Res facta quae tamen fingi potuit (
pauamma
) wrote in
linguaphiles
2022
-
04
-
03
04:31 am
Entry tags:
linguistic diversity
,
links
Wowsers. What's a good mass noun for languages?
Aside from numerous Turkic tongues, among other languages and groups it touches on, the following are mentioned: Mongolian, Tibetan, Chinese, Japanese, Tocharian, Uyghur, Bulgar, Tatar, Bactrian, Tungusic, Celtic, Dravidian, Yeniseian, Samoyedic, Chuvash, Latin, Italic, Prussian, Slavic (various languages), Sanskrit, Kitan, Hungarian, Xiongnu (Appendix 2 is a list of Xiongnu words surviving in Altaic languages), Circassian, Caucasian, Avar, Dingling 丁零, Khotanese Saka, Sogdian, Khwarezmian, Old Persian, Middle and New Persian, Pashto, Ossetian, and numerous Iranian languages, Yuezhi, Koguryŏan (Korean).
Flat
|
Top-Level Comments Only
no subject
claire_chan
2022-04-04 04:11 pm (UTC)
(
link
)
I found "topolect" yesterday or the day before, a group of dialects.
This
is the Wiktionary definition of it.
What you have is interesting, too! ♥
no subject
pauamma
2022-04-05 02:14 am (UTC)
(
link
)
I was aware of "topolect" in a Sinological context from reading Language Log, but I don't remember ever seeing it used to mean a group of related dialects. Or did you mean a subset of "dialect"?
no subject
claire_chan
2022-04-05 01:09 pm (UTC)
(
link
)
Gosh
, I was branching off accidentally into set theory with the word "dialect" due to past research.
no subject
pauamma
2022-04-05 10:55 pm (UTC)
(
link
)
No worry. (Was I a bit curt? That's been known to happen before.)
no subject
claire_chan
2022-04-05 10:58 pm (UTC)
(
link
)
It didn't come off that way! No problems.
5 comments
Post a new comment
Flat
|
Top-Level Comments Only
[
Home
|
Post Entry
|
Log in
|
Search
|
Browse Options
|
Site Map
]
no subject
What you have is interesting, too! ♥
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject