User:Malku H₂n̥rés

I am a French linguist studying everything in linguistics but particularly historical linguistics, the Afroasiatic family and languages of Northwest Africa in Antiquity. I mostly contribute in:
 * The Reconstruction namespace
 * Modules (for pronunciation, transliteration and inflection)
 * The etymology section
 * Afroasiatic languages
 * My Wiktionary projects (see below).

I used to construct an international auxiliary language and program a French-Spanish translator, after having learned Spanish in four months, and I wish I could expand it adding other Romance or Indo-European languages on it. I've never ended any of both. However, see below my achievement on Wiktionary, which are actual.

Subpages:

Achievements

 * Proto-Turkic
 * Some numeral entries: CAT:Proto-Turkic numerals
 * Proto-Kartvelian:
 * Some numeral entries: CAT:Proto-Kartvelian numerals
 * Proto-Indo-European
 * Update of number boxes: CAT:Proto-Indo-European numerals
 * Proto-Germanic
 * Update of number boxes: CAT:Proto-Germanic numerals
 * Phoenician
 * Standardization and literal meaning of quotations: CAT:Phoenician terms with quotation
 * Standardization
 * Etymology
 * Italic languages
 * User:Malku H₂n̥rés/Afroasiatic consistency to gather as many available resources about Afroasiatic languages as possible
 * Proto-Semitic
 * WT:About Proto-Semitic
 * Standardization: use of sem-noun, sem-decl-noun without parameter in L4, descendants section
 * Proto-West Semitic
 * Origin of its use as a reconstructed language
 * Proto-Afroasiatic
 * Standardization
 * Central Atlas Tamazight
 * Standardization
 * Basic vocabulary
 * Etymology
 * Proto-Berber
 * Standardization
 * Pronunciation modules and templates
 * Central Atlas Tamazight: MOD:tzm-IPA and tzm-IPA
 * Hausa: MOD:ha-IPA and ha-IPA
 * Akkadian: MOD:akk-IPA and akk-IPA
 * Afar: MOD:aa-IPA and aa-IPA
 * Hebrew
 * Proposals for romanization
 * Modification of MOD:hyphenation so that hyphenation can be module-automated.
 * Others
 * Minor contributions to English, French, German and Spanish.
 * Templates
 * Cuneiform sign: cuns
 * Hammurabi Code quotation template: RQ:Hammurabi
 * Reference templates:
 * R:NSWL
 * R:Penchoen:1973
 * I don't remember
 * Safaitic:
 * Some lemmas

Current

 * MOD:he-translit : to be deployed
 * MOD:Swadesh/data/tzm : almost done
 * Proto-Semitic: descendants sections
 * MOD:akk-conj: Akkadian conjugation module, beginning with akk-verb following User:Sartma/akk-verb
 * Gather on a page (likely Entry creation in a new section) any encountered PB vocabulary (with Afroasiatic consistency, PB entries, redlinks, library, original research)

To do

 * Pronunciation modules and templates
 * Tashelhit: MOD:shi-IPA and shi-IPA
 * Maltese: MOD:mt-IPA and mt-IPA
 * Reconstructed languages: really easy (see their "Wiktionary:About Lang" page)
 * Proto-Semitic
 * Proto-Germanic
 * Proto-Berber
 * Afroasiatic
 * Semitic
 * Aramaic
 * Classical Syriac: from transcription
 * Other Aramaic dialects: not sure if it's useful
 * Hebrew: from a full transcription
 * Punic: replace xpu-rows and work from vowels-including transcription
 * Moroccan Arabic: the transcription has full vocalization
 * Berber
 * Kabyle: Latin script
 * Tarifit: If Tifinagh, automated transcription to Latin
 * Tashelhit: from transcription
 * Tuareg languages: Latin script (Tifinagh are soft redirects)
 * Tamasheq: explicit pronunciation
 * Cushitic: Latin script
 * Somali:
 * Saho:
 * Oromo:
 * Egyptian: automatable
 * Coptic: automated dialect-based translit
 * Other
 * Turkic
 * Azerbaijani: fix MOD:az-IPA and az-IPA
 * Turkish
 * Many others
 * Niger-Congo
 * Yoruba: move and rewrite MOD:yo-pron
 * Greek
 * Germanic
 * German: mostly automatable. Some exceptions manageable with respelling
 * Swedish: likely feasible.
 * Dutch: possibly doable.
 * English: not impossible, if French pronunciation can be automated, English too, and likewise there will be plenty of respellings. Assume is voiceless, indicate stress and change vowel realization after it as in Russian, etc.
 * Breton: possibly doable.
 * etc.
 * Derivation templates
 * Central Atlas Tamazight:
 * Hausa:
 * Transliteration modules
 * Aramaic
 * Typing aid modules
 * MOD:typing-aids/data/Xsux: from romanization (ASCII) to cuneiform sign because it has no ambiguity unlike the reverse. Take a table with all the material and use regex in the module editor. Perhaps edit the cuneiform romanization template to automate it, in order to make this huge table as useful as possible.
 * Inflection modules
 * Central Atlas Tamazight:
 * Declension
 * Conjugation
 * Hausa
 * Conjugation
 * Proto-Semitic: about roots (remember Metaknowledge)
 * Conjugation
 * Akkadian
 * Conjugation
 * Declension
 * Central Atlas Tamazight:
 * See User:Malku H₂n̥rés/Entry creation
 * Akkadian
 * akk-verb (headline template)
 * Inflection tables: declension and conjugation
 * Import my virtual library (AA + Ber) on User:Malku H₂n̥rés/Afroasiatic consistency
 * Image of a text on entries with a quote from an old language
 * Phoenician/Punic
 * Numidian: since it's not in Unicode, see t2i and make a specific one like the Phoenician one.
 * List of eligible languages:
 * Languages to expand:
 * Phoenician/Punic
 * Safaitic
 * Proto-Semitic
 * Proto-Berber
 * Proto-Afroasiatic
 * Tamasheq
 * etc.
 * Old South Arabian (remember Metaknowledge) dialectology: merge the family under a single eponymous language, change the PS&PWS standard, remove the OSA languages in the PS&PWS entries and turn this into labels (their respective Wikipedia pages exist) on the OSA entries.
 * Aramaic dialectology: label the dialects on the Aramaic pages following the ones on PS&PWS entries
 * module: perhaps find a pattern to automate by bot its replacement (what was I thinking to, writing this?)

Etymology
Compound of +.

Proper noun

 * 1) user name of User/Malku H₂n̥rés
 * 2) etymological name and family name of Malku H₂n̥rés

Declension
Facultative. "Malku" can be inflected in the singular bound form following Proto-Semitic declension on whereas "H₂n̥rés" remains always at the genitive case.

Usage notes
Call me Malku.