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Today, we cover one of the weird and wonderful languages of Papua New Guinea. It turns out to be surprisingly not so weird, but there’s still quite a few things in it to inspire conlangers. Do check out the crazy verbs though — that bit is quite nuts.
Top of Show Greeting: Pøplish
Featured NATLANG: Kuot
Pete Bleackley
No outtakes this week?
admin
Nope, with packing and everything, I didn’t have time to make an outtake reel.
Carsten B.
IMHO, the outtakes at the end are unecessary ballast anyway. They may be funny sometimes, but they’re bells and whistles that add to the overall file size.
admin
Ah, but there are people expecting them now. And I do enjoy making them, even if the jokes I see aren’t really as hilarious to other people. I do try to set myself a limit of five minutes (I’ll try three, then increase to five if I feel the need for more, but I try not to go beyond that),
Anthony Docimo
Every language has bells and whistles; therefore it is only right that the discussion of languages also have them.
Ossicone
I always listen to the outtakes.
Roman Rausch
Which word is more evil – ’emphasis’ or ‘squirrel’?
MBR
Emphasquirrel!
wm.annis
That’s a really tough question.
Zifre
You guys keep talking about crazy stuff in Welsh and the Celtic languages and I have no idea what you are talking about. You should do an episode on Welsh at some point.
admin
We actually did feature Welsh once: http://conlangery.com/2012/04/09/conlangery-45-questions/ — back in the old format.
Laertes
“This is the first time– I’ve seen infixes do things, usually derivationally. This is the first language that has thoroughgoing, basic, agreement morphology happening in infixing.”
William, I’m surprised, considering how many times you’ve brought up Lakota and Assiniboine on this podcast. iču, iwaču, iyaču…