Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 36 guests
Re: Scenario: Safehold colonizes another planet... | |
---|---|
by John Prigent » Sun Oct 18, 2015 2:40 pm | |
John Prigent
Posts: 592
|
Just to muddy the waters, we do have at least one example of this kind of name here on Earth. The False Acacia, Pseudoacacia, so named because it looked a bit like an acacia when discovered.
Cheers John |
Top |
Re: Scenario: Safehold colonizes another planet... | |
---|---|
by Henry Brown » Sun Oct 18, 2015 5:02 pm | |
Henry Brown
Posts: 912
|
I agree. A name like nearoak makes sense in the Honorverse. Because in that universe, the colonists all know there are other planets and that on Terra there are Oak trees. Which is not the case on Safehold. None of the colonists had any memory of the Terran Federation or knowledge of other planets. Langhorn and the other Archangels could have just called them Oak trees. Nobody would have known the difference. |
Top |
Re: Scenario: Safehold colonizes another planet... | |
---|---|
by Dathi » Sun Oct 18, 2015 9:04 pm | |
Dathi
Posts: 17
|
Hmmm... Note that
in modern Polish those elements would be sort of noc[o] prze[lot] So, the second element is still visible, even if the first isn't, no? Besides you've got a word that has evolved for 1000 years or more (from proto-slavic to Polish) independently from its constituent elements. One of my complaints is that that HASN'T happened on Safehold. |
Top |
Re: Scenario: Safehold colonizes another planet... | |
---|---|
by evilauthor » Sun Oct 18, 2015 11:53 pm | |
evilauthor
Posts: 724
|
IIRC, the reason for this is the centralized standardization and education provided by the Church. Plus all the policy of assigning priests to countries they weren't born in which allows everyone to hear HOW words should be pronounced. Even so, the standard of pronunciation HAS shifted and there's plenty of regional accents that are so different from the standard that they're ALMOST unintelligible to non-speakers and thus ALMOST qualify as whole new languages. |
Top |
Re: Scenario: Safehold colonizes another planet... | |
---|---|
by hanuman » Mon Oct 19, 2015 1:05 am | |
hanuman
Posts: 643
|
Yet, in the three centuries or so since English became an export product the language has diversified into numerous dialects that all adhere to either of two major spelling systems and a still-unified grammar, but some of which are virtually unintelligible to speakers of other dialects. And this is a process that continues to this day despite the massive influence of near-instantaneous mass communication. |
Top |
Re: Scenario: Safehold colonizes another planet... | |
---|---|
by Kakai » Mon Oct 19, 2015 4:43 am | |
Kakai
Posts: 162
|
Well, valid point here. That's what happens when a programmist tries to tackle linguistics, I guess
A valid point again. I'd say it's simply artistic license. Going by names, nearoak is probably something like "neyrohk" in "modern" Safeholdian, just like Kaleb is Cayleb, but we're getting the "Terran" version because this way RFC doesn't have to spend time on things like "neyrohk, which looked almost identically to Old Terran oak" and can simply mention nearoaks and move on to more important things. -----------
When in mortal danger, when beset by doubt, Run in little circles, wave your arms and shout. - Ciaphas Cain |
Top |
Re: Scenario: Safehold colonizes another planet... | |
---|---|
by Kytheros » Mon Oct 19, 2015 5:34 am | |
Kytheros
Posts: 1407
|
Except that Terran oaks were one of the species that were brought with and seeded onto the planet as part of the terraforming process. Thus, there are (Terran) oaks and (Safeholdian) nearoaks. I expect that in the hypothetical future of the OP, there would be differentiation in the common names by planet of origin. Ie, Terran Oak, Safeholdian Nearoak, etc. |
Top |
Re: Scenario: Safehold colonizes another planet... | |
---|---|
by evilauthor » Mon Oct 19, 2015 10:05 am | |
evilauthor
Posts: 724
|
Oh, and don't forget that as far as SPELLING is concerned, the official handed-down-from-the-archangels spelling would still be "nearoak" however it's pronounced now. In fact the same should go for personal names, which makes Weber's initial decision to go with phonetic spellings even more odd. |
Top |