The candidate in question was Andy Park of the AMP, and you'd have to ask him why he withdrew his candidacy after I asked him for a 50-word statement.
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Show posts MenuQuote from: Iac Marscheir on December 09, 2019, 08:01:55 PM
Documents to be translated:
Wiki front page, language-related pages, government-related pages (not necessarily laws just yet) for a start. An other forthcoming ideas are welcome for consideration.
QuoteIn addition, there's the Twitter account where opportunities to use the language can be advertised.
Quote from: Iac Marscheir on December 09, 2019, 07:29:39 PM
The existence of any levels of organization beyond la SIGN is relatively moot until such time as an official standard can be created for the Talossan language.
Quote from: Marcel Eðo Pairescu Tafial on December 09, 2019, 05:57:52 PMQuoteWho ran that?Alèx S I believe
Quote from: Magniloqueu Épiqeu Ac'hlerglünä da Lhiun on December 09, 2019, 04:12:14 AM
I mean, I do not really care. Both seem valid and logical, but the "-rh" is somewhat unique, and worth keeping as an infinitive suffix, too.
Quote from: Magniloqueu Épiqeu Ac'hlerglünä da Lhiun on December 08, 2019, 07:13:49 PM
do you write -r [ʃ] for the infinitive, but the future suddenly has a -h- inserted before the suffixes, when pronunciation of the /r/ as [ʃ] does not change?
Quote21.11 The simple future tense is formed from the infinitive by dropping the -ar ending of the infinitive and adding the
following endings to the stem of the verb:
"I" form -arhéu "We" form -arhent
"Thou" form -arhás "You" form -arhetz
"He/she/it" form -arha "They" form -arhent
21.12 The ending -arh- is pronounced [aS] throughout the future tense conjugation. An example of a regular future tense
conjugation follows:
Lirar [liraS] -- to read
eu lirarhéu [liraSeu] -- I shall read, I am going to read
tú lirarhás [liraSas] -- Thou shalt/art going to read
o lirarha [liraSë] -- He will read, he is going to read
noi lirarhent [liraSënt] -- We shall read, are going to read
voi lirarhetz [liraSec] -- You will read, are going to read
os lirarhent [liraSënt] -- They will read, are going to read
21.13 The -arh- endings were originally spelt -ar- (liraréu, etc.) but it was difficult to remember that these "r's" were to
be pronounced <S>. The addition of the helpful letter "h" was mandated by the Arestadâ of 19 August 1993.