Hi there, I add too slight, but important, features to historical grammar of Nashica, into the part of phonetical changes. 1) geminate -tt- and -dt- extinction...
... Interesting! Perhaps I could borrow this feature into Vozgian as well (after all, there must have been some sort of Proto-North-Slavic. ... So, this does...
Hello, ... Proto-North-Slavic. Hmph, we'll need to agree on the details! :) Skuodian of course doesn't miss the chance to have at least some geminates (I mean,...
... Does Skuodian appear in IB worlds? I would suggest to prepare some proto-north-slavonic substrate for IB, cos all other north slavonic languages...
... Unfortunately, no. Pavel has his own conhistory, that he believes doesn't fit in IB. A fact I can't cease to regret... ... Great idea! Because, despite all...
Hello, ... Actually, I'm thinking this might change. In the present conhistory, Skuodia is incorporated into Lithuania, but given the amount of Lithuanian...
... That's good news! ... Well, for the sake of convenience I have always supposed history of the RTC before the Partitions was similar to *here*. Mostly,...
... If you divide Serbian and Sanjaki into two languages, then you should add to this list Montenegrin, which is basically Serbosanjaki with the grammatical...
... Well, I don't really know the differences between Serbian and Sanjaki, except for the alphabet. I think I should have written "serbosanjaki" instead. ...
... than ... stage ... Ahem, IMHO, Slovakian and Slovenian are quite distant cousins... I do speak fluently Slovakian and do read quite a lot of things in ...
... In general I would say this is expected. L2 knowledge of a language, however good, tends to be more brittle than L1 knowledge in the face of closely...
... True. And by the way: Belarussian is essentially Polish spoken by a Russian suffering from a severe attack of akanie. Jan ===== "Originality is the art of...
... In my imaginations, members of four tribes moved up north: Ilmeni (60% of total), Polochani (25%), Slovieni (10%) and Krivichi (5%) and during ca 500 years...
AFAIK lack of second and third palatalization can't be called kentumization, because the latter refers to the lack of satemization,. which is a much earlier...
... Vozhega - [vo'Zega] tell me my sense for Russian, so penultimate syllable is stressed. But, Pavel might know it better :)))) And etymology is behind my...
... I asked my wife, and she doesn't know the town. Her intuition says that the ultimate syllable would be most likely, but she isn't sure. In fact, each ...
... It is not far from Vologda (the capital of the Vozgian Republic, by the way). A bit north of it, to be exact. ... Hmm, what encoding are you using? I tried...
Hello, ... Yes, I have found it, only haven't been there, that's all (nor to Vologda, in any case). ... Not me, but the stupid Outlook thingy. ... It is,...
... No, the true villain here is not the Russian language, but Peter the Great, who went too far in simplifying the spelling; instead of making Russian ...
... It was Simplified Chinese. Why on earth???? ... I would vote for Vózhega. Just my intuition... ... It is NOT nóvyj!!!! It is novýj! And i really don't...
... Yes, it is quite strange. Would anyone know what could have been the Common Slavic accent here? ... I doubt it. Polish (and Czech IIRC) also has "jaki",...
... I'd put it on the first too. I think Serbian would do that too...but I could well be wrong. Often when I don't know where stress goes I put in on the...
... nOvi, nOva, bEli, bEla (bIjeli/bIjela) in Serbian. But Serbocroat abhors stress on the ultimate. And this really is irrelevant at the moment... ... Hm....
... South Slavic has 'kak' too... Puno srdac^nih pozdrava, ... Ferenc Gy. Valoczy 25kV/50Hz - http://www.geocities.com/twentyfivekv50hz The future of...
... A bit north of Vologda. The etymology of the town's name could help me in establishing an explanation for the name "Vozgian". BTW, I noticed that not only...
... Just so. But of course when they were borrowed from Greek, there was no distinction in Greek between them, and there has *never* been any distinction...