Webster's, 1989:
scatter (skat'er), v.t. 1. to throw loosely about; distribute at irregular intervals: to scatter seeds. 2. to separate and drive off in various directions; disperse: to scatter a crowd. [...] 4. to separate and disperse; go in different directions. -n. [...>
tongue (tung), n., v. tongued, tonguing. -n. [...] 4. the human tongue as the organ of speech. 5. the faculty or power of speech: Have you lost your tongue? 6. speech or talk, esp. mere glib or empty talk. 7. manner or character of speech: a flattering tongue. 8. the language of a particular people, region or nation: the Hebrew tongue. 9. a dialect. 10. Often, tongues. a people or nation distinguished by its language. Is. 66:18; Rev. 5:9. [...] 33. to articulate or pronounce. 34. Archaic. to speak or utter. -v.i. [...>
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Still hereDate: 2001-08-27 Three cheers for typing in the new password on a keyboard with slightly rearranged key-values... :) The ADSL drama has become a farce (I was offline during the tragedy-part), but at least I can walk (for forty minutes, uphill) to campus and get things done there now. |
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A few of the many good collections of links to more or less "handmade" languages:
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The following sites showcase some of the better known conlangs. Some of them are even known by non-linguaholics...
A few somewhat unstandard cases is linked to below...
Here is a good example of online grammars of natural languages (that is, non-constructed)...
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Conlanging isn't mentioned much outside our circles, but it does happen...
A webring is a way to connect sites that beats the old "20K list of links",
which the wired conlang community IMHO is so hampered with.
Keeping such a list up to date can be a nightmare!
The ring works around this problem by keeping the 20K list in one place (www.webring.org), thus, only one place needs to be updated. The sites on the ring is connected via a piece of common HTML-code. By clicking on any of the links, a command is sent to the webring script that responds by sending one address of the list to your browser, which then takes you to that address.
For this to work, the server at webring must be up and running, which is not always the case, of course, but that's a side-effect I think we all can live with!
If you wish to join this ring, SC, go to the sign-up page now. If you have any questions, pop by webring.org and read the FAQ there, or ask me.
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