Talk:Play language: Difference between revisions
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Poswob Rare (talk | contribs) (Replaced content with "see history of this page, but note that the culture it refers to is mostly now figured as non-Play-speaking since Play only diverged ~1958 AD.") |
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see history of this page, but note that the culture it refers to is mostly now figured as non-Play-speaking since Play only diverged ~1958 AD. | see history of this page for culture info, but note that the culture it refers to is mostly now figured as non-Play-speaking since Play only diverged ~1958 AD. | ||
From Wikipedia's article on Modern Hebrew: | |||
''Long vowels occur where two identical vowels were historically separated by a pharyngeal or glottal consonant, and the first was stressed. (Where the second was stressed, the result is a sequence of two short vowels.)'' | |||
This is the exact pattern that I used in Play, without knowing it had occurred in the real world. |
Latest revision as of 07:09, 24 May 2022
see history of this page for culture info, but note that the culture it refers to is mostly now figured as non-Play-speaking since Play only diverged ~1958 AD.
From Wikipedia's article on Modern Hebrew:
Long vowels occur where two identical vowels were historically separated by a pharyngeal or glottal consonant, and the first was stressed. (Where the second was stressed, the result is a sequence of two short vowels.)
This is the exact pattern that I used in Play, without knowing it had occurred in the real world.