Re: Orthography supporting sound changes?
- From: Aidan Kehoe <kehoea@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 07 Jan 2006 18:04:02 +0100
Ar an seachtú lá de mí Eanair, scríobh Peter T. Daniels:
> > In article <dpl987$gin$01$1@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>, Joachim Pense wrote:
> >
> > > In principle, It appears not to be impossible to me that reversals of
> > > lossy sound changes could happen if the old pronounciation is
> > > preserved by writing. I'm thinking of a reversal of a sound merger,
> > > or re-appearance of a lost sound.
> > >
> > > Are there any reported examples of such sound change reversals having
> > > happened, where it can be demonstrated (or at least is strongly
> > > believed by many) that the orthography was the only preserver of the
> > > old situation (so it was not also preserved by maybe regional or
> > > social variants of spoken language)?
>
> [...]
>
> You left out the most relevant point: children would have to learn to
> spell before they learned to talk.
Because children are the only vectors of sound change?
--
I AM IN JAIL AND ALLOWED SEND ONLY ONE CABLE SINCE WAS ARRESTED WHILE
MEASURING FIFTEEN FOOT WALL OUTSIDE PALACE AND HAVE JUST FINISHED COUNTING
THIRTY EIGHT THOUSAND FIVE HUNDERED TWENTY TWO NAMES WHOS WHO IN MIDEAST.
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Orthography supporting sound changes?
- From: Peter T. Daniels
- Re: Orthography supporting sound changes?
- References:
- Orthography supporting sound changes?
- From: Joachim Pense
- Re: Orthography supporting sound changes?
- From: Helmut Richter
- Re: Orthography supporting sound changes?
- From: Peter T. Daniels
- Orthography supporting sound changes?
- Prev by Date: Re: Do Children Learn Languages at Different Rates?
- Next by Date: Re: Chinese languages or language?
- Previous by thread: Re: Orthography supporting sound changes?
- Next by thread: Re: Orthography supporting sound changes?
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|