User:Urszag

Currently, I'm mostly contributing to entries on Latin.

Projects

 * User:Urszag/oides
 * Go through Latin river names ending in -a to find citations that show their gender. According to some grammars, names of this type are masculine in general, but some are feminine in exception to the usual rule for river names.
 * Go through river names in -is to check accusative forms ending in -em vs. -im.
 * fifth-declension nouns
 * Third declension adjectives of one termination
 * comparative-type adjectives like prior and ocior are currently misclassified as third-declension adjectives of one ending.
 * Add more detailed categories for Latin nouns
 * Look over Module:la-verb, the module for Template:la-conj, to see whether it is possible to make improvements. Currently, some fourth-conjugation verbs like erudio are shown with "contracted" forms like ērudiistī and ērudiimus; I believe that instead of these forms, it would be usual/attested to have ērudīstī and ērudīvimus (no contraction), respectively. Resources for this project: User:Isomorphyc/Sandbox/Some Latin Syncopated Forms, Aspects of the Phonology and Morphology of Classical Latin, András Cser
 * Adverbs with dubious synthetic comparative forms: egregie, varie, elate
 * sonivius,, dipsacos, plerusque, quinam
 * adjectives in -nus and -neus: ficulnus, ficulneus, populnus,

Syllabification and other pronunciation issues:
 * Mispronounced transcriptions: Adramyttium

Greek diphthongs in hiatus: Before consonants:
 * parasceve, Mnevis, Evenor
 * Nasava, Sucidava, Agave
 * Atreus

Voicing of /s/ to [z] in ancient or Ecclesiastical Latin

 * In some Italian accents, voicing of intervocalic "s" is blocked after ri-. How would this relate if at all to the use of [z] for "s" in Ecclesiastical Latin?
 * Also, Italian voices "s" before voiced consonants as well as between vowels.

S+sonorant in Latin:
 * Word-initially, mostly /sm/, which is voiced [zm] in Greek, allegedly since ancient times:
 * smaltum, smaragdus, smaris, smecticus, smegma, Smenus, Smerdis, Smila, smilax, Smyrna/Zmyrna, smyrus. There are spellings with "zm" as "Zymrna", which might be evidence for [zm]. Gaffiot mentions zm spellings for smaragdus, Smyrna, smyrnion/zmyrnium, smyrus.
 * word-initial /sn/ we only have in New-Latin Snelandia, which I'd guess has hardly ever been pronounced aloud
 * word-initial /sl/ we have in slavicus, Slovacia, and a couple related forms. Italian has [zl] in words spelled with "sl", most of which are from s-prefixed words I think (e.g. slabbrare, slacciare). The form "Sclavus" has "c" which it seems might go back to Greek forms. Gaffiot has only Slemnium for sl- words.
 * word-inital /sr/ does not exist in Wiktionary, nor in Gaffiot or L&S.
 * Word-medially, mostly /sm/:
 * /sm/ in many Greek -ma and -mus/-mos words; also in Asmura, Asmīraea, alius-modi, nos-met... trans-m...
 * /sn/ in Asnaus/Asnai; ...s-nam (cuius-, ecquis-, qualis-, quis-); trans-n... (-nato, -navigo, -no, -nominatio, -nomino, -numero)
 * /sl/ in ...s-libet, trans-l..., legis-latio, proslambanomenos
 * /sr/ in Cisrhenanus, Transrhenanus, Israel, disrumpo, disraro

Minor notes

 * Lamse Rhamses vs. decemscalmus, etiamsi, circum- words.
 * odd -culum/-cula words
 * PIE *lewh₃- seems to be two roots, not one (loosen and wash)
 * find information about the inflected form Jehovae
 * Latin verbs ending in -do seem to have a different etymology sometimes from the independent verb do.
 * Latin ki, ke and gi, ge don't display Ecclesiastical pronunciations correctly. e.g. Tōkiō, kerguelensis, atokensis, skrbinensis
 * ki, ke is fixed now, but ge is still off in kerguelensis
 * silvestris suffix
 * -um genitives: unguentum


 * rādula, tegula, regula: of a kind? "The Latin ‘tool’ Suffixes and the Formation of rēgula, tēgula, and trāgula" (Sihler)

Misc pages

 * vowel lengths that I have questions about

Quotes for quisquam
Valerius Maximus|Facta et Dicta Memorabilia|4|3|14|11|quote=ceterum cum et magni pretii et varii generis a legatis eius tam virorum quam feminarum apta usui munera circa domos ferrentur, nulla cuiquam dono ianua patuit Some editors correct this to "cuiusquam".

Titus Livius, Periochae Librorum A. U. C. 123.1 Sex. Pompeius, Magni filius, collectis ex Epiro proscriptis ac fugitivis cum exercitu diu sine ulla loci cuiusquam possessione praedatus in mari