same as ], of course), the term for ignoring stuff at the beginning to get to the essential part of the word is "prefix stemming"... ] (]) 23:40, 27 January 2020 (UTC)
:See ]. -- ] (])


What's the answer? Is there a consensus?
"The", "a" and "an" are generally placed among '']''. (There are exceptions: if there weren't, "]" would evaporate.) So if you were really intent on an impressive/soporific way of expressing the idea, perhaps something like "implementing a ''stop word'' function". -- ] (]) 00:55, 28 January 2020 (UTC)


Incidentally: do sequences of fricatives in Modern Greek only occur in words that are borrowed from Ancient Greek (literate borrowings) or do they occur also in Modern Greek words that are inherited from Ancient Greek?
==lugbara==
Which language do ] people in Uganda speak? <!-- Template:Unsigned IP --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (]) 21:09, 27 January 2020 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:Presumably most of them speak the ]; a number may be bilingual or multilingual in one or more of the other ] (including English). {The poster formerly known as 87.81.239.195} ] (]) 22:34, 27 January 2020 (UTC)


] (]) 07:34, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
= January 28 =


:In ancient Greek, geminated aspirates were written pi-phi. tau-theta, and kappa-chi: Sappho, Atthis, Bacchus. You can also see ] (though it doesn't apply in Greek)... ] (]) 07:46, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
== Sophomore ==
::By the way, some of the non-geminate aspirate consonant clusters in ancient Greek came from the so called ]... -- ] (]) 07:51, 20 December 2024 (UTC)


: For the non-homorganic clusters, I'd need to dust up my references for this, but as far as I remember, the natural sound change leading to Modern Greek actually dissimmilated these, leading to clusters of fricative + simple plosive, so Ancient χθ, φθ become χτ, φτ. The χθ, φθ clusters pronounced as double fricatives in Modern Greek are reading pronunciations of inherited spellings. Can't give you refs for the phonetic nature of the clusters before fricatization, off the top of my head. ] ] 07:55, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
How come so many people use this word simply to mean second?? Are there any similar words used to mean third, fourth, and so on?? ] (]) 12:33, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
::Referring to ], ] and ], Wiktionary gives the 5th BCE Attic pronunciation for the geminates {{serif|πφ, τθ, κχ}} as having both stops aspirated, the 1st CE Egyptian pronunciation with an unaspirated plus an aspirated stop, and the 4th CE Koine as well as later (10th CE Byzantine, 15th CE Constantinopolitan) pronunciations as having an unaspirated stop followed by a fricative. See {{serif|], ], ]}}.
:See ], from the first sentence of the article "is a student in the second year of study at high school or college." By ], the word sophomore is often applied to other second efforts, such as a professional athlete's second season in the pros, or a band's second album, etc. I am not aware of any special terms applied similarly to any other situation for "third", "fourth" etc. (that is, there is no special word for a band's third album) --]] 13:07, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
::For the the non-homorganic clusters, the development seems to be different: both still aspirated in 1st CE Egyptian pronunciation and both fricative in Koine and beyond; see {{serif|], ]}}. &nbsp;--] 11:26, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
::But why do people use such a fancy word when "second" is more obvious?? ] (]) 13:17, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
:I suspect (sans evidence) that Greek ''khth'' and ''phth'' would be better understood as /{kt}ʰ/; that is, the ancients understood the aspiration to belong to the cluster as a whole rather than to the stops separately (or either of them). ] (]) 22:09, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Because sometimes people like to use fancy words. The use of ] in English is a way to add variety and texture to language. --]] 13:26, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
::While that may be true, it raises the question why they then did not write {{serif|φφ, θθ}} and {{serif|χχ}}, and even went as far as writing explicitly {{serif|ῤῥ}}. &nbsp;--] 12:56, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Why do you (User:Georgia guy) use two question marks when one is sufficient? --] (]) 13:37, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
::::I just think it's interesting. ] (]) 13:55, 28 January 2020 (UTC) :::Good point. ] (]) 02:22, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::{{small|Adding varietyness and texturing. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 17:38, 28 January 2020 (UTC)}}
:::::If you want 'fancy', students in successive years at the ] I attended were called Bejants, Semis, Tertians and Magistrands, and had a somewhat unusual ]. That's what 6 centuries of tradition can land you with. (And don't mention the raisins!) {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} ] (]) 17:08, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
::::::Please get a Misplaced Pages user name so that we'll know all your edits are the same person. ] (]) 17:32, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
:::::::There's no rule requiring registration, and "poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195" has never run afoul of any rules that I can recall. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 17:36, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
::::::::Also, unlike many IP users, TPFKA 87.etc uses a consistent identity. They've been here for years, and always identifies themselves as the same person. Get off their back, GG. They did nothing wrong, and there's no reason you should be bothering them. --]] 19:56, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
:::::::::I apologize. Sometimes we have to "think outside the box" with how problems with Misplaced Pages can be resolved. ] (]) 20:04, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
::::::::::Unregistered users are not a problem that needs to be resolved. --]] 20:06, 28 January 2020 (UTC)
::::::Just for comparison, at the university I went to, undergrads were called first-year, second-year, third-year, and fourth-year students. "Freshmen" or "frosh" was used as well for first-years, but unofficially. And at the high school I went to, there were grade&nbsp;9, grade&nbsp;10, grade&nbsp;11, year&nbsp;4, and ] students. (Well, not all of those simultaneously. They changed the numbering the after I finished grade&nbsp;11.) --] (]) 02:14, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::My school career went from Sub A to Sub B to Standard 1 through Standard 9 and the 12th years is called Matric and us scholars were matriculants. Also my ] as the teacher wear robes, by choice. Anton ] (]) 09:41, 29 January 2020 (UTC)


= December 21 =
:It seems that the word is mainly used with this meaning in combinations like "sophomore album" or "sophomore book" for artists who had a successful launch of their first creations, naturally leading people to ask if these would turn out to be one-hit wonders. Publishing their second one proves they are not early dropouts. There appear to be more semantic undertones than carried by just "second". For the rest, language evolves by occasional innovations plus people copying what they hear from others. Fads come and go, and a few changes stick, in languages as well as in other cultural manifestations. Why some things spread while others don't, and why some fall out of fashion when they do, is not generally well understood. &nbsp;--] 08:58, 29 January 2020 (UTC)


== Were the concepts of "pitch accent" and "syllable" recently introduced from the West in Japanese linguistic science and grammar? ==
:::That theory sounds groovy. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 13:09, 29 January 2020 (UTC)


I was intrigued by the fact that Japanese linguists use the Western borrowed term "akusento" to refer to the pitch accent of Japanese? It seems hard to believe that for all those centuries Japanese linguists and grammarians never thought of studying pitch accent which is a prominent feature of most of the dialects of Japanese. (Korean linguists were certainly aware of the pitch accent of Middle Korean: pitch accent was even marked in some early Hangul texts). If that is not the case, and Japanese linguists have been aware of the pitch accent since the beginning of native linguistic science, then how come the Japanese do not have their own native term for the pitch accent?
::When I was in the UK in the early 1980s, the word "sophomore" was considered an American word (not generally used by UK students to refer to themselves), and it originated as a kind of joke (it means "wise fool" in Greek). Nevertheless, Misplaced Pages has an article on ]... ] (]) 21:10, 30 January 2020 (UTC)


Anecdotally, while young Japanese people who study linguistics or even study to become teachers, even primary school teachers, are taught about the Japanese pitch accent, the way the standard language and the dialects differ, etc. many regular Japanese people, particularly fairly old ones, still subscribe to the notion that Japanese pitch contour is a monotone. It is somewhat amusing to see them try and "help" foreigners learning Japanese with artificial demonstrations of how Japanese "ought to be spoken" that so obviously have nothing to do with the way they actually speak.
:Sort of off-topic, but at least it's about the same word: My mother went to a two-year college in the South (transferred to a four-year one later on, and eventually got her Master's). I remember seeing the yearbook from the two-year college. They essentially "multiplied the class name by two": First-year students were "sophomores"; second-year were "seniors". Curious whether anyone else is familiar with this usage. --] (]) 21:31, 29 January 2020 (UTC)


In the same vein, when was the concept of "syllable" introduced in Japanese linguistics? Is there even a native term for the concept of syllable?
= January 29 =


In general Japanese people are aware of kanas (moras) because it is kanas that are written and it is in terms of kanas that the pronunciation of kanji (for example) is described. The so called syllabaries of Japanese are actually "moraic syllabaries". Japanese poetry counts kanas not syllables. Regular Japanese people seem to be completely ignorant of the concept of syllable. For example everyone knows To-u-kyo-u (the capital city) is 4 kanas (and so 4 moras) long but I've never ever heard anyone mention the fact that it has 2 syllables.
== Biographies of parents with both living and deceased children ==


] (]) 03:45, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
If a parent has both living children and deceased children, what is the most tactful way to convey that information in a sentence or two? I ask after looking at the personal life section of ] (Kobe's father). Various editors have been changing the wording, but nothing looks right to me. ]''']''' 03:34, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:I guess Japanese could often have borrowed English terms, due to them being more specific than similar Japanese, often Chinese-derived, homonyms. ] (]) 12:16, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:At the moment it reads "In 1975, Bryant married Pam Cox, sister of former NBA player Chubby Cox. Bryant's son, Kobe, won five NBA championships with the Los Angeles Lakers. Bryant also has two daughters, Sharia and Shaya. Through his wife Pam, he is the uncle of professional basketball player John Cox IV. On January 26, 2020, Kobe Bryant died in a helicopter crash, along with Bryant's 13-year-old grand-daughter Gianna and seven others."
:Looks good to me. Factual and straightforward. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 03:52, 29 January 2020 (UTC)


:From what I've read, pitch accent in Japanese has a low "]" (as Martinet would express it), and there are significant numbers of people who speak a form of Japanese close to the standard, but without pitch accent. As for borrowing the term from a European language, the fact that it's not a concept which is needed when analyzing the Chinese language could be relevant. (Of course, the concept "syllable" is quite relevant for Chinese.) ] (]) 12:44, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
== Omitting articles in English text ==
:For many languages the notion of ] is rather artificial. Even if it isn't, it may be unclear. How many syllables do English '']'' and Turkish '']'' have? What are the constituent syllables of the Dutch word '']''? Since the concept is not particularly meaningful for the Japanese language, it should not be surprising that its speakers are unfamiliar with it. The useful concept known to most Japanese is the '']'', a concept of which English speakers are generally quite ignorant. &nbsp;--] 12:47, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks guys for your insightful comments. Still, my basic questions are yet unanswered: Are the concepts of "pitch accent" and "syllable" a relatively recent borrowing from Western linguistics or not? (If they're not, and you do have examples of the use of these concepts in traditional Japanese grammar, what is the traditional terminology?) ] (]) 14:40, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Japanese uses ] (onsetsu) for the concept of a syllable, possibly with the kanji borrowed from Chinese but with unrelated readings. &nbsp;--] 02:54, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:The Japanese term for the syllable is ]. Funnily enough, the mora is known as ], though the term was for analysis of Japanese. ] (]) 05:11, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::The Japanese term ] (haku) is also used for a mora. &nbsp;--] 02:30, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I would hesitate to say it "is" used, rather than "was", so far as I've seen. ] (]) 12:41, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks. And how about the pitch accent, アクセント? No native Japanese equivalent? And most importantly, no attestation of it being dealt with in traditional Japanese grammar prior to Western contact? ] (]) 13:10, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I found pretty informative. She notes ] (1892) was the first dictionary to mark accent, which it called ]. But she also cites a paper from 1915 already featuring the term アクセント in the title. ] (]) 14:12, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Thanks a lot. I've always been intrigued by this and have asked around for years without ever getting any answers. Finally you've provided some real data. Thanks again. Is 音調 also the Chinese term for "lexical tone" (one of the tones that Chinese "monosyllabic words" have, e.g. like the 4 tones of the standard language)? If it is, then I would guess this phrase is also used in Japanese to refer to those Chinese tones? Which might explain why they thought after awhile that it'd be more specific to adopt the Western term for the Japanese pitch accent? I can see the term 音調 is also used in Korean, hence the same questions? Standard Korean no longer has a lexical pitch accent but Middle Korean did (that was even at times notated in hangul) and some dialects still do, so Korean must have terminology for that.
::::Incidentally, are you somewhat familiar with the linguistic literature of the Tokugawa (Edo) period? Not only for Japanese but also possibly for Chinese or Sanskrit or other languages? If you are do you know if there are any Edo-jidai Japanese descriptions or grammars or textbooks of the Dutch language? Tokugawa scientific activity was not completely isolated from the West since the Japanese were importing Dutch books on science, medecine, mathematics, technology, etc. (as far as I know that imported learning was called "Rangaku" or "Dutch science"?) through Nagasaki (more exactly Dejima) so some Japanese people must have had some command of the Dutch language if they were to make any use of those books? How were they getting it?
::::] (]) 10:40, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::I might have meant "distinct" rather than "specific", when I think about my phrasing, as well. ] (]) 11:22, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::The modern term for phonological tone is (トーン or) ]. I had never heard of 音調. I also saw ] in some papers by authors Sugitō mentions (particularly 井上奥本), but it now only means tone of voice or choice of words in general.
:::::I'm no expert on Japanese history but there was ], with ] and ] discovering ] in the 18th century (hello ]). Note modern Western linguistics didn't start until ] connected Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit in 1786, and monolingual dictionaries of contemporary languages had just started to become a thing in Europe; there probably didn't yet exist a large body of research into Dutch or any vernacular and I doubt the Japanese had much to learn from them. King Sejong was ahead of Europe by centuries. ] (]) 11:24, 27 December 2024 (UTC)


== Two questions ==
Way back in the late 1980s, when I got my first ] toys, I noticed that the instruction manuals used a form of English that was completely new to me at the time. For example, an instruction manual might say:
:''Fold front part of car apart to form arms. Pull back part of car back to form legs. Stand robot.''
The way I had learned English, it would have to have been:
:''Fold the front part of the car apart to form the arms. Pull the back part of the car back to form the legs. Stand the robot.''
Of course I understood everything, but I didn't know English could be written this way. Is there a name for this form of English? And why were the manuals written in this way? Is it used elsewhere? ] &#124; ] 13:31, 29 January 2020 (UTC)


#Are there any French loanwords in English where French hard C was changed to K when it was borrowed to English?
:I'd ''guess'' that various manufacturers wanted to provide instructions in a variety of languages yet do so in limited space. (I remember multilingual instructions for exposing films, all on a single piece of paper that would fit in the box.) So there would have been a motive for this kind of "telegraphese". It became commoner, people got used to it, it then became expected. NB this is mere guesswork. -- ] (]) 13:41, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
#Why most languages do not have native words for continents where they are spoken? For example, neither Finnish nor English have native word for Europe, nor does Swahili have native word for Africa.
::Except that the instruction manuals for Transformers toys in the US at the time were written in this variant of English and no other languages. This form of writing is very common in instructions and similar forms of writing. --] (]) 14:32, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
--] (]) 21:39, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:::This "elliptical style" (as the style manual ''Words into Type'' calls it) is also common in recipes, usage in which may predate usage in such manufacturers' instructions. The style manual I mentioned has this to say: "Instructions are sometimes written in an elliptical style, omitting articles. Consistency should be observed, omitting all or none." ] (]) 14:35, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::::That style has been around for a long time, presumably to cut down on wordiness. "Insert tab A into slot B." That kind of thing. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 14:46, 29 January 2020 (UTC)


: {{re|40bus}} As an ordinary, little-knowing person, I think the 2. is quite obvious: when languages were emerging, people didn't know there is such thing like 'a continent' and that they were living on one. So there were no such concept known to them, consequently no need to invent either a general word 'continent' nor a specific name for the one where they lived. --] (]) 22:04, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
:We have articles on ] and ]… ] (])


:: I wonder how much the word ''continent'' was used before the ]! ] (]) 18:21, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
I remember begging my Dad for a transformer and after months of pleading, one Saturday morning he agreed and took me into town and bought an AC/DC electricity transformer. I was not amused. lol Anton ] (]) 14:50, 29 January 2020 (UTC)


:1. Thre only one that springs to mind is ] from the French ''sceptique''. Here in Britain, the usual spelling is "sceptical", but apparently the "k" variant was preferred by 19th-century lexicographers in America, out of deference to its Greek roots. ] (]) 15:13, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
== The phantom The ==
::Your link asserts that ''skeptical'' derives directly from Latin rather than from French. Is the <c> really pronounced /k/ in French? That's not what I would have guessed, though I suppose otherwise it would sound the same as ''septique'', assuming that's a word, which would probably not be desired. --] (]) 20:08, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I can confirm that the "c" in "sceptique" is silent in French and that the word is a homophone of "septique", as used in "fosse septique" (]). ] (]) 14:17, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Italian has an advantage over French here, in that the predictably formed cognates ''scettico'' and ''settico'' are pronounced differently in the first consonant ( vs ). --] (]) 02:35, 30 December 2024 (UTC)


= December 22 =
Is there a word to cover the action of adding a "The" to the start of a name or title that shouldn't have one? e.g referring to ] as The Eurythmics - ] (]) 14:08, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:Not really, but it's an example of ]. --] 14:19, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:{{ec}} It's called "usual English grammar". The normal rules of English grammar allow for the use of the definite article "the" before plural nouns, ''especially in situations when dealing with the plural as a specific, designated grouping''. Referring to the band as "the Eurythmics" is not incorrect in any way, and mirrors the usage of the word "the" in numerous other similar contexts. Consider "the dogs are barking" meaning "There's a specific group of dogs (where both of us know which dogs they are) that are barking", which is different from "Dogs are barking" which means "Some unidentified group of dogs (where none of us really knows which ones they are) are barking". In the case of "the Eurythmics", the use of the definite article is more natural and how people would normally speak, ''because'', when we say "The Eurythmics are playing a concert" we're referring to a specific grouping, "Eurythmics are playing a concert" feels like it could be any random Eurythmics and not a specific set of them; yes, we can ''after the fact'' take the time to analyze the statement and realize what is meant, but in the case of making language as natural and understandable to our listeners/readers, "the Eurythmics" in that context does not feel ] in the way that leaving off the definite article does. So, to answer your question directly, again, the use of "the" before the word "Eurythmics" goes by the name "standard ]." --]] 14:26, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::I must say, I've never come across any random Eurythmics. Articles in band names can be a bit of an oddity. ] (]) 14:50, 29 January 2020 (UTC) p.s. I've always thought Annie Lennox had a ].
::(ec) I don't think your (Jayron32's) informative answer exactly answers the question. X201 carefully wrote "The" (with an uppercase "T"), twice, so asking specifically about the word being part of the title. I don't think I'd say "The ]", "The ]", or "The ], so I think the answer is more complex. ] (]) 14:53, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::::You hit the nail on the head Bazza. I was trying to think of other groups or TV shows as examples, but my mind came up blank. - ] (]) 16:56, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:::Yes, quite. ] has often been ridiculed for adding an unwanted The, e.g. ]. ] (]) 14:59, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::::You are wrong. In their early days they were known as The Pink Floyd. --] 15:05, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:::::I certainly wasn't claiming they were never called that. Only that the BBC failed to drop the The when it became unfashionable. Partly why I chose that as an example! ] (]) 15:12, 29 January 2020 (UTC)


== To borrow trouble ==
:::I've only seen such added "The"s (capitalized) at the beginnings of sentences (or fragments). I've never noticed such in running text, "I saw the Eurythmics last night", yes, "I saw The Eurythmics last night", no. --] (]) 15:02, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::::At least they're consistent. The Beatles were most often "The Beatles", but on some of their albums they were only "Beatles". ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 15:12, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::::"The Beatles" vs "the Beatles" has been a long running saga at MoS. ] (]) 15:13, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:::::That's of minor concern, such subtle differences in orthography have little effect on the understandability of the language. The greater concern is that, among the "article is not a part of the name" crowd, there is an ardent subset who also removes ''any'' article, without regard to capitalization, from the text, so we get such monstrosities as "I bought an album by Beatles last week" or "Have you heard a new song by Beatles". There's numerous examples of such things all over Misplaced Pages. --]] 15:22, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::::::A waste of money. Most of them are ], allegedly. Although they were ]. ] (]) 15:52, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
*I will note that, in the specific example given, it is blatantly clear that the current Misplaced Pages article titled ] is using incorrect grammar. When we check ngrams, , we see that comparing the phrase "by Eurythmics" vs. "by the Eurythmics" there are literally no examples from the corpus of the former usage (the "the"less one). using "to the Eurythmics vs. "to Eurythmics" also shows similar results. We can probably debate and allow for a variance of opinion as to whether the use of "the" should be capitalized or not, but omitting the definite article ''altogether'' is simply unknown in the English corpus, so the Misplaced Pages article pretending that is the proper way to write is utter bullshit. --]] 17:34, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
**That pedantic plague appears to have begun 15 years ago, by an editor who bailed in 2007. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 17:56, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
***Interesting. One of the things I've "learned" from Misplaced Pages is that ] should not be referred to as "the Eagles". If that's wrong, I'd like to know.<br>By the way, if ], I find a substantial preference for "by Eagles". But my guess is that if you looked into those occurrences, you would find that a lot of them were talking about the bird rather than the band. No obvious, easy way of checking that comes to mind. --] (]) 21:08, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
***:You can turn off the default case-insensitivity and . The result is interestingly different. &nbsp;--] 07:46, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
***:: I did that, actually. Considered mentioning it, but the results, while suggestive, are not really definitive, and it seemed like too much work to report on. --] (]) 08:01, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
***::: is a search comparing "song by Eagles" and "song by the Eagles"; that should hypothetically eliminate much of the noise from the bird portion of the searches. Once again, the "the-less" version is essentially unknown. While the proper name of the band is "Eagles", that ''still does not override normal English grammar when using the word in a sentence''. --]] 13:19, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
***::::Ok Jayron, nice one, just try and ]. ] (]) 13:30, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
***:::::<small>I hate the fuckin' Eagles, man.</small> ] (]) 13:42, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
***::::::<small>This aggression will not stand, man! --]] 14:42, 30 January 2020 (UTC) </small>
***::::::{{small|You're a Cowboys fan? ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 13:50, 30 January 2020 (UTC)}}
***:::::::<small>No, just wants the rug back. It really brought the room together, you know? --] (]) 20:22, 30 January 2020 (UTC) </small>


I recently had occasion to use this phrase, which I believe I learned from my grandma, and it occurred to me I wasn't sure everyone knew it. I went and looked it up in Wiktionary, and found a definition I consider wrong, which I corrected.
== Pronunciation of ''ʻokina'' ==


But searching, it does seem like the "wrong" definition may actually have some currency in the wild.
The ʻokina marks a glottal stop in words like ''Hawaiʻi''. How do you pronounce the name of the punctuation mark itself? (I've also ], but no responses so far.) Thanks. —] (]) 19:13, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:According to ], it is oh-KEE-nah. ] (]) 20:04, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::In English? Or in Hawaiian? I would guess that the Hawaiian name would be pronounced with an initial glottal stop. However, that isn't a sound that English uses at the beginnings of words. --] (]) 20:06, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:::It is, when an utterance starts with a vowel. If you say "''ʻokina'' is the Hawaiian character representing a glottal stop", it shoud come out about right. After "the" I'd say it's 50&ndash;50. I find that if I start a sentence with "the ʻokina", it seems to depend on whether I pronounce "the" as /ðʌ/ (in which case I want to use the glottal stop) or /ðiː/ (in which case I don't). --] (]) 20:50, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:::: The younger generation should have no problem. They now routinely spout atrocities like "'''Thə''' interesting thing is that '''thə''' answer is ''''ə''' apple', not ''''ə''' orange'". -- ] </sup></span>]] 00:18, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
::::: I'm not sure exactly what you mean. Maybe this is some Oz trend that hasn't made it here yet? But beyond that I'm not sure what the complaint is in the first place. I use /ðʌ/ and /ðiː/ fairly interchangeably, with /ðiː/ being maybe just a touch more formal. --] (]) 06:27, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
:::::: Oh, I just noticed that you meant "a apple" instead of "an apple". I don't say that, of course. But Mr Bumble probably would have, so it's not all that new. --] (]) 06:29, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
::::::: Not only that. When you say "the answer", is it elided to "thee-y-answer" or is there a glottal stop as per my example? -- ] </sup></span>]] 07:31, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
:::::::: I use both forms interchangeably. --] (]) 07:38, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
::::::::: Then you're only half the man I thought you were. :) -- ] </sup></span>]] 22:05, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
:::::<small>"It's not by a elk." —] (]) 03:14, 2 February 2020 (UTC)</small>


My understanding is that to borrow trouble (against tomorrow/against the future/etc) is to spend a lot of effort worrying about or preparing for an adverse event that may never happen. I think this is clearly the definition that makes the most sense and is best historically grounded. Similar sayings include Jesus ("sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof") and ] ("worry is interest paid on trouble before it comes due").
::: I realized on reflection that there's a manifold confluence of threads that's too interesting not to mention (at least from my possibly slightly idiosyncratic view of interestingness).
::: The section above talks about the Eagles, which I would almost certainly render as /ðʌˈʔiːglz/ because using the /ðiː/ pronunciation would blend into the first syllable of "Eagles".
::: But I was also going to give an example in German, suggesting that if you know German you should try to pronounce ''der Adler'', which has a glottal stop before the A.
::: I ''think'' it's a pure coincidence that ''Adler'' means "eagle". --] (]) 06:35, 30 January 2020 (UTC)


The other understanding is that it means "stir up trouble". A Quora post I found claims that this is actually the older meaning, which it dates from the 1850s, whereas the "worry" meaning it dates to the 20th century. This rendering, to me, makes much less sense &mdash; in what way is this supposed to be "borrowing"?
== Von der Leyen and Eliot ==


Anyway, I would be interested to know if high-quality attestations can be found for the "provocation" meaning, and how it might have come about if it actually predated the "worry" meaning. --] (]) 00:57, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
] tells UK "Only in the agony of parting do we look into the depth of love": . But where and when did ] novelist and poet ] ever write this? (It's also a popular quote for funerals, it seems). ] (]) 22:29, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:::{{small|What do you mean by ''also'' for funerals? ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 23:11, 29 January 2020 (UTC)}}
:In chapter 44 of '']'', she wrote "And 'tis a strange truth that only in the agony of parting we look into the depths of love." ---] ] 23:19, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:{{ec}}One of my favorite authors. The quote is from '']'', published in 1866. You'll find it on page 377 here: .--] <sup>]</sup><sup>]</sup> 23:22, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
::<small>] - ]. ] (]) 22:25, 31 January 2020 (UTC) </small>


:To me the 'stir up' makes sense. 'Borrowing' implies that you now actually have something: if you just worry about something, it may never materialise, but if you talk and/or act in the wrong ways, potential trouble may become actual. I (in the UK) have always read/heard the phrase as being about bringing trouble upon oneself unnecessarily.
== English pronunciation of qaf and kaf ==
:The saying is an example of an ], where the ''literal'' meaning is not (at least any longer) what it ''actually'' means. Both individual words, and idioms and other sayings, can drift in meaning over long periods. They may also differ in current ].
:Many expressions in English originate from sailing. The nautical meaning of borrow, "to approach closely to either land or wind" is quoted in the OED from ]'s ''The Sailor's Word Book'' of 1867 and obviously describes a manouvre with some risk; See also the golfing use of the word – the amount a ball on a sloping green will drift to one side of the hole, which the putting player must compensate for. (If the player compensates too much, they are said to have "over-borrowed".)
:May I gently suggest that if you want to correct (or otherwise edit) material in Wiktionary, you should (as here) do so only on the basis of published Reliable sources, not on "what you (or your Granny) know". Many (all?) families have their own internal expressions and word meanings, and every individual has their own ] – ones different from yours (or mine) are not automatically "wrong". {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} ] (]) 03:09, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::] &nbsp;--] 14:54, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Which is why I made a suggestion, rather than issuing a ukase. Although Wiktionary does not have that formal requirement, it would be improved if editors there chose to follow it anyway. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} ] (]) 16:21, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::I don't really know the norms on Wiktionary in detail. I believe though that it's based on "attestations" rather than "sources". The only real ''sources'' for meanings of words are usually -- other dictionaries, which has an obvious circularity problem. (Similarly, at Misplaced Pages, which is a tertiary source, we should not ordinarily be relying on other tertiary sources).
::::As to the merits, the point is that "borrowing" innately involves the idea of the future. You borrow against income you expect to have tomorrow. If you're just ''creating'' trouble from scratch, that's not being a borrower, that's being a producer. But if you worry about something not under your control and that may never come to pass, that's borrowing that potential trouble from tomorrow, and making it actual trouble (for you) today. --] (]) 20:02, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:The two senses coexist on , which has,
:# Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition: "to worry about anything needlessly or before one has sufficient cause";
:# Penguin Random House/HarperCollins: "to do something that is unnecessary and may cause future harm or inconvenience".
:Sense 1 is also found in Longman: "to worry about something when it is not necessary".<sup></sup>
:Sense 2 is found in Merriam–Webster: "to do something unnecessarily that may result in adverse reaction or repercussions".<sup></sup> Dictionary.com has the stronger "Go out of one's way to do something that may be harmful".<sup></sup> &nbsp;--] 12:07, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:The earliest use I found, from 1808,<sup></sup> is about unnecessary worry. &nbsp;--] 12:44, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:Idioms are often literal nonsense. ''Back and forth'' implies returning before departing: Wiktionary's definition is "From one place to another and back again", not "Returning from a place and then going to it". ] is the normal configuration for a human, and indeed the expression has inverted over time from an earlier ''heels over head.'' You can easily and naturally ''have your cake and eat it too.'' The difficult thing is eating a cake that you ''don't,'' at that point in time, have: or eating a cake and having it ''later,'' too. ]&nbsp;] 20:49, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:&nbsp;
:The two senses have in common that the subject is doing something unnecessary, and that someone sees potential trouble ahead. In the first sense it is the subject who sees the (unprovoked) trouble, and what they do is worry. In the second sense it is the speaker who fears trouble if the subject does a provocative act. (The speaker may in this case coincide with the subject.)
:Looking at books of idioms, it looks almost as if a switch-over occurred between 2008 and 2010.
:
:For the ''worry'' sense:
:* 1977, ''Early American Proverbs and Proverbial Phrases''.<sup></sup>
:* 1995, ''The Anthracite Idiom''.<sup></sup>
:* 2008, ''Idiom Junky''.<sup></sup>
:For the ''provoke'' sense:
:* 2010, ''Oxford Dictionary of English Idioms''.<sup></sup> (labelled "North American")
:* 2013, ''The American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms''.<sup></sup>
:* 2015, ''Professional Learner's Dictionary of Spoken English''.<sup></sup>
:These are "mentions", not "uses", and not usable as attestations on Wiktionary. For attestations of the "provoke" sense:
:* '''2016''', Stacy Finz, ''Borrowing Trouble''. Kensington, p. 22:<sup></sup>
:*: Brady hadn’t bothered to change his name, figuring it was common enough. But he stayed off Facebook and Twitter. When Harlee Roberts had wanted to write a feature story about him for the Nugget Tribune, he’d politely declined. No need to '''borrow trouble'''.
:* '''2024''' June 11, Kristine Francis, “7 Little Johnstons Recap 06/11/24: Season 14 Episode 14 ‘Burpees and Burp Clothes’”, ''Celeb Dirty Laundry'':<sup></sup>
:*: Brice didn’t want talk about it because he thought it was '''borrowing trouble'''.
:* '''2024''' August 7, Colby Hall, “Shark Tank’s Kevin O’Leary Defends Kamala Harris Avoiding Press to Fox News: Her Campaign is In ‘Euphoric Stage!’”, ''Mediaite'':<sup></sup>
:*: From O’Leary’s perspective, shared during Wednesday morning appearance on America’s Newsroom, Harris is enjoying so much momentum at the moment, things are going so well for her since she became the nominee; she has little reasons to '''borrow trouble''' by taking tough questions during a press conference or a journalist willing to challenge her.''
:&nbsp;--] 13:46, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::Against this is the fact that I (a Brit) have taken the expression to have the 'provoke' sense since the early 1960s. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} ] (]) 17:53, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Can you find earlier uses of that sense in published sources? &nbsp;--] 23:52, 23 December 2024 (UTC)


One "borrows" trouble from the future, often unnecessarily. It seems pretty straightforward to me. --] &#124; ] 21:54, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
How can anglophones distinguish the names of these 2 Arabic letters?? ] (]) 23:23, 29 January 2020 (UTC)
:But it's obviously not using "borrow" in the most normal way. ] (]) 23:49, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
:] discusses how to pronounce "qaf". Do you see anything about an Arabic letter in ]? <-] <sup>'']''</sup> ]-> 00:51, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
::Our article on kaf is at ]--] <sup>]</sup><sup>]</sup> 01:44, 30 January 2020 (UTC)


== Repetition ==
Georgia_guy -- This Arabic letter has an extremely wide range of realizations in different modern Arabic dialects (part of the reason why there are so many Latin-alphabet spellings of "Gaddafi"); some of these are similar to sounds found in English, some not. In early medieval Arabic, it was usually a voiceless uvular stop. It comes from a sound which was probably a velar ] stop in early Semitic. Some sounds written by Semitic alphabets (Hebrew, Arabic etc.) are so alien to the English sound system that there's not much point in trying to pronounce them in English, such as the letter Ayn/Ayin <big>E+/e+</big>, which originally represents a voiced ] consonant. ] (]) 21:13, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
:But how about distinguishing their ''names''?? Both names would have the same English pronunciation, similar to the first syllable of the word "coffin". ] (]) 22:36, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
::For many speakers, the position of the tongue in making /q/ and /k/ affects the sound of the following /a/. After /k/ it sounds closer to (like the "a" in English "cat" or "calf"). After /q/ it has a sound closer to your "coffin" example. Find youtube videos by native speakers trying to explain the Arabic alphabet and listen to their pronunciations of the letter names. For example: or . I don't know how common these pronunciations are and they may be exaggerating for effect, but my Beginning Arabic teacher, many many years ago, pronounced them that way too.--] <sup>]</sup><sup>]</sup> 01:24, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
:::Part of the problem for some English speakers is that many dialects (especially in the US outside of the Northeast) have undergone the ] and as such, may not recognize the two different vowel sounds as unique. --]] 14:11, 31 January 2020 (UTC)


Does English use do-support when the verb is repeated? Can the main verb also be repeated? For example, are the following sentences correct?
:::WilliamThweatt -- the Classical Arabic term for fronting or raising of an "a" vowel (often inhibited by an adjacent emphatic or guttural consonant) is ]. By the way, my favorite Qaf is not the letter, but the ] which makes an appearance in many of the Arabian Nights tales... ] -- ] (]) 16:38, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
* ''This is why this street has the name it has.''
* ''Jack likes it more than Kate likes.''
* ''I drink milk and you drink too.''
--] (]) 08:27, 22 December 2024 (UTC)


:The first is correct, the latter two are not.
In layman's terms, can one just say "the Arabic letter K" and "the Arabic letter Q"? --] (]) 19:39, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
:In such cases, I'm pretty sure any transitive verb still requires its object to be explicitly stated. <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 08:35, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::Apparently, the ''what'' in ''I know what you know'' preposes what is called a ]. I don't go down syntax rabbit holes enough... <span style="border-radius:2px;padding:3px;background:#1E816F">]<span style="color:#fff">&nbsp;‥&nbsp;</span>]</span> 08:56, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::In this sentence, the interrogative content clause is the object, ''what you know''. The word ''what'' is a fused relative pronoun, not a clause. &nbsp;--] 11:39, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::The other two would normally be phrased as:
:::*"Jack likes it more than Kate does." (Or less commonly, "Jack likes it more than Kate likes it.")
:::*I drink milk, and you drink it too." ] (]) 10:45, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Or, "I drink milk and so do you." &nbsp;--] 11:44, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Or "I drink milk and you do too". Pondering ''this street has the name it has,'' "I drink milk you drink" makes sense, and has a similar structure, but not the required meaning. ]&nbsp;] 20:59, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::I consider the repetition of wording a sort of emphasis. ] (]) 13:53, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:The third sentence is grammatical but may not mean what you think it means. (Intransitive "drink" in English tends to mean "drink alcohol", quite likely to excess.) --] (]) 20:16, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
:: I'm reminded of the intransitive "go" (Does your wife go? She sometimes goes, yes.) -- ] </sup></span>]] 20:43, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::: Aye aye nudge nudge say no more.... --] (]) 20:44, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
::::<SMALL>But does your wife come? ] (]) 22:22, 22 December 2024 (UTC)</SMALL>
:::Wiktionary lists 46 intransitive senses. &nbsp;--] 01:48, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:In my dialect of (American) English I think I would prefer does even in the first sentence, i.e. "This is why this street has the name (that) it does.", without necessarily considering 'has' wrong. As others have said, the lack of repetition of the direct objects is a bigger problem than not replacing the verbs with a form of 'do'. It makes the sentence sound wrong or have another implication (as "drink"=consume alcohol to excess) rather than just sound non-native. ] (]) 01:36, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::The possibility to use lexical (i.e. non-auxiliary) ''have'' without ] ("At long last, have you no decency, sir?") is quite exceptional; it is unique in this respect among lexical verbs. Colloquially, this is far more common in British English, but seems to be dying out also there, sounding stiff. &nbsp;--] 02:13, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::: That sounds a bit categorical. There are a lot of archaic-sounding, but clearly grammatical, uses that allow such constructions. Stuff like {{xt|know you not that I must be about my father's business?}}. It's not something you would likely say to communicate ideas in any ordinary context, but it's still completely clear what it means, and the syntax still works. --] (]) 02:06, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
::::Verily, verily, I say unto thee, "not likely" is too weak; "no way" comes much closer. If "know you not" sounds syntactically acceptable to some, it is only because it is familiar from the syntax of the 1611 KJV, {{tq|Wiſt ye not that I muſt be about my fathers buſineſſe?}},<sup></sup> with the familiarity kept alive through reuse in later revisions, such as Webster's revision from 1833 ({{tq|knew ye not that I must be about my Father’s business?}}.<sup></sup>), an archaism that, including the archaic ''ye'', is retained in the ].<sup></sup> &nbsp;--] 01:27, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
::::: No, I disagree; {{xt|know you not}} is syntactically acceptable. If you use it in casual conversation, you're obviously making fun, but it's not nearly as obscure as (say) "wist", and maybe less than "ye". --] (]) 19:43, 26 December 2024 (UTC)


= January 30 = == Demonyms ==


How are demonyms of overseas territories determined? Are people from ], ] and ] "British"? Are people from all French overseas departments, collectivities and territories "French"? Are people from both ], ], ] and ] "Dutch"? And I have never seen demonyms formed from French overseas department names, such as "Réunionian", "Guadeloupean", "French Guinanan", "Mayottean", "Martiniquean", so are their people just "French"? Is this same from overseas collectivities and territories? --] (]) 23:08, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
== need help translating Kanji album cover ==
:Demonyms are generally listed in the articles. ] (]) 00:04, 23 December 2024 (UTC)


:There is no system to it. The inhabitants of ] are French but still have a demonym, '']''. The demonym '']'' can be used for the inhabitants of ]. In both cases these terms are ambiguous, because they are also used for members of specific ethnic groups. &nbsp;--] 01:37, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
link --> https://img.discogs.com/xffouchGHMx0c0l0boXkLpx-kVo=/fit-in/600x601/filters:strip_icc():format(jpeg):mode_rgb():quality(90)/discogs-images/R-4949421-1451338983-6970.jpeg.jpg


:Most regions, islands, cities, etc have demonyms, and even for those that don't, you can always say "a <''toponym''> person" or "a person from <''toponym''>" if you want to be more precise than just indicating the country. Or if you're asking whether those people are legally full British, Dutch and French nationals, then ] or ] would be a better place for that. --] (]) 03:03, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
I want to write an article on this band/album. What does the cover say in English, please? ] (]) 08:24, 30 January 2020 (UTC)


:40bus -- The Isle of Man and the Channel Islands are under the British Crown, but technically they aren't part of the UK. The demonym for the Isle of Man is "Manx" adjective (as in the famous tailless cat), "Manxman" noun, but you wouldn't be able to predict that. ] (]) 03:16, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:Here is the text left-to-right in digital form: 海は荒海∙向うは佐渡よ∙すずめ啼け啼け∙もう日はくれた∙みんな呼べ呼べ∙お星さま∙出たぞ. I have separated the original columns by bullets, but it looks like the last two columns together form one sentence. My Japanese is insufficient to translate it. This is what Google translate produces: "The sea is rough seas, the other side is Sado, the sparrows are crying, the sun is gone, everyone can be called, the stars have come out." ] is a city and an island. Are these the lyrics of a song on the album? &nbsp;--] 21:23, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
:::Although Manx people (and Channel Islanders) are ]s. Like everything connected with British governance, it's a tottering pile of complex traditions and reforms; we have never re-started with a clean sheet, and don't intend to either. ] (]) 12:41, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
::P.S. The French have the lovely word "DOM-TOM" to describe non-Hexagonal territories. On Misplaced Pages, that redirects to ], which might answer some of your questions... ] (]) 03:20, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Martiniquais, Guadeloupéen and Réunionais are commonly used in French; I guess you just don't run across their English equivalents that often. For Mayotte, which has been in the news a lot of late, the demonym is "Mahorais" for some reason I haven't explored. Other overseas territories have demonyms as well (e.g. Guyanais); this goes even though their inhabitants hold French citizenship. ] (]) 14:49, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::: American citizens include Californians, Texans, Rhode Islanders, Pennsylvanians, etc. Australians include New South Welshmen, Queenslanders, Victorians, etc. The Soviet Union was populated by Russians, Ukrainians, Georgians, Armenians, etc, all of whom were Soviet citizens. -- ] </sup></span>]] 15:38, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::<SMALL>Georgians could be both Sovietans and Americans, though... ] (]) 22:49, 23 December 2024 (UTC)</SMALL>
:::::Similarly the French include Normands, Lorrains, Bourguignons and whatnot; though I am not aware of demonyms for the newfangled départements. ] (]) 02:38, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Luckily ] is. --] (]) 15:39, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::::''Mahorais'' comes from ''Mahoré'', the ] name for ] (and consequently the entirety of Mayotte.) ] (]) 19:05, 23 December 2024 (UTC)


= December 24 =
:<small>It says nothing in English, other than the word ''Trio''. You're welcome. —] (]) 03:18, 2 February 2020 (UTC)</small>


== Language forums ==
It's ]. There's likely to be a good translation somewhere, but in my own I-really-ought-to-down-one-more-coffee-before-trying-this translation:


I was just reading this of still active web forums, unfortunately there's no language section. What language, linguistics, etymology, and lexicography blogs and forums are there? Epigraphy? Deep knowledge and open attitudes are best.
<poem>
] (]) 23:21, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
The sea is choppy;
Over there is Sado.
Chirp, sparrows!
The sun has set.
Call everyone!
The stars have come out.
</poem>


:] hosted some lively discussions in its early days, but by the time I stopped receiving it, it was mainly for conference announcements, job offerings, book announcements etc.; I don't know what it is now. ] is still operating, but only approved people can start new topics, and it's focused somewhat on Chinese language and linguistics in recent years. ] (]) 01:00, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
In Japan too, sparrows chirp in daylight; so this ingredient is a bit odd. (On the other hand, you might say that it's after dark when they need instructions to chirp.)


::There are also general question-answering websites such as Quora, but I don't know if any of them contain an interacting community of people with linguistic expertise. Back in the day, there was also Usenet's "sci.lang", but I haven't participated there for many years, and 2024 seems to be the year when general-purpose Usenet became definitively defunct (only certain niches survive). ] (]) 19:14, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
Just one note on what {{U|Lambiam}} writes. Sado, aka Sadogashima, is administratively a '']'': thus, "Sado-shi". This is conventionally englished as "city" (so Lambiam isn't wrong), but it has only the most tenuous relationship with "city" as the word is used elsewhere. Simply, nobody who isn't already accustomed to the concept of ''shi'' would recognize Sado as a city. -- ] (]) 23:19, 1 February 2020 (UTC)


= December 25 =
:"Sunayama" (literally sand dune(s)) is the title of the poem, which is by ]. Just one half-sentence from the Japanese WP article on the verse: "The record of ''Sunayama'', as set to music by ], sold 150,000 between 1945 and 1960". -- ] (]) 00:04, 2 February 2020 (UTC)


== Ways to improve proposed Help:IPA page ==
== Klingon and Kazakh ==


I currently have a draft of a proposed Help:IPA page for the Kannada language, and I was referred here by @] to seek advice on ways I can improve it for potential inclusion in the Help: category. Any advice or criticisms would be much appreciated.
How do you say toothbrush in Klingon and Kazakh?] (]) 18:08, 30 January 2020 (UTC)
: is the Kazakh word. --]] 18:51, 30 January 2020 (UTC)


::In Klingon it's ''Ho' teywI''' according to . ] (]) 19:34, 30 January 2020 (UTC) Link to draft: ] ] (]) 12:18, 25 December 2024 (UTC)


:Hello, @]. I have little knowledge of Dravidian languages, but I do have some comments about your draft.
:::Klingons use toothbrushes? I would have assumed they'd just swish around some blood wine. ] (]) 07:40, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
:* "suit" is not a good choice for English approximation, because it has variant pronunciations as /sut/ and /sjut/.
:* I doubt that most English speakers could even tell you what the Korean currency is, and would be unsure how to pronounce it. According to Wiktionary, the currency is pronounced in Korean, and /wɑn/ in AmE, /wɒn/ in BrE - none of them quite the /(w)o/ you want. I think the BrE "want" is probably closest, but I don't know how to convey that to an AmE speaker.
:* I really don't think that "Irish 'boat'" (whatever that is supposed to mean) is a good match for /aʊ/
:* 'Hungary' has the sequence /ŋg/ in all varieties of English I've ever heard, and certainly in RP/ "Hangar" does not have the /g/ in most varieties of English (except in the Midlands and North West of England).
:* your use of "th" to key the dentals will not work for most English speakers outside India (and maybe Ireland). To most Anglophone ears, the salient feature of /θ/ and /ð/ is their fricative nature, not their dental articluation, and if you write "th" you will get θ or ð.
:Of course, the whole problem with "English approximation" is that you are trying to capture distinctions that are completely imperceptible to most Anglophones. I see that ] addresses this problem in notes, and I think this is the better approach. ] (]) 14:36, 25 December 2024 (UTC)


= December 27 =
::::It's probably just a borrowing from a conquered species. With all their biological redundancies they probably just regrow the teeth that fall out. ] (]) 11:12, 1 February 2020 (UTC)


== Weird sentence ==
:::''Ho&apos;'' means "tooth" and is in the original 1985 lexicon. ''tey'' is not in that lexicon but must be a verb meaning "to brush". ''-wI&apos;'' is a verbal suffix that converts a verb meaning "to X" into a noun meaning "one who/which does X", like the English "-er" suffix on "lover", "runner", etc. The Klingon ''H'' represents the ] /x/, and the two &apos; symbols represent the ], which is ] in Klingon; for example ''teywI&apos;'' (a brush) is a different word than ''tey'wI&apos;'' (a confider) . ] (]) 19:00, 1 February 2020 (UTC)


I recently removed this wording from an article because it looked on the face of it like a grammatical error, but reading closer, I see that it is likely correct but still confusing:
= January 31 =
*"He thus became a permanent ambassador at the at the time itinerant royal court."
Should it be left as is, or is there another way to write it that is less confusing? ] (]) 18:29, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:"He thus became a permanent ambassador at the royal court, which at the time was itinerant." --] (]) 18:36, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::Thanks. ] (]) 18:38, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:::Another way to say it would be to hyphenate at-the-time. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 21:27, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::::I have to admit this sentence threw me for a loop. It isn't often I come across something like this. Does it have a linguistic term? ] (]) 21:37, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::It's not quite ], but close.
:::::I might have minimally amended it as "He thus became a permanent ambassador at the then-itinerant royal court," but Wrongfilter's proposal is probably better. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} ] (]) 21:47, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::While yours is better than mine. :) ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 21:56, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::"ambassador to" would be better than "ambassador at". ] (]) 22:01, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
:The wordy option (not always the best idea) is to replace ''at the time'' with ''contemporarily.'' I wonder if there's an equivalent word without the Latin stuffiness. I considered ''meanwhile,'' but that has slightly the wrong connotations, as if being an ambassador and having a royal court were two events happening on one particular afternoon.
:Edit: I mean yes, that word is "then". But here we have a situation where if the word chosen is too fancy, the reader isn't sure what it means, but if the word is too ''un''fancy, the reader can't parse the grammar. Hence the use of a hyphen, I guess.]&nbsp;] 11:50, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::It is a rather common rule/guideline/advice to use hyphens in compound modifiers before nouns,<sup></sup> but when the first part of a compound modifier is an adverb, there is some divergence in the three guidelines linked to (yes but not for adverbs ending on ''-ly'' followed by a participle; mostly no; if the compound modifier can be misread). They all agree on ''happily married couple'' (no; mostly no; no) and mostly on ''fast-moving merchandise)'' (yes; mostly no; yes). They are incomplete, since none give an unequivocally-negative advice for ''unequivocally-negative advice'', which IMO is very-bad use of a hyphen (and so is ''very-bad use''). &nbsp;--] 07:04, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:{{u|Viriditas}}, have you now edited the article text? None of the rest of us can, because you haven't identified or linked it. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} ] (]) 19:41, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
::That . In the course of finding this I did a search for "at the at the" and fixed five instances that ''were'' errors. ]&nbsp;] 20:23, 28 December 2024 (UTC)


= December 29 =
== Yakut/Sakha (second try) ==


== A few questions ==
This is a follow-up to my last request ]. Sorry I missed your comments, {{u|81.131.40.58}} and {{u|Theurgist}}! The phrase I'd like to transliterate/transcribe is "Бырайыак:Көмпүүтэр оонньуулара". I had used an online tranlsator to come up with {{Diff2|934476116|this}}, but I would welcome any other attempts. Thank you! -] (]) 01:08, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
:"Бырайыак:Көмпүүтэр оонньуулара" means "Project:Computer games". A better transliteration of the last word would be "oonnyuulara", note the ннь (geminated form of нь). The other two should be correct. --] (]) 03:39, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
::Thanks. I'll make that correction. -] (]) 15:16, 31 January 2020 (UTC)


# Are there any words in German where double consonant is written after {{angbr|ei}}, {{angbr|au}},{{angbr|eu}} and {{angbr|ie}}?
== Type of speech (actually a type of spelling) ==
# Is there any natural language which uses letter Ŭ in its writing system? It is used in Esperanto, a conlang, in Belarusian Latin alphabet, in McCune-Reichschauer of Korean, and some modern transcriptions of Latin, but none of these uses it in their normal writing system.
# Why does Lithuanian not use ogonek under O, unlike all other its vowels?
# Why do so few languages use letter Ÿ, unlike other umlauted basic Latin letters? Are there any languages where it occurs in beginning of word?
# Are there any languages where letter Ž can occur doubled?
# Are there any languages where letter Ð (eth) can start a word?
# Can it be said that Spanish has a /v/ sound, at least in some dialects?
# Are there any languages where letter Ň can occur doubled?
# Are there any languages where form of count noun depends on final digits of a number (like it does in many Slavic languages) and numbers 11-19 are formed exactly same way as numbers 21-99? Hungarian forms numbers like that, but it uses singular after all numbers.
# Why English does not have equivalent of German and Dutch common derivational prefix ''ge-''?
--] (]) 10:01, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:ad 10.: ] had it: ]. Then they got rid of it. Maybe too much effort for those lazy bums. --] (]) 10:19, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
::Indeed, English dropped it. Maybe it got less useful as English switched to SVO word order. ] (]) 10:42, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:::It disappeared early in Old Norse, as well. ] (]) 13:42, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
::The reason that "ge-" got dropped in English was because the "g" become a "y" (IPA ) by sound changes, and then the "y" tended to disappear, so all that was left was a reduced schwa vowel prefix. ] (]) 00:05, 30 December 2024 (UTC)


:ad 1.: You mean within a syllable? Otherwise you'd have to accept words like ''vielleicht''. --] (]) 10:24, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
I think there is a Misplaced Pages article on a type of spelling in English which approximates the way of speaking found within certain social groups. The title of the article would be a reference to this method of writing—mostly spelling—that does not follow proper spelling but instead aims to suggest the way a specific group of English speakers might sound. I'm not good with language and grammar and all that stuff but the name of the article sounds like a very formal and academic sort of terminology. ] (]) 04:20, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
:Possibly ]? ] (]) 05:20, 31 January 2020 (UTC) ::] / Strauß, which except for a name can mean 'bunch' or 'ostrich'. ] (]) 13:42, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:::One can find plenty of references stating that a diphthong is never followed by a double consonant in German, including the ]. The two examples given don't contradict this, since ß isn't a regular double consonant (as it does not shorten the preceding vowel), and the two l in 'vielleicht' belong (as already implied by Wrongfilter) to different syllables. People's and place names may have kept historic, non-regular spellings and therefore don't always follow this rule, e.g. "Beitz" or "Gauck" (tz and ck are considered double consonants since they substitute the non-existent zz and kk). -- ] (]) 20:18, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
::Yes, that's it. Thank you. Should it be added to the "See also" section of ]? ] (]) 05:32, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
:ad 4.: Statistics? Only few languages written in the Latin alphabet use umlauts in native words, mostly German and languages with an orthography influenced by German. Similarly, only few use Y in native words. Very few use both. ] (]) 11:07, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:::I've . ] (]) 17:07, 31 January 2020 (UTC)
::Swedish has both umlauts/ diaeresis and Y (and occasionally Ü in German names and a miniscule number of loanwords, including ]). Swedish still didn't see a need for Ÿ (and I can't even type a capital Ÿ on my Swedish keyboard in a regular way). ] (]) 13:56, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:::A similar situation applies to 40bus' native Finnish. ] (]) 14:13, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
:ad 7.: Seems to be used as an allophone of /f/ under certain circumstances. It's used in ], if it is to be considered a dialect, rather than its own language. ] (]) 13:47, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
:Regarding 10: Middle English still had ] which goes back to ge- "]" (here it is spelled i-); it is still used in Modern English in archaic or humorous forms like: yclad, yclept, and other cases (see the Wiktionary entry I linked to). ] (]) 18:11, 29 December 2024 (UTC)


:2 & 6: The ] marks short vowels with breves (while leaving the long ones unmarked) so it uses ⟨ŭ⟩ (and ⟨ư̆⟩), while the now-extinct ] has initial ⟨ð⟩s. The Wiktionary entries on individual letters usually provide lists of languages that use them. --] (]) 10:55, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
= February 1 =


= December 30 =
== Translation to Krakowiaczek ==


== Teaching pronunciation for Spanish in 17th c. France and Italy? ==
Does anyone have a translation to Krakowiaczek ?
<poem>
Krakowiaczek jeden
mial koników siedem.
Pojechal na wojnę,
Zostal mu się jeden.


Although it seems that Spanish 'x' and 'j' had both taken on the sound of a velar fricative (jota) at least among the majority of the population already in the course of the 16th c. (is this correct?) the French and the Italians pronounce the title of Cervantes's novel "Don Quixote" with an 'sh' sound (which was the old pronunciation of 'x' until the end of the 15th c.; the letter 'j' was pronounced like French j like the 'ge' in 'garage'; ] still uses these pronunciations).
Krakowianka jedna
miala chlopca z drewna
i dziewczynke z wosku,
wszystko po krakowsku.
-------------------------------------------
Krakowiaczek jeden
Miał koników siedem
Pojechał na wojnę
Został mu się jeden


So I've been wondering: Why do the French and the Italian use the archaic pronunciation of 'x'? Is it because this was still the official literate (albeit a minority) pronunciation even in Spain or had that pronunciation already completely disappeared in Spain but was still taught to students of the Spanish language in France and Italy?
Siedem lat wojował
Szabli nie wyjmował
Szabla zardzewiała
Wojny nie widziała


] (]) 12:57, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Krakowianka jedna
:Might just be an approximation, since French and Italian lack a velar fricative natively. ] (]) 14:12, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Miała chłopca z drewna
::In French, the protagonist's name is always spelled "Quichotte", never "Quixote" or "Quijote", and is pronounced as if it were a native French word. The article on the book in the French wikipedia explains that this spelling was adopted to approximate the pronunciation used in Spanish at the time. ] (]) 14:44, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
A buciki z wosku
::: Which is odd since the final -e is silent in French but definitely not silent in any version of Spanish I'm aware of. -- ] </sup></span>]] 19:51, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Wszystko po krakowsku
::::Was final ''e'' silent in French at the tme of the novel? ] (]) 00:41, 31 December 2024 (UTC)


178.51.7.23 -- The letter "X" standing for a "sh" sound was still alive enough in the 16th century, that the convention was used for writing Native American languages (see ] etc)... ] (]) 01:05, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Krakowiaczek ci ja
Krakowskiej natury
Kto mi wejdzie w drogę
Ja na niego z góry


== VIP ==
Krakowiaczek ci ja
Któż nie przyzna tego
Siedemdziesiąt kółek
U pasika mego


Is the acronym "]" ever pronounced as a word, as /vɪp/? --] (]) 16:11, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Krakowiaczek ci ja
Z czerwona czapeczką
Szyta kierezyja
Bucik z podkóweczką


:In my understanding, only jokingly or as shorthand in environments where the meaning would be understood. You probably wouldn't see it in a news broadcast, but I could imagine it being used casually by, say, service workers who occasionally cater to high-end clientele. ] (]) 16:27, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Gra mi wciąż muzyka
::There was a German TV programme called '']'', making a wordplay out of the fact that /vɪp/ sounds like ''Wipp-'' (from the verb ''wippen'':to rock, to swing; ''Schaukel'' is a swing). It was based on interviews with and documentary bits about famous people. But that does not mean that V.I.P. would normally have been pronounced like that. -- ] (]) 16:34, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
A kółka trzepocą
:In Dutch it's always pronounced /vɪp/, which has no other meanings than VIP. It's still written with capitals. ] (]) 17:11, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Jak małe księżyce
::I believe that is the case for Swedish, as well. Possibly due to the confusion about whether the letters of English abbreviations should be pronounced the English or the Swedish way. ] (]) 21:44, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
W blasku się migocą
:Somewhat akin to VP for Vice President, typically pronounced "VEE-PEE" but also colloquially as "VEEP". ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 21:34, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
:When I was a kid growing up in the UK I used to watch a cartoon called '']'' (which was renamed ''Boss Cat'' in the UK as there was a cat food available called Top Cat). There's a line in the theme song that goes "he's the boss, he's a vip, he's the championship". Or does it say "he's a pip"? Most lyrics sites have it as "pip", but I favour "vip". Decide for yourself here: --] 10:21, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::Ah, that brings back some memories. It sounds like "vip" to me. One thing I'm now wondering: If the series in the UK was called ''Boss Cat'', did they change the song lyrics at all? ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 13:59, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Not according to my memory, @]. It was transparent even to kids that they'd been forced to change the title, but didn't change anything else. (The dialogue wasn't changed: "TC"). ] (]) 14:43, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Imported American culture rarely see any changes at all. The term "spaz" might have been changed to "ass" or something, occasionally, as "spaz" is considered more harsh in the UK (and "ass" less so)... ] (]) 15:26, 1 January 2025 (UTC)


= December 31 =
Krakowiaczek jeden
Miał koników siedem
Pojechał na wojnę
Został mu się jeden
</poem>


== Spanish consonants ==
Thanks <!-- Template:Unsigned --><small class="autosigned">—&nbsp;Preceding ] comment added by ] (] • ]) 09:48, 1 February 2020 (UTC)</small> <!--Autosigned by SineBot-->
:Maybe you could ask at ]? ] (]) 11:51, 1 February 2020 (UTC)


Why in Spanish and Portuguese, /s/ sound can never start a word if it is followed by consonant? For example, why is it ''especial'' rather than ''special'' I think that in Portuguese, it is because of letter S would be pronounced /ʃ/ before a voiceless consonant, but in beginning of word, /ʃ/ would not end a syllable. But why it is forbidden in Spanish too? --] (]) 08:50, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
:<small>''(posting same reply I posted at the Entertainment Desk)''</small> Mama Lisa has one (not sure if all the verses you posted are there, but there are quite a few): . ---] ] 14:21, 1 February 2020 (UTC)
:In situations like this, we can also try to summon the helpful assistance of ], ] or ]. ---] ] 01:01, 2 February 2020 (UTC)


:A couple of explanation options can be found in this thread: . I would mention that you can add ''sc'' to your list. An sc- at the start of a Latin word was changed into c- (scientia - ciencia), s- (scio -> se) but also into esc (schola -> escuela, scribo -> escribo). -- ] (]) 11:13, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::I've just Googled "krakowiaczek jeden english" and found , which is quite good. It's not literal, but does a pretty good job of preserving both the sense and the rythm of the song. Please let me know, if you're looking for a more literal translation or need help with some specific words.
::One might also note the elimination of the Latin -e in infinitives in Spanish and Portuguese (Example: Habere -> Haber, Haver) while Italian kept them. To avoid consonant clusters like -rst-, -rsp-, -rsc- between words which would be a challenge to the Romance tongue, (e.g. atender scuela, observar strellas), the intermittent e may have been required and therefore may have shifted to the beginning of such words. -- ] (]) 11:29, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::One note on the translation linked to above: it renders "krakowiaczek" as "a man from ]", but the term actually refers to a member of the ], an ethnic subgroup living in the region ''around'' Kraków. In other words, the man and the girl in the song are not citizens of the city of Kraków, but peasants from one of the villages in the Kraków region. — ]<sup>]</sup> 12:59, 2 February 2020 (UTC)
::Also, a fun note: I was born and raised in Kraków and I've never heard more than the first three stanzas of the song. — ]<sup>]</sup> 13:06, 2 February 2020 (UTC)


:::There are Italian dialects where final wovels of low ] regularly are dropped, though. It's common in Sicilian, I believe. Also, I'm not sure on whether the two phonetic shifts would be related. ] (]) 11:40, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
Original is PD but pl wikisource does not link to any English translation: . However, we can make our own, through I am unsure it would be allowed on wikisource? Any translation is AFAIK subject to its own new copyright.--<sub style="border:1px solid #228B22;padding:1px;">]&#124;]</sub> 18:19, 2 February 2020 (UTC)
::::It's quite normal in standard Italian to leave the final vowel off of the infinitive auxiliary verbs (or other verbs acting in a quasi-auxiliary role, say in ''saper vivere''). But I don't think that's really what 79.91.113.116 was talking about. Anyway if the main verb starts with s+consonant you can always leave the e on the auxiliary to avoid the cluster, similarly to how a squirrel is ''uno scoiattolo'' and not *''un scoiattolo''.
:To be includable, any artistic works must have been published in a medium that includes peer review or editorial controls; this excludes self-publication. &nbsp;--] 20:51, 2 February 2020 (UTC)
::::As a side note, I actually think it's the northern dialects that are more known for leaving off final vowels of ordinary words, particularly Lombardian. I have the notion that ] is Milanese. But I'm not sure of that; I wasn't able to find out for sure with a quick search. --] (]) 23:40, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::An AI bot on that Quora link mentions that there are no Latin words starting with st-, I see, which however is blatantly wrong. ] (]) 11:29, 31 December 2024 (UTC)


:For whatever reason, it's a part of the Spanish language culture. Even a native Spanish speaker talking in English will tend to put that leading "e", for example they might say "the United Estates". ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 11:42, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
= February 2 =
::An accent isn't generally considered part of the "culture" in the broader sense. It's not really part of the "English language culture" to refer to a certain German statesman as the "Fyoorer of the Third Rike"... ] (]) 13:26, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
:::English speakers have typically always mispronounced Hitler's title. In fact, in Richard Armour's satirical American history book, he specifically referred to Hitler as a "Furor". ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 01:29, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::::It is kinda proper English, so when I think about it, a better equivalent might be an English speaker talking in German about "Der Fyoorer des dritten Rikeys" or so... (I need to brush up on my German cases...) ] (]) 02:08, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:The reason why they do not occur in these languages is that the native speakers of these languages cannot pronounce ]s like /sk/. The reason why they cannot pronounce these onsets is that they do not occur in their native languages, so that they have not been exposed to them in the process of ]. &nbsp;--] 11:49, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
::However, these onsets existed in Latin and disappeared in Spanish so at some point they got lost. See above for a more etymological approach. -- ] (]) 11:53, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
:It's quite common cross-linguistically to insert a prothetic vowel before some initial clusters. Old French did it (though the /s/ has since often been lost): "étoile"; "escalier"; "épée". Turkish does it: "istasyon". Other languages simplify the cluster: English "knife" /n-/; "pterodactyl" /t-/; Finnish "Ranska" ('France') ] (]) 14:58, 1 January 2025 (UTC)


== The <nowiki><surname></nowiki> woman ==
== PSA? What is being said here? ==


In a novel I'm reading there are characters who are sometimes referred to as "the Borthwick woman" and "the Pomfrey woman". Nothing exceptional there. But then I got to wondering: why do we never see some male literary character called, say, "the Randolph man" or "the McDonald man"? We do sometimes see "the <surname> person", but never "the <surname> man". Yet, "the <surname> woman" seems fair game.
At 3:20 it sounds like he says . What is a "PSA"? Or is he saying something else? We have a page ]. But nothing there seems likely. On second thought maybe it means ]. ] (]) 06:56, 2 February 2020 (UTC)
:Yes, I think he means Public Service Announcement. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 08:42, 2 February 2020 (UTC)


We also hear these things in extra-literary contexts.
= February 3 =

What's going on here? -- ] </sup></span>]] 10:30, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

:Traditinal gender roles, I believe. Men inherit their father's surname, while women change theirs by marrying into a new family, on some level being treated as possessions, I guess. ] (]) 11:35, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

:A possible reason is that, particularly in former eras, men generally had a particular occupation or role by which they could be referenced, while women often did not, being 'merely' a member of first their parental and later their spousal families. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} ] (]) 13:26, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

Another aspect is that these are usually intended as, and understood as, pejorative or disrespectful ways to refer to someone. There's no need to spell it out as, e.g. "that awful/appalling/dreadful Borthwick woman". Those descriptors are understood. How subtle our language can be. I suppose the nearest equivalent for a male referent would be their surname alone, but that would need a context because it wouldn't automatically be taken as pejorative, whereas "the <surname> woman" would. -- ] </sup></span>]] 20:25, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

:There's also the fact that this is not only understood as a negative towards the woman, but also an insinuation that the man is "lesser" because he can't control "his woman".--] (]) (]) 23:32, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
:: That hadn't occurred to me. In the book I referred to above, the Borthwick woman is definitely not attached to a man, and the status of the Pomfrey woman is unknown and irrelevant to the story. -- ] </sup></span>]] 08:13, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
: is a use of "the Abernathy man", one of "the Babson man", and one of "the Callahan man". These uses do not appear pejorative to me. &nbsp;--] 12:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::That sounds not perjorative by avoidance or distancing, but like a "non-definite" (novel? term) similar to "A certain Calsonathy," or "If a '''man''' comes by, tell '''them'''..." (this a nongendered pronoun regardless of gendered referent; feels newish)
::] (]) 17:42, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::::They were chosen to refer to specific individuals, but for the second I apparently have copied the link to a non-example. For the other two, they are Floyd Abernathy and Leonard Callahan. A better B example is "the Bailey man". we do not learn the given name, but he is definitely a specific individual. And , although we are afforded only snippet views, "the Bailey man" refers to one Dr.&nbsp;Hal Bailey. &nbsp;--] 19:11, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Further to Jack of Oz's and Lambiam's observations above , for a male equivalence one might also use near synonyms like 'chap' or 'fellow'. "That Borthwick chap . . ." would be a casual and neutral reference to someone not very well known to the speaker or listener; "that Borthwick fellow . . ." might hint at the speaker's disapproval. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} ] (]) 03:46, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::The use in the third link is the spoken sentence "He works during the day to the Callahan man that does the carvings." It occurs just above the blank line halfway down the page. &nbsp;--] 19:19, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

== English vowels ==
There are some dialects which have /yː/ and /øː/, such as in South African and NZ English, but are there any dialects that have /ʏ/ and /œ/? --] (]) 14:24, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
:There are some examples listed in the relevant IPA articles. ] (]) 14:45, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

= January 1 =

== Fraction names ==

How do English speakers say fractions of units? For example, is 50 cm "half a metre", and 150 cm "one and half metres"? Does English refer to a period of two days as "48 hours"? Is 12 hours "half a day", 36 hours "one and half days" and 18 months "one and half years"? --] (]) 10:49, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

:Yes to all, except that it would be "one and a half" rather than "one and half". ]|] 12:26, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:{{ec}} One does not say "one and half metres" but "one and <u>a</u> half metres". One can also say "one and a half metre" or "one metre and a half". Likewise for "one and half days/years". In "two and a half metres", one only uses the plural form. Note that "48 hours" can also be used for any 48-hour period, like from Saturday 6am to Monday 6am. &nbsp;--] 12:31, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:Is then 75 minutes "one and a quarter hours"? Is 250,000 "a quarter million"? --] (]) 15:20, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::In British English at least, 75 minutes = one and a quarter hours, or an hour and a quarter; 250,000 is a quarter of a million, or two-hundred-and-fifty thousand. ] (]) 15:36, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Also in British English, "eighteen months" would be more usual than "one and a half years". It's common to give the age of babies as a number of months until they reach the age of two. ] (]) 16:49, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::All those usages are also found in America English. Also "a quarter million" is not uncommon in casual speech whereas "a quarter of a million" sounds formal. However, "three quarters of a million" is the only correct way to refer to 750,000 with this idiom though the 's' in quaters is often not audible. ] (]) 23:36, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::::In Finnish it is common to give age of one-year-old babies as mixed years and months, such as "yksi vuosi ja kuusi kuukautta" ("one year and six month")? ''Puolitoista vuotta'' is very commonly used to mean 18 months. Also, ''puoli vuorokautta'' is 12 hours and ''puolitoista vuorokautta'' 36 hours. Does English use ''day'' to refer to thing that Finnish refers as ''vuorokausi'', i.e., a period of exactly 24 hours (1,440 minutes, 86,400 seconds), starting at any moment and ending exactly 24 hours later? --] (]) 18:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::In English ages between one and two years are more often given in months than mixed months and years. I.e. "18 months" is more common than "a/one year and six months" but both are heard. A one day period is more often called 24 hours because "day" would be ambiguous. "One day later" could mean any time during the next day. But using "one day" or "exactly one day" in that meaning would not be obviously incorrect either. ] (]) 23:36, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

== The two pronunciations of Hebrew letter Het in Ancient Hebrew? ==

The Hebrew letters Het and ayin had two different pronunciations each in Ancient Hebrew: the Het could be pronounced like Arabic Ha or like Arabic kha while ayin could be pronounced like Arabic ayin or like Arabic ghayin.

For ayin the clue that this was the case is the transcription into Greek (e.g. in the Septuagint) of Hebrew words like the names Gaza, Gomora, etc. compared to modern Hebrew Aza, Amora, etc. The Greek gamma is in fact a reflex of the ghayin pronunciation. When the letter was pronounced ayin it was not transcribed, e.g. in Eden.

But how do we know for Het? What are in the Septuagint transcribed Hebrew words that indicate that the letter Het had two pronunciations? In other words what are the two different transcriptions of letter Het in the Septuagint that are a clue to that fact? If I had to adventure a guess I would guess that the pronunciation Het was not transcribed (except possibly for a rough breathing), while the pronunciation khet was transcribed as a khi, but I don't know, and I can't think of any examples, and that's exactly why I am asking here.

] (]) 12:28, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:Didn't Biblical Hebrew survive as a liturgical language? Maybe that proviced pointers. ] (]) 12:44, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:: No, not phonologically. From the point of view of the phonology you're mixing two meanings of "Biblical Hebrew" here. The pronunciation used when the text were composed and the ritual pronunciation of the text nowadays. That has nothing to do with the ancient pronunciation and in fact has developed differently in different traditions (ashkenazi, sefaradi, yemeni, iraqi, persian, etc. none of which preserves the double pronunciation of Het and/or ayin) which obviously cannot all be different and yet be identical to the ancient pronunciation. In any case I now changed "Biblical" to "Ancient". ] (]) 12:54, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:The het in {{Script/Hebr|הָגָר}} (]) is not transcribed in the Septuagint: {{serif|῎Αγαρ}} (Agar), while {{Script/Hebr|חֶבְרוֹן}} (]) is transcribed as {{serif|Χεβρών}} (Khebrōn). &nbsp;--] 13:04, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::In Hagar you don't have a Het (8th letter) but a heh (5th letter). However I think the idea is good. ] (]) 13:14, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Oops, yes, mistake. &nbsp;--] 13:27, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Did you check the breathing in Greek Agar is soft? I would say that's a surprise. ] (]) 13:36, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::Yes, I did. The Vulgate has Agar. See also {{serif|]}} on Wiktionary. I suspect, though, that when the Septuagint was originally produced, breathings were not yet written. &nbsp;--] 13:41, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::{{Script/Hebr|חַגַּי}} (]) is transcribed as {{serif|᾿Αγγαῖος}} (Angaios), Aggaeus in the Vulgate. &nbsp;--] 14:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:] mentions the pair יצחק = Ἰσαάκ = Isaac vs. רחל = Ῥαχήλ = Rachel with non-intial ח. Another example of initial ח as zero is Ἐνώχ (Enoch) from חנוך. –] (]) 16:25, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::This conversation brings up the question "''Does ''the LXX contain transcriptions?"
::] (]) 18:07, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::What do you mean? ] (]) 19:15, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::"Transcription" is perhaps not the right term. We have an article on ], but AFAIK nothing similar for Greek. (] is about a 19th- and 20th-century policy of replacing non-Greek geonyms by Greek ones, such as Βάρφανη → ].) The Hellenization of Hebrew and Aramaic names in the LXX combines a largely phonetically based transcription of stems with coercing proper nouns into the straightjacket of one of the three Ancient Greek declensions. &nbsp;--] 00:46, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

:See () for a discussion by a distinguished scholar (]), arguing in great detail for the polyphony of <big>&#1495;</big> (and also <big>&#1506;</big>), representing both a pharyngeal consonant and a velar fricative in "literary" or formal Biblical recitation Hebrew down to the late centuries B.C. ] (]) 01:10, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

== Meaning of "fauve" in native French and in Ionesco's "Rhinoceros"? ==

In his play "Rhinoceros" the Romanian-born French playwright Eugène Ionesco uses the word "fauve" to refer to the rhinoceros as if it just meant "wild animal". I would say no native French speaker would do that: am I right or wrong? To me "fauve" would be used mostly for big cats (tigers, lions, leopards). Maybe for bears and wolves? (Not totally sure though). But "fauve" would never refer to just any large dangerous animal like Ionesco (who was not a native speaker of French) does. What do you say? ] (]) 12:42, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:Looking up French Wiktionnaire and some French dictionaries, it does indeed seem that "fauve" is an acceptable - albeit perhaps dated - way to refer to ochre or wild animals in general, not a non-native misunderstanding. ] (]) 12:50, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

== Use of Old Norse in old Rus'? ==

The first rulers of Rus' were Swedes (the Varangians), for example Rurik and his descendants. Is there a record of when they stopped to speak Old Norse? What are some Old Norse words in Russian that came with the Swedes (as opposed to later borrowings from Swedish possibly)? (I know of Rus' and the name of Russia itself it seems. Any other?) How about Russian personal names that go back to Swedish ones? (I know of Vladimir which goes back to Valdemar. Any other?) ] (]) 13:32, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:To start you off, Wiktionary have a ]. --] (]) 13:45, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:According to ], that derivation from Valdemar is something that "some sources speculate", and elsewhere (]) the borrowing is claimed to be the other way. ] (]) 15:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::How about Oleg (from Helgi?), Igor (from Ingvar?), and of course Rurik (from ????) Incidentally, is Rurik a name that is still used in Russia these days? ] (]) 19:17, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:This whole question is contentious, partly because of the sparsity of sources and partly because of political considerations. Some Soviet historians in Stalin's day appeared to believe that Viking assimilation with Slavic culture had been almost instantaneous because, I suppose, they wanted the foundations of the Russian state and nation to have as little foreign influence as possible. Russian historians still tend to argue for a more rapid assimilation than their Western counterparts do. However, there's a discussion of the language question by Elena A. Melnikova which concludes that "By the mid-tenth century the Varangians became bilingual; by the end of the eleventh century they used Old Russian as their mother tongue", and my old student copy of ]'s '']'' agrees that "the Rus themselves gradually lost their Scandinavian traditions and language; they must have been almost completely merged in the Slavonic people by the beginning of the twelfth century." --] (]) 10:02, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

== English tenses ==

Does English ever use perfect instead of imperfect (past) to describe events that happened entirely in the past but still have connections to present time, such as "this house has been built in 1955", "Arsenal has last won Premier League in 2004", "When has Arsenal last won...", "this option has last been used three months ago", "humans have last visited Moon in 1972", "last ice age has ended 10,000 years ago"? And is simple present of verb ''be born'' ever used, since birth happen only once? And would sentences like "I am being born", "She is born" and "You are being born" sound odd? --] (]) 18:30, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

:No to the first <small>(except among the "unedumacated")</small>. As for the second, I'm not sure this counts, but there is the religious "She is born again." The rest sound bizarre. ] (]) 20:34, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::No, that's not right as the question is stated. It's often fine to use use the present perfect (that's the better term than just "perfect") to describe events that happened entirely in the past. Say {{xt|I have been promoted to colonel}}; you can use that if you're still a colonel, even though the promotion itself happened in the past.
:::What makes those sentences sound wrong is the explicit date on the sentence. That makes it very difficult to use the present perfect in idiomatic English. --] (]) 22:40, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::::<small> If I study really hard, someday I will become underedumacated. ] (]) 23:04, 1 January 2025 (UTC)</small>
::Another question: why in English Misplaced Pages, events listed in year articles are in present tense, but in Finnish Misplaced Pages they are in past tense? --] (]) 21:06, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::Present or past tense is acceptable in English (why, I have no idea). Getting back to the original topic, the title of the first chapter of '']'' is "I am born." ] (]) 22:30, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::::This is the so-called '']'' or ''narrative present''. --] (]) 22:37, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::The worst of it, often seen on the internet, is using past and present tenses in describing the same event, such as in a movie plot. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 03:01, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:I am pretty sure that there are differences between British and American English in the use of the present perfect vs the simple past in such sentences. In American English all your examples sound wrong and should be simple past "this house was built", "Asenal last won", "When did Arsenal last win", "this option was last used", "humans last vistited", "the last ice age ended". When I see imperfect I thin of the past ''progressive'' tense: "was being built", "was winning", "was being used", "were visiting", "was ending" which wouldn't work in your example sentences. But I may be incorrect since my knowledge of grammatical categories is based on Classical Latin rather than modern descriptive linguistics. As for "be born", all your examples are perfectly good English. ] (]) 23:59, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
::While I do think BrE uses the present perfect a ''bit'' more than AmE, I don't think that's really the issue here. I'm pretty sure (one of our British friends can correct me) that the first, second, fourth, fifth, and sixth example sentences in the original post would also sound odd (if not outright wrong) in BrE. Again, the problem is not the fact that the action is entirely in the past, but that the sentence contains an explicit marker of time in the past (1955, three months ago, etc). The third sentence, {{xtg|when has Arsenal last won}}, I'm less sure about; I find it marginally acceptable, though it would be much more idiomatic to say {{xt|how long has it been since Arsenal last won}}.
::As to "imperfect", this is a little complicated. The imperfect tense in Italian, and presumably in the rest of the Romance languages, indicates a continuous or habitual action, or a background description. In Latin it was much the same, whereas the Latin perfect indicates a completed action in the past. The present perfect (or analogous construction) entered Romance languages later, maybe with medieval Latin or some such, and differs from the perfect by the emphasis on the importance of the event to the present time.
::In German and English, there was never an imperfect tense per se; it was conflated with the simple past (preterite), which is the closest to the Latin perfect tense. It's true that you can use the past continuous or "would" or "used to" to emphasize certain aspects of the imperfect, but at the simplest level, the Latin perfect and imperfect are merged in English, with the present perfect being distinct from both.
::Modern Romance languages keep all three tenses in theory, but usually pick one of present perfect or preterite to use overwhelmingly in practice (alongside the imperfect, so they simplify to two conversational tenses). Both French and the northern varieties of Italian rarely use the preterite in conversation, and I think Spanish (especially Latin American Spanish) rarely use the present perfect. However as far as I know they all use the imperfect and keep it separate, which was one of the hardest things for me to get right learning Italian. --] (]) 05:43, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::I think one can say, {{xtg|What have the Romans ever done for us, and when have they done it?}} Similarly, {{xtg|Sure, Arsenal has won the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, but when has Arsenal ever won the UEFA Cup?}}. &nbsp;--] 12:00, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::To my ear there's a difference in acceptability between {{xt|when has Arsenal ever won?}}, which is unassailable <small>except by Arsenal fans I suppose</small>, and {{xtg|when has Arsenal last won?}}, which strikes me as borderline, the kind of thing that sounds weird and you're not sure why. I guess it must have something to do with the word "last" but I don't have a well-developed theory of exactly ''what'' it has to do with it. --] (]) 22:24, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

== Centuries ==

Does English ever use term ''2000s'' to refer to period from 2000 to 2099? Why is ''21st century'' more common? And is ''2000s'' pronounced as "twenty hundreds"? --] (]) 21:03, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:There is some ambiguity with 2000s; it could also refer to 2000 to 2009 (vs. 2010s), so that may be why 21st century is more used. It's pronounced "two thousands". ] (]) 22:35, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
:If 1900s is pronounced as "nineteen hundreds", then why 2000s is pronounced as "two-thousands"? And 2000s is sometimes used to represent the century, and the decade could be disambiguated by saying "2000s decade", "first decade of 2000s", with basic meaning being century. --] (]) 07:24, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::It ''could'' be, sure. And it is, sometimes. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 09:04, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::“One thousand nine hundreds” has six syllables, “nineteen hundreds” has four, saving two. “Two thousands” has three syllables, “twenty hundreds” has four, adding one. People just pick the shorter option.
::BTW, 2000s refers to the period 2000–2099, but 21st century to 2001–2100. It rarely matters. ] (]) 11:29, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:]. ] (]) 10:30, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::For me, the '00s (decade) are the "noughties". Probably I would call the '10s the "twenty tens" or "new tens". (Dunno why I feel the need to disambiguate from the 1910s.) ] (]) 11:59, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::I feel like "noughties" or "aughties" never really caught on. But it's almost time for the '00s nostalgia craze, so I suppose they'll come up with something. --] (]) 00:42, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::As a side note, I once read (possibly in an SF fanzine) that when Arthur C. Clarke and Stanley Kubrick co-wrote the ] and ] ''2001: A Space Odyssey'', Clarke expected people to pronounce the title "Twenty-oh-one . . ." (as they do for 1901, for example), not "Two thousand and one . . .". {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} ] (]) 12:03, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
:::That story sounds familiar. Clark maybe didn't count on the public to keep it simple amid the grandeur, so to speak, of reaching a millennium. There's a late-1940s cartoon called "The Old Gray Hare", in which Elmer is taken into the future. The "voice of God" tells him, "At the sound of the gong, it will be TWO-THOUSAND A.D." That was the predominant media usage by the time it actually arrived. The "Y2K problem" or "Year two thousand problem", for example. By about 2010, the form "twenty-ten" had become more prevalent. As suggested above, one less syllable. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 12:28, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
::::Back when it was 2008 (say), I would've said "two thousand and eight", but now that that year is in the past I'd say "twenty oh eight". ] (]) 03:34, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::Yep. One thing I recall is that ] was kind of an "early adapter" to that style, saying "twenty-oh-one" and so on. Now, pretty much everyone follows that norm. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 06:00, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::::::Are 20th century years ever said like "nineteen hundred and twenty-five" for 1925? Does English put "hundred and" between first two and last two number in speech? --] (]) 10:05, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::::I seem to recall that ] used to say years that way. Maybe it was a Canadian thing. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 11:13, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

= January 3 =

== Why is it boxes and not boxen? ==

Why is it foxes and not foxen? ] (]) 05:45, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:Why is it sheep and not sheeps? ] (]) 05:57, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::{{small|Don't forget the related term "sheeps kin". ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 06:13, 3 January 2025 (UTC)}}
::I thought the plural of sheep was ]! ] (]) 06:52, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:Possibly because "box" has its roots in Latin. ←] <sup>'']''</sup> ]→ 06:06, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:Also, ] is a word, just uncommon. ] (]) 06:07, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
:: Because Vikings. ] (]) 07:35, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

:Someone wrong -- You can look at ] to see the declensions of a thousand years ago or more. The regular pattern of modern English inflection comes from the Old English masculine "a-stems". The only nouns with a non-"s" plural ending in modern English (leaving aside Classical borrowings such as "referenda" and unassimilated foreignisms) are oxen, children, brethren, and the rather archaic kine, which have an ending from the OE "weak" declension (though "child" and "brother" were not originally weak declension nouns). There are also the few remaining umlaut nouns, which do not have any plural ''endings'', and a few other forms which don't (or don't always) distinguish between singular and plural. In that context, there's no particular reason why "box" should be expected to be irregular. However, the form "boxen" has been occasionally used in certain types of computer slang: http://catb.org/jargon/html/B/boxen.html -- ] (]) 12:18, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
::Likewise, '']'', '']'' and '']'' are geeky plurals of '']'', '']'' and '']''. &nbsp;--] 15:25, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

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December 20

Sequences of aspirate stops in Ancient Greek and their reflexes as fricatives in Modern Greek?

There are in Ancient Greek sequences of aspirate stops: for example khthoon (earth), etc. I think there are even sequences of identical aspirates (double aspirates) but I couldn't think of any off the top of my head.

Now aspirate stop geminates or even sequences of aspirate stops are, I would think, fairly problematic from the point of view of phonetics.

I guess you could posit that those were sequences of aspirate stops (or double aspirate stops) only in spelling and that in actual fact phonetically there was only one aspiration at the end of the sequence. The problem with this assumption is that those sequences produce sequences of fricatives in Modern Greek, which would seem to indicate in fact two aspirates?

Or do people imagine more complex processes: where the 1st fricative was originally an unaspirate stop that became a fricative under the influence of the 2nd fricative (assimilation) but that only the 2nd fricative goes back to an Ancient Greek aspirate stop?

What's the answer? Is there a consensus?

Incidentally: do sequences of fricatives in Modern Greek only occur in words that are borrowed from Ancient Greek (literate borrowings) or do they occur also in Modern Greek words that are inherited from Ancient Greek?

178.51.16.158 (talk) 07:34, 20 December 2024 (UTC)

In ancient Greek, geminated aspirates were written pi-phi. tau-theta, and kappa-chi: Sappho, Atthis, Bacchus. You can also see Bartholomae's law (though it doesn't apply in Greek)... AnonMoos (talk) 07:46, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
By the way, some of the non-geminate aspirate consonant clusters in ancient Greek came from the so called Indo-European "thorn clusters"... -- AnonMoos (talk) 07:51, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
For the non-homorganic clusters, I'd need to dust up my references for this, but as far as I remember, the natural sound change leading to Modern Greek actually dissimmilated these, leading to clusters of fricative + simple plosive, so Ancient χθ, φθ become χτ, φτ. The χθ, φθ clusters pronounced as double fricatives in Modern Greek are reading pronunciations of inherited spellings. Can't give you refs for the phonetic nature of the clusters before fricatization, off the top of my head. Fut.Perf. 07:55, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
Referring to Ancient Greek phonology, Koine Greek phonology and Medieval Greek, Wiktionary gives the 5th BCE Attic pronunciation for the geminates πφ, τθ, κχ as having both stops aspirated, the 1st CE Egyptian pronunciation with an unaspirated plus an aspirated stop, and the 4th CE Koine as well as later (10th CE Byzantine, 15th CE Constantinopolitan) pronunciations as having an unaspirated stop followed by a fricative. See Σαπφώ, Ἀτθίς, Βάκχος.
For the the non-homorganic clusters, the development seems to be different: both still aspirated in 1st CE Egyptian pronunciation and both fricative in Koine and beyond; see χθών, φθόγγος.  --Lambiam 11:26, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
I suspect (sans evidence) that Greek khth and phth would be better understood as /{kt}ʰ/; that is, the ancients understood the aspiration to belong to the cluster as a whole rather than to the stops separately (or either of them). —Tamfang (talk) 22:09, 20 December 2024 (UTC)
While that may be true, it raises the question why they then did not write φφ, θθ and χχ, and even went as far as writing explicitly ῤῥ.  --Lambiam 12:56, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
Good point. —Tamfang (talk) 02:22, 27 December 2024 (UTC)

December 21

Were the concepts of "pitch accent" and "syllable" recently introduced from the West in Japanese linguistic science and grammar?

I was intrigued by the fact that Japanese linguists use the Western borrowed term "akusento" to refer to the pitch accent of Japanese? It seems hard to believe that for all those centuries Japanese linguists and grammarians never thought of studying pitch accent which is a prominent feature of most of the dialects of Japanese. (Korean linguists were certainly aware of the pitch accent of Middle Korean: pitch accent was even marked in some early Hangul texts). If that is not the case, and Japanese linguists have been aware of the pitch accent since the beginning of native linguistic science, then how come the Japanese do not have their own native term for the pitch accent?

Anecdotally, while young Japanese people who study linguistics or even study to become teachers, even primary school teachers, are taught about the Japanese pitch accent, the way the standard language and the dialects differ, etc. many regular Japanese people, particularly fairly old ones, still subscribe to the notion that Japanese pitch contour is a monotone. It is somewhat amusing to see them try and "help" foreigners learning Japanese with artificial demonstrations of how Japanese "ought to be spoken" that so obviously have nothing to do with the way they actually speak.

In the same vein, when was the concept of "syllable" introduced in Japanese linguistics? Is there even a native term for the concept of syllable?

In general Japanese people are aware of kanas (moras) because it is kanas that are written and it is in terms of kanas that the pronunciation of kanji (for example) is described. The so called syllabaries of Japanese are actually "moraic syllabaries". Japanese poetry counts kanas not syllables. Regular Japanese people seem to be completely ignorant of the concept of syllable. For example everyone knows To-u-kyo-u (the capital city) is 4 kanas (and so 4 moras) long but I've never ever heard anyone mention the fact that it has 2 syllables.

178.51.16.158 (talk) 03:45, 21 December 2024 (UTC)

I guess Japanese could often have borrowed English terms, due to them being more specific than similar Japanese, often Chinese-derived, homonyms. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 12:16, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
From what I've read, pitch accent in Japanese has a low "Functional load" (as Martinet would express it), and there are significant numbers of people who speak a form of Japanese close to the standard, but without pitch accent. As for borrowing the term from a European language, the fact that it's not a concept which is needed when analyzing the Chinese language could be relevant. (Of course, the concept "syllable" is quite relevant for Chinese.) AnonMoos (talk) 12:44, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
For many languages the notion of syllable is rather artificial. Even if it isn't, it may be unclear. How many syllables do English library and Turkish sıhhat have? What are the constituent syllables of the Dutch word voortaan? Since the concept is not particularly meaningful for the Japanese language, it should not be surprising that its speakers are unfamiliar with it. The useful concept known to most Japanese is the on, a concept of which English speakers are generally quite ignorant.  --Lambiam 12:47, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
Thanks guys for your insightful comments. Still, my basic questions are yet unanswered: Are the concepts of "pitch accent" and "syllable" a relatively recent borrowing from Western linguistics or not? (If they're not, and you do have examples of the use of these concepts in traditional Japanese grammar, what is the traditional terminology?) 178.51.16.158 (talk) 14:40, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
Japanese uses 音節 (onsetsu) for the concept of a syllable, possibly with the kanji borrowed from Chinese but with unrelated readings.  --Lambiam 02:54, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
The Japanese term for the syllable is 音節. Funnily enough, the mora is known as モーラ, though the term was coined for analysis of Japanese. Nardog (talk) 05:11, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
The Japanese term (haku) is also used for a mora.  --Lambiam 02:30, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
I would hesitate to say it "is" used, rather than "was", so far as I've seen. Nardog (talk) 12:41, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Thanks. And how about the pitch accent, アクセント? No native Japanese equivalent? And most importantly, no attestation of it being dealt with in traditional Japanese grammar prior to Western contact? 178.51.16.158 (talk) 13:10, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
I found this paper (Sugitō 1983) pretty informative. She notes 日本大辞書 (1892) was the first dictionary to mark accent, which it called 音調. But she also cites a paper from 1915 already featuring the term アクセント in the title. Nardog (talk) 14:12, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
Thanks a lot. I've always been intrigued by this and have asked around for years without ever getting any answers. Finally you've provided some real data. Thanks again. Is 音調 also the Chinese term for "lexical tone" (one of the tones that Chinese "monosyllabic words" have, e.g. like the 4 tones of the standard language)? If it is, then I would guess this phrase is also used in Japanese to refer to those Chinese tones? Which might explain why they thought after awhile that it'd be more specific to adopt the Western term for the Japanese pitch accent? I can see the term 音調 is also used in Korean, hence the same questions? Standard Korean no longer has a lexical pitch accent but Middle Korean did (that was even at times notated in hangul) and some dialects still do, so Korean must have terminology for that.
Incidentally, are you somewhat familiar with the linguistic literature of the Tokugawa (Edo) period? Not only for Japanese but also possibly for Chinese or Sanskrit or other languages? If you are do you know if there are any Edo-jidai Japanese descriptions or grammars or textbooks of the Dutch language? Tokugawa scientific activity was not completely isolated from the West since the Japanese were importing Dutch books on science, medecine, mathematics, technology, etc. (as far as I know that imported learning was called "Rangaku" or "Dutch science"?) through Nagasaki (more exactly Dejima) so some Japanese people must have had some command of the Dutch language if they were to make any use of those books? How were they getting it?
178.51.7.23 (talk) 10:40, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
I might have meant "distinct" rather than "specific", when I think about my phrasing, as well. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 11:22, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
The modern term for phonological tone is (トーン or) 声調. I had never heard of 音調. I also saw 語調 in some papers by authors Sugitō mentions (particularly 井上奥本), but it now only means tone of voice or choice of words in general.
I'm no expert on Japanese history but there was Kokugaku, with Kamo no Mabuchi and Motoori Norinaga discovering Lyman's law in the 18th century (hello Stigler's law). Note modern Western linguistics didn't start until William Jones connected Latin, Greek, and Sanskrit in 1786, and monolingual dictionaries of contemporary languages had just started to become a thing in Europe; there probably didn't yet exist a large body of research into Dutch or any vernacular and I doubt the Japanese had much to learn from them. King Sejong was ahead of Europe by centuries. Nardog (talk) 11:24, 27 December 2024 (UTC)

Two questions

  1. Are there any French loanwords in English where French hard C was changed to K when it was borrowed to English?
  2. Why most languages do not have native words for continents where they are spoken? For example, neither Finnish nor English have native word for Europe, nor does Swahili have native word for Africa.

--40bus (talk) 21:39, 21 December 2024 (UTC)

@40bus: As an ordinary, little-knowing person, I think the 2. is quite obvious: when languages were emerging, people didn't know there is such thing like 'a continent' and that they were living on one. So there were no such concept known to them, consequently no need to invent either a general word 'continent' nor a specific name for the one where they lived. --CiaPan (talk) 22:04, 21 December 2024 (UTC)
I wonder how much the word continent was used before the Age of Sail! —Tamfang (talk) 18:21, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
1. Thre only one that springs to mind is "skeptical" from the French sceptique. Here in Britain, the usual spelling is "sceptical", but apparently the "k" variant was preferred by 19th-century lexicographers in America, out of deference to its Greek roots. Alansplodge (talk) 15:13, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Your link asserts that skeptical derives directly from Latin rather than from French. Is the <c> really pronounced /k/ in French? That's not what I would have guessed, though I suppose otherwise it would sound the same as septique, assuming that's a word, which would probably not be desired. --Trovatore (talk) 20:08, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
I can confirm that the "c" in "sceptique" is silent in French and that the word is a homophone of "septique", as used in "fosse septique" (septic tank). Xuxl (talk) 14:17, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Italian has an advantage over French here, in that the predictably formed cognates scettico and settico are pronounced differently in the first consonant ( vs ). --Trovatore (talk) 02:35, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

December 22

To borrow trouble

I recently had occasion to use this phrase, which I believe I learned from my grandma, and it occurred to me I wasn't sure everyone knew it. I went and looked it up in Wiktionary, and found a definition I consider wrong, which I corrected.

But searching, it does seem like the "wrong" definition may actually have some currency in the wild.

My understanding is that to borrow trouble (against tomorrow/against the future/etc) is to spend a lot of effort worrying about or preparing for an adverse event that may never happen. I think this is clearly the definition that makes the most sense and is best historically grounded. Similar sayings include Jesus ("sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof") and William Inge ("worry is interest paid on trouble before it comes due").

The other understanding is that it means "stir up trouble". A Quora post I found claims that this is actually the older meaning, which it dates from the 1850s, whereas the "worry" meaning it dates to the 20th century. This rendering, to me, makes much less sense — in what way is this supposed to be "borrowing"?

Anyway, I would be interested to know if high-quality attestations can be found for the "provocation" meaning, and how it might have come about if it actually predated the "worry" meaning. --Trovatore (talk) 00:57, 22 December 2024 (UTC)

To me the 'stir up' makes sense. 'Borrowing' implies that you now actually have something: if you just worry about something, it may never materialise, but if you talk and/or act in the wrong ways, potential trouble may become actual. I (in the UK) have always read/heard the phrase as being about bringing trouble upon oneself unnecessarily.
The saying is an example of an idiom, where the literal meaning is not (at least any longer) what it actually means. Both individual words, and idioms and other sayings, can drift in meaning over long periods. They may also differ in current varieties of English.
Many expressions in English originate from sailing. The nautical meaning of borrow, "to approach closely to either land or wind" is quoted in the OED from William Henry Smyth's The Sailor's Word Book of 1867 and obviously describes a manouvre with some risk; See also the golfing use of the word – the amount a ball on a sloping green will drift to one side of the hole, which the putting player must compensate for. (If the player compensates too much, they are said to have "over-borrowed".)
May I gently suggest that if you want to correct (or otherwise edit) material in Wiktionary, you should (as here) do so only on the basis of published Reliable sources, not on "what you (or your Granny) know". Many (all?) families have their own internal expressions and word meanings, and every individual has their own idiolect – ones different from yours (or mine) are not automatically "wrong". {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 03:09, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Unlike Misplaced Pages, Wiktionary has no "reliable sources" requirement.  --Lambiam 14:54, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Which is why I made a suggestion, rather than issuing a ukase. Although Wiktionary does not have that formal requirement, it would be improved if editors there chose to follow it anyway. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 16:21, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
I don't really know the norms on Wiktionary in detail. I believe though that it's based on "attestations" rather than "sources". The only real sources for meanings of words are usually -- other dictionaries, which has an obvious circularity problem. (Similarly, at Misplaced Pages, which is a tertiary source, we should not ordinarily be relying on other tertiary sources).
As to the merits, the point is that "borrowing" innately involves the idea of the future. You borrow against income you expect to have tomorrow. If you're just creating trouble from scratch, that's not being a borrower, that's being a producer. But if you worry about something not under your control and that may never come to pass, that's borrowing that potential trouble from tomorrow, and making it actual trouble (for you) today. --Trovatore (talk) 20:02, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
The two senses coexist on a dictionary page hosted by Collins, which has,
  1. Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition: "to worry about anything needlessly or before one has sufficient cause";
  2. Penguin Random House/HarperCollins: "to do something that is unnecessary and may cause future harm or inconvenience".
Sense 1 is also found in Longman: "to worry about something when it is not necessary".
Sense 2 is found in Merriam–Webster: "to do something unnecessarily that may result in adverse reaction or repercussions". Dictionary.com has the stronger "Go out of one's way to do something that may be harmful".  --Lambiam 12:07, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
The earliest use I found, from 1808, is about unnecessary worry.  --Lambiam 12:44, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Idioms are often literal nonsense. Back and forth implies returning before departing: Wiktionary's definition is "From one place to another and back again", not "Returning from a place and then going to it". Head over heels is the normal configuration for a human, and indeed the expression has inverted over time from an earlier heels over head. You can easily and naturally have your cake and eat it too. The difficult thing is eating a cake that you don't, at that point in time, have: or eating a cake and having it later, too.  Card Zero  (talk) 20:49, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
 
The two senses have in common that the subject is doing something unnecessary, and that someone sees potential trouble ahead. In the first sense it is the subject who sees the (unprovoked) trouble, and what they do is worry. In the second sense it is the speaker who fears trouble if the subject does a provocative act. (The speaker may in this case coincide with the subject.)
Looking at books of idioms, it looks almost as if a switch-over occurred between 2008 and 2010.
For the worry sense:
  • 1977, Early American Proverbs and Proverbial Phrases.
  • 1995, The Anthracite Idiom.
  • 2008, Idiom Junky.
For the provoke sense:
  • 2010, Oxford Dictionary of English Idioms. (labelled "North American")
  • 2013, The American Heritage Dictionary of Idioms.
  • 2015, Professional Learner's Dictionary of Spoken English.
These are "mentions", not "uses", and not usable as attestations on Wiktionary. For attestations of the "provoke" sense:
  • 2016, Stacy Finz, Borrowing Trouble. Kensington, p. 22:
    Brady hadn’t bothered to change his name, figuring it was common enough. But he stayed off Facebook and Twitter. When Harlee Roberts had wanted to write a feature story about him for the Nugget Tribune, he’d politely declined. No need to borrow trouble.
  • 2024 June 11, Kristine Francis, “7 Little Johnstons Recap 06/11/24: Season 14 Episode 14 ‘Burpees and Burp Clothes’”, Celeb Dirty Laundry:
    Brice didn’t want talk about it because he thought it was borrowing trouble.
  • 2024 August 7, Colby Hall, “Shark Tank’s Kevin O’Leary Defends Kamala Harris Avoiding Press to Fox News: Her Campaign is In ‘Euphoric Stage!’”, Mediaite:
    From O’Leary’s perspective, shared during Wednesday morning appearance on America’s Newsroom, Harris is enjoying so much momentum at the moment, things are going so well for her since she became the nominee; she has little reasons to borrow trouble by taking tough questions during a press conference or a journalist willing to challenge her.
 --Lambiam 13:46, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Against this is the fact that I (a Brit) have taken the expression to have the 'provoke' sense since the early 1960s. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 17:53, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Can you find earlier uses of that sense in published sources?  --Lambiam 23:52, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

One "borrows" trouble from the future, often unnecessarily. It seems pretty straightforward to me. --Orange Mike | Talk 21:54, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

But it's obviously not using "borrow" in the most normal way. HiLo48 (talk) 23:49, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

Repetition

Does English use do-support when the verb is repeated? Can the main verb also be repeated? For example, are the following sentences correct?

  • This is why this street has the name it has.
  • Jack likes it more than Kate likes.
  • I drink milk and you drink too.

--40bus (talk) 08:27, 22 December 2024 (UTC)

The first is correct, the latter two are not.
In such cases, I'm pretty sure any transitive verb still requires its object to be explicitly stated. Remsense ‥  08:35, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Apparently, the what in I know what you know preposes what is called a fused interrogative content clause. I don't go down syntax rabbit holes enough... Remsense ‥  08:56, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
In this sentence, the interrogative content clause is the object, what you know. The word what is a fused relative pronoun, not a clause.  --Lambiam 11:39, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
The other two would normally be phrased as:
Or, "I drink milk and so do you."  --Lambiam 11:44, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Or "I drink milk and you do too". Pondering this street has the name it has, "I drink milk you drink" makes sense, and has a similar structure, but not the required meaning.  Card Zero  (talk) 20:59, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
I consider the repetition of wording a sort of emphasis. Clarityfiend (talk) 13:53, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
The third sentence is grammatical but may not mean what you think it means. (Intransitive "drink" in English tends to mean "drink alcohol", quite likely to excess.) --Trovatore (talk) 20:16, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
I'm reminded of the intransitive "go" (Does your wife go? She sometimes goes, yes.) -- Jack of Oz 20:43, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Aye aye nudge nudge say no more.... --Trovatore (talk) 20:44, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
But does your wife come? 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 22:22, 22 December 2024 (UTC)
Wiktionary lists 46 intransitive senses.  --Lambiam 01:48, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
In my dialect of (American) English I think I would prefer does even in the first sentence, i.e. "This is why this street has the name (that) it does.", without necessarily considering 'has' wrong. As others have said, the lack of repetition of the direct objects is a bigger problem than not replacing the verbs with a form of 'do'. It makes the sentence sound wrong or have another implication (as "drink"=consume alcohol to excess) rather than just sound non-native. Eluchil404 (talk) 01:36, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
The possibility to use lexical (i.e. non-auxiliary) have without do-support ("At long last, have you no decency, sir?") is quite exceptional; it is unique in this respect among lexical verbs. Colloquially, this is far more common in British English, but seems to be dying out also there, sounding stiff.  --Lambiam 02:13, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
That sounds a bit categorical. There are a lot of archaic-sounding, but clearly grammatical, uses that allow such constructions. Stuff like know you not that I must be about my father's business?. It's not something you would likely say to communicate ideas in any ordinary context, but it's still completely clear what it means, and the syntax still works. --Trovatore (talk) 02:06, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
Verily, verily, I say unto thee, "not likely" is too weak; "no way" comes much closer. If "know you not" sounds syntactically acceptable to some, it is only because it is familiar from the syntax of the 1611 KJV, Wiſt ye not that I muſt be about my fathers buſineſſe?, with the familiarity kept alive through reuse in later revisions, such as Webster's revision from 1833 (knew ye not that I must be about my Father’s business?.), an archaism that, including the archaic ye, is retained in the 21st Century King James Version.  --Lambiam 01:27, 26 December 2024 (UTC)
No, I disagree; know you not is syntactically acceptable. If you use it in casual conversation, you're obviously making fun, but it's not nearly as obscure as (say) "wist", and maybe less than "ye". --Trovatore (talk) 19:43, 26 December 2024 (UTC)

Demonyms

How are demonyms of overseas territories determined? Are people from Isle of Man, Channel Islands and British Overseas Territories "British"? Are people from all French overseas departments, collectivities and territories "French"? Are people from both Caribbean Netherlands, Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten "Dutch"? And I have never seen demonyms formed from French overseas department names, such as "Réunionian", "Guadeloupean", "French Guinanan", "Mayottean", "Martiniquean", so are their people just "French"? Is this same from overseas collectivities and territories? --40bus (talk) 23:08, 22 December 2024 (UTC)

Demonyms are generally listed in the articles. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 00:04, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
There is no system to it. The inhabitants of Corsica are French but still have a demonym, Corsican. The demonym Curaçaoan can be used for the inhabitants of Curaçao. In both cases these terms are ambiguous, because they are also used for members of specific ethnic groups.  --Lambiam 01:37, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Most regions, islands, cities, etc have demonyms, and even for those that don't, you can always say "a <toponym> person" or "a person from <toponym>" if you want to be more precise than just indicating the country. Or if you're asking whether those people are legally full British, Dutch and French nationals, then WP:RDH or WP:RDM would be a better place for that. --Theurgist (talk) 03:03, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
40bus -- The Isle of Man and the Channel Islands are under the British Crown, but technically they aren't part of the UK. The demonym for the Isle of Man is "Manx" adjective (as in the famous tailless cat), "Manxman" noun, but you wouldn't be able to predict that. AnonMoos (talk) 03:16, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Although Manx people (and Channel Islanders) are British Citizens. Like everything connected with British governance, it's a tottering pile of complex traditions and reforms; we have never re-started with a clean sheet, and don't intend to either. Alansplodge (talk) 12:41, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
P.S. The French have the lovely word "DOM-TOM" to describe non-Hexagonal territories. On Misplaced Pages, that redirects to Overseas France, which might answer some of your questions... AnonMoos (talk) 03:20, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Martiniquais, Guadeloupéen and Réunionais are commonly used in French; I guess you just don't run across their English equivalents that often. For Mayotte, which has been in the news a lot of late, the demonym is "Mahorais" for some reason I haven't explored. Other overseas territories have demonyms as well (e.g. Guyanais); this goes even though their inhabitants hold French citizenship. Xuxl (talk) 14:49, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
American citizens include Californians, Texans, Rhode Islanders, Pennsylvanians, etc. Australians include New South Welshmen, Queenslanders, Victorians, etc. The Soviet Union was populated by Russians, Ukrainians, Georgians, Armenians, etc, all of whom were Soviet citizens. -- Jack of Oz 15:38, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Georgians could be both Sovietans and Americans, though... 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 22:49, 23 December 2024 (UTC)
Similarly the French include Normands, Lorrains, Bourguignons and whatnot; though I am not aware of demonyms for the newfangled départements. —Tamfang (talk) 02:38, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
Luckily French Misplaced Pages is. --Antiquary (talk) 15:39, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
Mahorais comes from Mahoré, the Maore Comorian name for Grande-Terre (and consequently the entirety of Mayotte.) GalacticShoe (talk) 19:05, 23 December 2024 (UTC)

December 24

Language forums

I was just reading this list of still active web forums, unfortunately there's no language section. What language, linguistics, etymology, and lexicography blogs and forums are there? Epigraphy? Deep knowledge and open attitudes are best. Temerarius (talk) 23:21, 24 December 2024 (UTC)

Linguist List hosted some lively discussions in its early days, but by the time I stopped receiving it, it was mainly for conference announcements, job offerings, book announcements etc.; I don't know what it is now. Language Log is still operating, but only approved people can start new topics, and it's focused somewhat on Chinese language and linguistics in recent years. AnonMoos (talk) 01:00, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
There are also general question-answering websites such as Quora, but I don't know if any of them contain an interacting community of people with linguistic expertise. Back in the day, there was also Usenet's "sci.lang", but I haven't participated there for many years, and 2024 seems to be the year when general-purpose Usenet became definitively defunct (only certain niches survive). AnonMoos (talk) 19:14, 27 December 2024 (UTC)

December 25

Ways to improve proposed Help:IPA page

I currently have a draft of a proposed Help:IPA page for the Kannada language, and I was referred here by @Hoary to seek advice on ways I can improve it for potential inclusion in the Help: category. Any advice or criticisms would be much appreciated.

Link to draft: Draft:Help:IPA/Kannada Krzapex (talk) 12:18, 25 December 2024 (UTC)

Hello, @Krzapex. I have little knowledge of Dravidian languages, but I do have some comments about your draft.
  • "suit" is not a good choice for English approximation, because it has variant pronunciations as /sut/ and /sjut/.
  • I doubt that most English speakers could even tell you what the Korean currency is, and would be unsure how to pronounce it. According to Wiktionary, the currency is pronounced in Korean, and /wɑn/ in AmE, /wɒn/ in BrE - none of them quite the /(w)o/ you want. I think the BrE "want" is probably closest, but I don't know how to convey that to an AmE speaker.
  • I really don't think that "Irish 'boat'" (whatever that is supposed to mean) is a good match for /aʊ/
  • 'Hungary' has the sequence /ŋg/ in all varieties of English I've ever heard, and certainly in RP/ "Hangar" does not have the /g/ in most varieties of English (except in the Midlands and North West of England).
  • your use of "th" to key the dentals will not work for most English speakers outside India (and maybe Ireland). To most Anglophone ears, the salient feature of /θ/ and /ð/ is their fricative nature, not their dental articluation, and if you write "th" you will get θ or ð.
Of course, the whole problem with "English approximation" is that you are trying to capture distinctions that are completely imperceptible to most Anglophones. I see that Help:IPA/Hindi and Urdu addresses this problem in notes, and I think this is the better approach. ColinFine (talk) 14:36, 25 December 2024 (UTC)

December 27

Weird sentence

I recently removed this wording from an article because it looked on the face of it like a grammatical error, but reading closer, I see that it is likely correct but still confusing:

  • "He thus became a permanent ambassador at the at the time itinerant royal court."

Should it be left as is, or is there another way to write it that is less confusing? Viriditas (talk) 18:29, 27 December 2024 (UTC)

"He thus became a permanent ambassador at the royal court, which at the time was itinerant." --Wrongfilter (talk) 18:36, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
Thanks. Viriditas (talk) 18:38, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
Another way to say it would be to hyphenate at-the-time. ←Baseball Bugs carrots21:27, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
I have to admit this sentence threw me for a loop. It isn't often I come across something like this. Does it have a linguistic term? Viriditas (talk) 21:37, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
It's not quite Garden path, but close.
I might have minimally amended it as "He thus became a permanent ambassador at the then-itinerant royal court," but Wrongfilter's proposal is probably better. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 21:47, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
While yours is better than mine. :) ←Baseball Bugs carrots21:56, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
"ambassador to" would be better than "ambassador at". DuncanHill (talk) 22:01, 27 December 2024 (UTC)
The wordy option (not always the best idea) is to replace at the time with contemporarily. I wonder if there's an equivalent word without the Latin stuffiness. I considered meanwhile, but that has slightly the wrong connotations, as if being an ambassador and having a royal court were two events happening on one particular afternoon.
Edit: I mean yes, that word is "then". But here we have a situation where if the word chosen is too fancy, the reader isn't sure what it means, but if the word is too unfancy, the reader can't parse the grammar. Hence the use of a hyphen, I guess. Card Zero  (talk) 11:50, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
It is a rather common rule/guideline/advice to use hyphens in compound modifiers before nouns, but when the first part of a compound modifier is an adverb, there is some divergence in the three guidelines linked to (yes but not for adverbs ending on -ly followed by a participle; mostly no; if the compound modifier can be misread). They all agree on happily married couple (no; mostly no; no) and mostly on fast-moving merchandise) (yes; mostly no; yes). They are incomplete, since none give an unequivocally-negative advice for unequivocally-negative advice, which IMO is very-bad use of a hyphen (and so is very-bad use).  --Lambiam 07:04, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Viriditas, have you now edited the article text? None of the rest of us can, because you haven't identified or linked it. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 19:41, 28 December 2024 (UTC)
That is resolved. In the course of finding this I did a search for "at the at the" and fixed five instances that were errors.  Card Zero  (talk) 20:23, 28 December 2024 (UTC)

December 29

A few questions

  1. Are there any words in German where double consonant is written after ⟨ei⟩, ⟨au⟩,⟨eu⟩ and ⟨ie⟩?
  2. Is there any natural language which uses letter Ŭ in its writing system? It is used in Esperanto, a conlang, in Belarusian Latin alphabet, in McCune-Reichschauer of Korean, and some modern transcriptions of Latin, but none of these uses it in their normal writing system.
  3. Why does Lithuanian not use ogonek under O, unlike all other its vowels?
  4. Why do so few languages use letter Ÿ, unlike other umlauted basic Latin letters? Are there any languages where it occurs in beginning of word?
  5. Are there any languages where letter Ž can occur doubled?
  6. Are there any languages where letter Ð (eth) can start a word?
  7. Can it be said that Spanish has a /v/ sound, at least in some dialects?
  8. Are there any languages where letter Ň can occur doubled?
  9. Are there any languages where form of count noun depends on final digits of a number (like it does in many Slavic languages) and numbers 11-19 are formed exactly same way as numbers 21-99? Hungarian forms numbers like that, but it uses singular after all numbers.
  10. Why English does not have equivalent of German and Dutch common derivational prefix ge-?

--40bus (talk) 10:01, 29 December 2024 (UTC)

ad 10.: Old English had it: wikt:ge-#Old_English. Then they got rid of it. Maybe too much effort for those lazy bums. --Wrongfilter (talk) 10:19, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Indeed, English dropped it. Maybe it got less useful as English switched to SVO word order. PiusImpavidus (talk) 10:42, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
It disappeared early in Old Norse, as well. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 13:42, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
The reason that "ge-" got dropped in English was because the "g" become a "y" (IPA ) by sound changes, and then the "y" tended to disappear, so all that was left was a reduced schwa vowel prefix. AnonMoos (talk) 00:05, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
ad 1.: You mean within a syllable? Otherwise you'd have to accept words like vielleicht. --Wrongfilter (talk) 10:24, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Strauss / Strauß, which except for a name can mean 'bunch' or 'ostrich'. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 13:42, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
One can find plenty of references stating that a diphthong is never followed by a double consonant in German, including the German Misplaced Pages. The two examples given don't contradict this, since ß isn't a regular double consonant (as it does not shorten the preceding vowel), and the two l in 'vielleicht' belong (as already implied by Wrongfilter) to different syllables. People's and place names may have kept historic, non-regular spellings and therefore don't always follow this rule, e.g. "Beitz" or "Gauck" (tz and ck are considered double consonants since they substitute the non-existent zz and kk). -- 79.91.113.116 (talk) 20:18, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
ad 4.: Statistics? Only few languages written in the Latin alphabet use umlauts in native words, mostly German and languages with an orthography influenced by German. Similarly, only few use Y in native words. Very few use both. PiusImpavidus (talk) 11:07, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Swedish has both umlauts/ diaeresis and Y (and occasionally Ü in German names and a miniscule number of loanwords, including müsli). Swedish still didn't see a need for Ÿ (and I can't even type a capital Ÿ on my Swedish keyboard in a regular way). 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 13:56, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
A similar situation applies to 40bus' native Finnish. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 14:13, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
ad 7.: Seems to be used as an allophone of /f/ under certain circumstances. It's used in Judaeo-Spanish, if it is to be considered a dialect, rather than its own language. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 13:47, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
Regarding 10: Middle English still had y- which goes back to ge- "Sumer is icumen in" (here it is spelled i-); it is still used in Modern English in archaic or humorous forms like: yclad, yclept, and other cases (see the Wiktionary entry I linked to). 178.51.7.23 (talk) 18:11, 29 December 2024 (UTC)
2 & 6: The Jarai language marks short vowels with breves (while leaving the long ones unmarked) so it uses ⟨ŭ⟩ (and ⟨ư̆⟩), while the now-extinct Osage language has initial ⟨ð⟩s. The Wiktionary entries on individual letters usually provide lists of languages that use them. --Theurgist (talk) 10:55, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

December 30

Teaching pronunciation for Spanish in 17th c. France and Italy?

Although it seems that Spanish 'x' and 'j' had both taken on the sound of a velar fricative (jota) at least among the majority of the population already in the course of the 16th c. (is this correct?) the French and the Italians pronounce the title of Cervantes's novel "Don Quixote" with an 'sh' sound (which was the old pronunciation of 'x' until the end of the 15th c.; the letter 'j' was pronounced like French j like the 'ge' in 'garage'; Judaeo-Spanish still uses these pronunciations).

So I've been wondering: Why do the French and the Italian use the archaic pronunciation of 'x'? Is it because this was still the official literate (albeit a minority) pronunciation even in Spain or had that pronunciation already completely disappeared in Spain but was still taught to students of the Spanish language in France and Italy?

178.51.7.23 (talk) 12:57, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

Might just be an approximation, since French and Italian lack a velar fricative natively. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 14:12, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
In French, the protagonist's name is always spelled "Quichotte", never "Quixote" or "Quijote", and is pronounced as if it were a native French word. The article on the book in the French wikipedia explains that this spelling was adopted to approximate the pronunciation used in Spanish at the time. Xuxl (talk) 14:44, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Which is odd since the final -e is silent in French but definitely not silent in any version of Spanish I'm aware of. -- Jack of Oz 19:51, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Was final e silent in French at the tme of the novel? —Tamfang (talk) 00:41, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

178.51.7.23 -- The letter "X" standing for a "sh" sound was still alive enough in the 16th century, that the convention was used for writing Native American languages (see Chicxulub etc)... AnonMoos (talk) 01:05, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

VIP

Is the acronym "VIP" ever pronounced as a word, as /vɪp/? --40bus (talk) 16:11, 30 December 2024 (UTC)

In my understanding, only jokingly or as shorthand in environments where the meaning would be understood. You probably wouldn't see it in a news broadcast, but I could imagine it being used casually by, say, service workers who occasionally cater to high-end clientele. GalacticShoe (talk) 16:27, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
There was a German TV programme called Die V.I.P.-Schaukel, making a wordplay out of the fact that /vɪp/ sounds like Wipp- (from the verb wippen:to rock, to swing; Schaukel is a swing). It was based on interviews with and documentary bits about famous people. But that does not mean that V.I.P. would normally have been pronounced like that. -- 79.91.113.116 (talk) 16:34, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
In Dutch it's always pronounced /vɪp/, which has no other meanings than VIP. It's still written with capitals. PiusImpavidus (talk) 17:11, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
I believe that is the case for Swedish, as well. Possibly due to the confusion about whether the letters of English abbreviations should be pronounced the English or the Swedish way. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 21:44, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
Somewhat akin to VP for Vice President, typically pronounced "VEE-PEE" but also colloquially as "VEEP". ←Baseball Bugs carrots21:34, 30 December 2024 (UTC)
When I was a kid growing up in the UK I used to watch a cartoon called Top Cat (which was renamed Boss Cat in the UK as there was a cat food available called Top Cat). There's a line in the theme song that goes "he's the boss, he's a vip, he's the championship". Or does it say "he's a pip"? Most lyrics sites have it as "pip", but I favour "vip". Decide for yourself here: --Viennese Waltz 10:21, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
Ah, that brings back some memories. It sounds like "vip" to me. One thing I'm now wondering: If the series in the UK was called Boss Cat, did they change the song lyrics at all? ←Baseball Bugs carrots13:59, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Not according to my memory, @Baseball Bugs. It was transparent even to kids that they'd been forced to change the title, but didn't change anything else. (The dialogue wasn't changed: "TC"). ColinFine (talk) 14:43, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Imported American culture rarely see any changes at all. The term "spaz" might have been changed to "ass" or something, occasionally, as "spaz" is considered more harsh in the UK (and "ass" less so)... 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 15:26, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

December 31

Spanish consonants

Why in Spanish and Portuguese, /s/ sound can never start a word if it is followed by consonant? For example, why is it especial rather than special I think that in Portuguese, it is because of letter S would be pronounced /ʃ/ before a voiceless consonant, but in beginning of word, /ʃ/ would not end a syllable. But why it is forbidden in Spanish too? --40bus (talk) 08:50, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

A couple of explanation options can be found in this thread: . I would mention that you can add sc to your list. An sc- at the start of a Latin word was changed into c- (scientia - ciencia), s- (scio -> se) but also into esc (schola -> escuela, scribo -> escribo). -- 79.91.113.116 (talk) 11:13, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
One might also note the elimination of the Latin -e in infinitives in Spanish and Portuguese (Example: Habere -> Haber, Haver) while Italian kept them. To avoid consonant clusters like -rst-, -rsp-, -rsc- between words which would be a challenge to the Romance tongue, (e.g. atender scuela, observar strellas), the intermittent e may have been required and therefore may have shifted to the beginning of such words. -- 79.91.113.116 (talk) 11:29, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
There are Italian dialects where final wovels of low functional load regularly are dropped, though. It's common in Sicilian, I believe. Also, I'm not sure on whether the two phonetic shifts would be related. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 11:40, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
It's quite normal in standard Italian to leave the final vowel off of the infinitive auxiliary verbs (or other verbs acting in a quasi-auxiliary role, say in saper vivere). But I don't think that's really what 79.91.113.116 was talking about. Anyway if the main verb starts with s+consonant you can always leave the e on the auxiliary to avoid the cluster, similarly to how a squirrel is uno scoiattolo and not *un scoiattolo.
As a side note, I actually think it's the northern dialects that are more known for leaving off final vowels of ordinary words, particularly Lombardian. I have the notion that Cattivik is Milanese. But I'm not sure of that; I wasn't able to find out for sure with a quick search. --Trovatore (talk) 23:40, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
An AI bot on that Quora link mentions that there are no Latin words starting with st-, I see, which however is blatantly wrong. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 11:29, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
For whatever reason, it's a part of the Spanish language culture. Even a native Spanish speaker talking in English will tend to put that leading "e", for example they might say "the United Estates". ←Baseball Bugs carrots11:42, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
An accent isn't generally considered part of the "culture" in the broader sense. It's not really part of the "English language culture" to refer to a certain German statesman as the "Fyoorer of the Third Rike"... 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 13:26, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
English speakers have typically always mispronounced Hitler's title. In fact, in Richard Armour's satirical American history book, he specifically referred to Hitler as a "Furor". ←Baseball Bugs carrots01:29, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
It is kinda proper English, so when I think about it, a better equivalent might be an English speaker talking in German about "Der Fyoorer des dritten Rikeys" or so... (I need to brush up on my German cases...) 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 02:08, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
The reason why they do not occur in these languages is that the native speakers of these languages cannot pronounce onsets like /sk/. The reason why they cannot pronounce these onsets is that they do not occur in their native languages, so that they have not been exposed to them in the process of speech acquisition.  --Lambiam 11:49, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
However, these onsets existed in Latin and disappeared in Spanish so at some point they got lost. See above for a more etymological approach. -- 79.91.113.116 (talk) 11:53, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
It's quite common cross-linguistically to insert a prothetic vowel before some initial clusters. Old French did it (though the /s/ has since often been lost): "étoile"; "escalier"; "épée". Turkish does it: "istasyon". Other languages simplify the cluster: English "knife" /n-/; "pterodactyl" /t-/; Finnish "Ranska" ('France') ColinFine (talk) 14:58, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

The <surname> woman_woman-December_31-20241231103000">

In a novel I'm reading there are characters who are sometimes referred to as "the Borthwick woman" and "the Pomfrey woman". Nothing exceptional there. But then I got to wondering: why do we never see some male literary character called, say, "the Randolph man" or "the McDonald man"? We do sometimes see "the <surname> person", but never "the <surname> man". Yet, "the <surname> woman" seems fair game.

We also hear these things in extra-literary contexts.

What's going on here? -- Jack of Oz 10:30, 31 December 2024 (UTC)_woman"> _woman">

Traditinal gender roles, I believe. Men inherit their father's surname, while women change theirs by marrying into a new family, on some level being treated as possessions, I guess. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 11:35, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
A possible reason is that, particularly in former eras, men generally had a particular occupation or role by which they could be referenced, while women often did not, being 'merely' a member of first their parental and later their spousal families. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.1.223.204 (talk) 13:26, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

Another aspect is that these are usually intended as, and understood as, pejorative or disrespectful ways to refer to someone. There's no need to spell it out as, e.g. "that awful/appalling/dreadful Borthwick woman". Those descriptors are understood. How subtle our language can be. I suppose the nearest equivalent for a male referent would be their surname alone, but that would need a context because it wouldn't automatically be taken as pejorative, whereas "the <surname> woman" would. -- Jack of Oz 20:25, 31 December 2024 (UTC)_woman"> _woman">

There's also the fact that this is not only understood as a negative towards the woman, but also an insinuation that the man is "lesser" because he can't control "his woman".--User:Khajidha (talk) (contributions) 23:32, 31 December 2024 (UTC)
That hadn't occurred to me. In the book I referred to above, the Borthwick woman is definitely not attached to a man, and the status of the Pomfrey woman is unknown and irrelevant to the story. -- Jack of Oz 08:13, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Here is a use of "the Abernathy man", here one of "the Babson man", and here one of "the Callahan man". These uses do not appear pejorative to me.  --Lambiam 12:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
That sounds not perjorative by avoidance or distancing, but like a "non-definite" (novel? term) similar to "A certain Calsonathy," or "If a man comes by, tell them..." (this a nongendered pronoun regardless of gendered referent; feels newish)
Temerarius (talk) 17:42, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
They were chosen to refer to specific individuals, but for the second I apparently have copied the link to a non-example. For the other two, they are Floyd Abernathy and Leonard Callahan. A better B example is "the Bailey man". Here we do not learn the given name, but he is definitely a specific individual. And here, although we are afforded only snippet views, "the Bailey man" refers to one Dr. Hal Bailey.  --Lambiam 19:11, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
Further to Jack of Oz's and Lambiam's observations above , for a male equivalence one might also use near synonyms like 'chap' or 'fellow'. "That Borthwick chap . . ." would be a casual and neutral reference to someone not very well known to the speaker or listener; "that Borthwick fellow . . ." might hint at the speaker's disapproval. {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.6.84.253 (talk) 03:46, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
The use in the third link is the spoken sentence "He works during the day to the Callahan man that does the carvings." It occurs just above the blank line halfway down the page.  --Lambiam 19:19, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

English vowels

There are some dialects which have /yː/ and /øː/, such as in South African and NZ English, but are there any dialects that have /ʏ/ and /œ/? --40bus (talk) 14:24, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

There are some examples listed in the relevant IPA articles. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 14:45, 31 December 2024 (UTC)

January 1

Fraction names

How do English speakers say fractions of units? For example, is 50 cm "half a metre", and 150 cm "one and half metres"? Does English refer to a period of two days as "48 hours"? Is 12 hours "half a day", 36 hours "one and half days" and 18 months "one and half years"? --40bus (talk) 10:49, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

Yes to all, except that it would be "one and a half" rather than "one and half". Shantavira| 12:26, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
(edit conflict) One does not say "one and half metres" but "one and a half metres". One can also say "one and a half metre" or "one metre and a half". Likewise for "one and half days/years". In "two and a half metres", one only uses the plural form. Note that "48 hours" can also be used for any 48-hour period, like from Saturday 6am to Monday 6am.  --Lambiam 12:31, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Is then 75 minutes "one and a quarter hours"? Is 250,000 "a quarter million"? --40bus (talk) 15:20, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
In British English at least, 75 minutes = one and a quarter hours, or an hour and a quarter; 250,000 is a quarter of a million, or two-hundred-and-fifty thousand. Bazza 7 (talk) 15:36, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Also in British English, "eighteen months" would be more usual than "one and a half years". It's common to give the age of babies as a number of months until they reach the age of two. Alansplodge (talk) 16:49, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
All those usages are also found in America English. Also "a quarter million" is not uncommon in casual speech whereas "a quarter of a million" sounds formal. However, "three quarters of a million" is the only correct way to refer to 750,000 with this idiom though the 's' in quaters is often not audible. Eluchil404 (talk) 23:36, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
In Finnish it is common to give age of one-year-old babies as mixed years and months, such as "yksi vuosi ja kuusi kuukautta" ("one year and six month")? Puolitoista vuotta is very commonly used to mean 18 months. Also, puoli vuorokautta is 12 hours and puolitoista vuorokautta 36 hours. Does English use day to refer to thing that Finnish refers as vuorokausi, i.e., a period of exactly 24 hours (1,440 minutes, 86,400 seconds), starting at any moment and ending exactly 24 hours later? --40bus (talk) 18:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
In English ages between one and two years are more often given in months than mixed months and years. I.e. "18 months" is more common than "a/one year and six months" but both are heard. A one day period is more often called 24 hours because "day" would be ambiguous. "One day later" could mean any time during the next day. But using "one day" or "exactly one day" in that meaning would not be obviously incorrect either. Eluchil404 (talk) 23:36, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

The two pronunciations of Hebrew letter Het in Ancient Hebrew?

The Hebrew letters Het and ayin had two different pronunciations each in Ancient Hebrew: the Het could be pronounced like Arabic Ha or like Arabic kha while ayin could be pronounced like Arabic ayin or like Arabic ghayin.

For ayin the clue that this was the case is the transcription into Greek (e.g. in the Septuagint) of Hebrew words like the names Gaza, Gomora, etc. compared to modern Hebrew Aza, Amora, etc. The Greek gamma is in fact a reflex of the ghayin pronunciation. When the letter was pronounced ayin it was not transcribed, e.g. in Eden.

But how do we know for Het? What are in the Septuagint transcribed Hebrew words that indicate that the letter Het had two pronunciations? In other words what are the two different transcriptions of letter Het in the Septuagint that are a clue to that fact? If I had to adventure a guess I would guess that the pronunciation Het was not transcribed (except possibly for a rough breathing), while the pronunciation khet was transcribed as a khi, but I don't know, and I can't think of any examples, and that's exactly why I am asking here.

178.51.7.23 (talk) 12:28, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

Didn't Biblical Hebrew survive as a liturgical language? Maybe that proviced pointers. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 12:44, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
No, not phonologically. From the point of view of the phonology you're mixing two meanings of "Biblical Hebrew" here. The pronunciation used when the text were composed and the ritual pronunciation of the text nowadays. That has nothing to do with the ancient pronunciation and in fact has developed differently in different traditions (ashkenazi, sefaradi, yemeni, iraqi, persian, etc. none of which preserves the double pronunciation of Het and/or ayin) which obviously cannot all be different and yet be identical to the ancient pronunciation. In any case I now changed "Biblical" to "Ancient". 178.51.7.23 (talk) 12:54, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
The het in הָגָר‎ (Hagar) is not transcribed in the Septuagint: ῎Αγαρ (Agar), while חֶבְרוֹן‎ (Hebron) is transcribed as Χεβρών (Khebrōn).  --Lambiam 13:04, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
In Hagar you don't have a Het (8th letter) but a heh (5th letter). However I think the idea is good. 178.51.7.23 (talk) 13:14, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Oops, yes, mistake.  --Lambiam 13:27, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Did you check the breathing in Greek Agar is soft? I would say that's a surprise. 178.51.7.23 (talk) 13:36, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Yes, I did. The Vulgate has Agar. See also Ἄγαρ on Wiktionary. I suspect, though, that when the Septuagint was originally produced, breathings were not yet written.  --Lambiam 13:41, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
חַגַּי‎ (Haggai) is transcribed as ᾿Αγγαῖος (Angaios), Aggaeus in the Vulgate.  --Lambiam 14:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Biblical Hebrew#Phonology mentions the pair יצחק = Ἰσαάκ = Isaac vs. רחל = Ῥαχήλ = Rachel with non-intial ח. Another example of initial ח as zero is Ἐνώχ (Enoch) from חנוך. –Austronesier (talk) 16:25, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
This conversation brings up the question "Does the LXX contain transcriptions?"
Temerarius (talk) 18:07, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
What do you mean? 178.51.7.23 (talk) 19:15, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
"Transcription" is perhaps not the right term. We have an article on Latinization of names, but AFAIK nothing similar for Greek. (Hellenization of place names is about a 19th- and 20th-century policy of replacing non-Greek geonyms by Greek ones, such as Βάρφανη → Παραπόταμος.) The Hellenization of Hebrew and Aramaic names in the LXX combines a largely phonetically based transcription of stems with coercing proper nouns into the straightjacket of one of the three Ancient Greek declensions.  --Lambiam 00:46, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
See "On Polyphony in Biblical Hebrew" (PDF here) for a discussion by a distinguished scholar (Joshua Blau), arguing in great detail for the polyphony of ח (and also ע), representing both a pharyngeal consonant and a velar fricative in "literary" or formal Biblical recitation Hebrew down to the late centuries B.C. AnonMoos (talk) 01:10, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

Meaning of "fauve" in native French and in Ionesco's "Rhinoceros"?

In his play "Rhinoceros" the Romanian-born French playwright Eugène Ionesco uses the word "fauve" to refer to the rhinoceros as if it just meant "wild animal". I would say no native French speaker would do that: am I right or wrong? To me "fauve" would be used mostly for big cats (tigers, lions, leopards). Maybe for bears and wolves? (Not totally sure though). But "fauve" would never refer to just any large dangerous animal like Ionesco (who was not a native speaker of French) does. What do you say? 178.51.7.23 (talk) 12:42, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

Looking up French Wiktionnaire and some French dictionaries, it does indeed seem that "fauve" is an acceptable - albeit perhaps dated - way to refer to ochre or wild animals in general, not a non-native misunderstanding. 惑乱 Wakuran (talk) 12:50, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

Use of Old Norse in old Rus'?

The first rulers of Rus' were Swedes (the Varangians), for example Rurik and his descendants. Is there a record of when they stopped to speak Old Norse? What are some Old Norse words in Russian that came with the Swedes (as opposed to later borrowings from Swedish possibly)? (I know of Rus' and the name of Russia itself it seems. Any other?) How about Russian personal names that go back to Swedish ones? (I know of Vladimir which goes back to Valdemar. Any other?) 178.51.7.23 (talk) 13:32, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

To start you off, Wiktionary have a Category:Russian terms derived from Old Norse. --Antiquary (talk) 13:45, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
According to wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/Voldiměrъ, that derivation from Valdemar is something that "some sources speculate", and elsewhere (wikt:Valdemar) the borrowing is claimed to be the other way. ColinFine (talk) 15:09, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
How about Oleg (from Helgi?), Igor (from Ingvar?), and of course Rurik (from ????) Incidentally, is Rurik a name that is still used in Russia these days? 178.51.7.23 (talk) 19:17, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
This whole question is contentious, partly because of the sparsity of sources and partly because of political considerations. Some Soviet historians in Stalin's day appeared to believe that Viking assimilation with Slavic culture had been almost instantaneous because, I suppose, they wanted the foundations of the Russian state and nation to have as little foreign influence as possible. Russian historians still tend to argue for a more rapid assimilation than their Western counterparts do. However, there's a discussion of the language question by Elena A. Melnikova here which concludes that "By the mid-tenth century the Varangians became bilingual; by the end of the eleventh century they used Old Russian as their mother tongue", and my old student copy of E. V. Gordon's Introduction to Old Norse agrees that "the Rus themselves gradually lost their Scandinavian traditions and language; they must have been almost completely merged in the Slavonic people by the beginning of the twelfth century." --Antiquary (talk) 10:02, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

English tenses

Does English ever use perfect instead of imperfect (past) to describe events that happened entirely in the past but still have connections to present time, such as "this house has been built in 1955", "Arsenal has last won Premier League in 2004", "When has Arsenal last won...", "this option has last been used three months ago", "humans have last visited Moon in 1972", "last ice age has ended 10,000 years ago"? And is simple present of verb be born ever used, since birth happen only once? And would sentences like "I am being born", "She is born" and "You are being born" sound odd? --40bus (talk) 18:30, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

No to the first (except among the "unedumacated"). As for the second, I'm not sure this counts, but there is the religious "She is born again." The rest sound bizarre. Clarityfiend (talk) 20:34, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
No, that's not right as the question is stated. It's often fine to use use the present perfect (that's the better term than just "perfect") to describe events that happened entirely in the past. Say I have been promoted to colonel; you can use that if you're still a colonel, even though the promotion itself happened in the past.
What makes those sentences sound wrong is the explicit date on the sentence. That makes it very difficult to use the present perfect in idiomatic English. --Trovatore (talk) 22:40, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
If I study really hard, someday I will become underedumacated. Clarityfiend (talk) 23:04, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Another question: why in English Misplaced Pages, events listed in year articles are in present tense, but in Finnish Misplaced Pages they are in past tense? --40bus (talk) 21:06, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
Present or past tense is acceptable in English (why, I have no idea). Getting back to the original topic, the title of the first chapter of David Copperfield is "I am born." Clarityfiend (talk) 22:30, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
This is the so-called historical present or narrative present. --Trovatore (talk) 22:37, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
The worst of it, often seen on the internet, is using past and present tenses in describing the same event, such as in a movie plot. ←Baseball Bugs carrots03:01, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
I am pretty sure that there are differences between British and American English in the use of the present perfect vs the simple past in such sentences. In American English all your examples sound wrong and should be simple past "this house was built", "Asenal last won", "When did Arsenal last win", "this option was last used", "humans last vistited", "the last ice age ended". When I see imperfect I thin of the past progressive tense: "was being built", "was winning", "was being used", "were visiting", "was ending" which wouldn't work in your example sentences. But I may be incorrect since my knowledge of grammatical categories is based on Classical Latin rather than modern descriptive linguistics. As for "be born", all your examples are perfectly good English. Eluchil404 (talk) 23:59, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
While I do think BrE uses the present perfect a bit more than AmE, I don't think that's really the issue here. I'm pretty sure (one of our British friends can correct me) that the first, second, fourth, fifth, and sixth example sentences in the original post would also sound odd (if not outright wrong) in BrE. Again, the problem is not the fact that the action is entirely in the past, but that the sentence contains an explicit marker of time in the past (1955, three months ago, etc). The third sentence, when has Arsenal last won, I'm less sure about; I find it marginally acceptable, though it would be much more idiomatic to say how long has it been since Arsenal last won.
As to "imperfect", this is a little complicated. The imperfect tense in Italian, and presumably in the rest of the Romance languages, indicates a continuous or habitual action, or a background description. In Latin it was much the same, whereas the Latin perfect indicates a completed action in the past. The present perfect (or analogous construction) entered Romance languages later, maybe with medieval Latin or some such, and differs from the perfect by the emphasis on the importance of the event to the present time.
In German and English, there was never an imperfect tense per se; it was conflated with the simple past (preterite), which is the closest to the Latin perfect tense. It's true that you can use the past continuous or "would" or "used to" to emphasize certain aspects of the imperfect, but at the simplest level, the Latin perfect and imperfect are merged in English, with the present perfect being distinct from both.
Modern Romance languages keep all three tenses in theory, but usually pick one of present perfect or preterite to use overwhelmingly in practice (alongside the imperfect, so they simplify to two conversational tenses). Both French and the northern varieties of Italian rarely use the preterite in conversation, and I think Spanish (especially Latin American Spanish) rarely use the present perfect. However as far as I know they all use the imperfect and keep it separate, which was one of the hardest things for me to get right learning Italian. --Trovatore (talk) 05:43, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
I think one can say, What have the Romans ever done for us, and when have they done it? Similarly, Sure, Arsenal has won the UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, but when has Arsenal ever won the UEFA Cup?.  --Lambiam 12:00, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
To my ear there's a difference in acceptability between when has Arsenal ever won?, which is unassailable except by Arsenal fans I suppose, and when has Arsenal last won?, which strikes me as borderline, the kind of thing that sounds weird and you're not sure why. I guess it must have something to do with the word "last" but I don't have a well-developed theory of exactly what it has to do with it. --Trovatore (talk) 22:24, 2 January 2025 (UTC)

Centuries

Does English ever use term 2000s to refer to period from 2000 to 2099? Why is 21st century more common? And is 2000s pronounced as "twenty hundreds"? --40bus (talk) 21:03, 1 January 2025 (UTC)

There is some ambiguity with 2000s; it could also refer to 2000 to 2009 (vs. 2010s), so that may be why 21st century is more used. It's pronounced "two thousands". Clarityfiend (talk) 22:35, 1 January 2025 (UTC)
If 1900s is pronounced as "nineteen hundreds", then why 2000s is pronounced as "two-thousands"? And 2000s is sometimes used to represent the century, and the decade could be disambiguated by saying "2000s decade", "first decade of 2000s", with basic meaning being century. --40bus (talk) 07:24, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
It could be, sure. And it is, sometimes. ←Baseball Bugs carrots09:04, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
“One thousand nine hundreds” has six syllables, “nineteen hundreds” has four, saving two. “Two thousands” has three syllables, “twenty hundreds” has four, adding one. People just pick the shorter option.
BTW, 2000s refers to the period 2000–2099, but 21st century to 2001–2100. It rarely matters. PiusImpavidus (talk) 11:29, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
xkcd:1849. Nardog (talk) 10:30, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
For me, the '00s (decade) are the "noughties". Probably I would call the '10s the "twenty tens" or "new tens". (Dunno why I feel the need to disambiguate from the 1910s.) Double sharp (talk) 11:59, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
I feel like "noughties" or "aughties" never really caught on. But it's almost time for the '00s nostalgia craze, so I suppose they'll come up with something. --Trovatore (talk) 00:42, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
As a side note, I once read (possibly in an SF fanzine) that when Arthur C. Clarke and Stanley Kubrick co-wrote the film and novel 2001: A Space Odyssey, Clarke expected people to pronounce the title "Twenty-oh-one . . ." (as they do for 1901, for example), not "Two thousand and one . . .". {The poster formerly known as 87.81.230.195} 94.6.84.253 (talk) 12:03, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
That story sounds familiar. Clark maybe didn't count on the public to keep it simple amid the grandeur, so to speak, of reaching a millennium. There's a late-1940s cartoon called "The Old Gray Hare", in which Elmer is taken into the future. The "voice of God" tells him, "At the sound of the gong, it will be TWO-THOUSAND A.D." That was the predominant media usage by the time it actually arrived. The "Y2K problem" or "Year two thousand problem", for example. By about 2010, the form "twenty-ten" had become more prevalent. As suggested above, one less syllable. ←Baseball Bugs carrots12:28, 2 January 2025 (UTC)
Back when it was 2008 (say), I would've said "two thousand and eight", but now that that year is in the past I'd say "twenty oh eight". Double sharp (talk) 03:34, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Yep. One thing I recall is that Charles Osgood was kind of an "early adapter" to that style, saying "twenty-oh-one" and so on. Now, pretty much everyone follows that norm. ←Baseball Bugs carrots06:00, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Are 20th century years ever said like "nineteen hundred and twenty-five" for 1925? Does English put "hundred and" between first two and last two number in speech? --40bus (talk) 10:05, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
I seem to recall that Alex Trebek used to say years that way. Maybe it was a Canadian thing. ←Baseball Bugs carrots11:13, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

January 3

Why is it boxes and not boxen?

Why is it foxes and not foxen? Someone who's wrong on the internet (talk) 05:45, 3 January 2025 (UTC)

Why is it sheep and not sheeps? HiLo48 (talk) 05:57, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Don't forget the related term "sheeps kin". ←Baseball Bugs carrots06:13, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
I thought the plural of sheep was sheeple! Someone who's wrong on the internet (talk) 06:52, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Possibly because "box" has its roots in Latin.Baseball Bugs carrots06:06, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Also, foxen is a word, just uncommon. GalacticShoe (talk) 06:07, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Because Vikings. Maungapohatu (talk) 07:35, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Someone wrong -- You can look at Old English grammar#Noun classes to see the declensions of a thousand years ago or more. The regular pattern of modern English inflection comes from the Old English masculine "a-stems". The only nouns with a non-"s" plural ending in modern English (leaving aside Classical borrowings such as "referenda" and unassimilated foreignisms) are oxen, children, brethren, and the rather archaic kine, which have an ending from the OE "weak" declension (though "child" and "brother" were not originally weak declension nouns). There are also the few remaining umlaut nouns, which do not have any plural endings, and a few other forms which don't (or don't always) distinguish between singular and plural. In that context, there's no particular reason why "box" should be expected to be irregular. However, the form "boxen" has been occasionally used in certain types of computer slang: http://catb.org/jargon/html/B/boxen.html -- AnonMoos (talk) 12:18, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
Likewise, VAXen, Unixen and Linuxen are geeky plurals of VAX, Unix and Linux.  --Lambiam 15:25, 3 January 2025 (UTC)
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