GeoModder wrote: ↑Sun Jul 25, 2021 8:43 pm
Okay, sounds like you want to have things absolutely your way, cthulhu.
Have fun with it, I don't I'll bother with your participation on the board anymore.
Eh, if you can't handle a joke, fine.
I was just thinking that asking about such an insignificant detail will be too much nitpicking already, even without turning it into a discussion about nautical terms. Thus, I spiced my reply up a little.
captainsmirk wrote: ↑Sun Jul 25, 2021 8:47 pm
Seems quite unlikely to me that the same derivation would show up in two completely unrelated languages, but not impossible. Even if Loroi-handedness have an effect surely it would be on the Trade word for Port

.
Also worth remembering that Trade is not actually a Loroi language and so any such terms (even in the Loroi dialect) could still be hang overs from the original Trade language and maybe created by a species without handedness as such (or indeed possibly hands at all

)
Still I guess the sides of a ship may be the sort of word that wouldn't survive, however that assumes that just because earth languages have specific terms for those things alien languages will as well (they could just be called left and right, as long as a specific orientation is assumed to avoid confusion).
Thinking about it prior to the invention of radio communication it wouldn't have even been necessary for the Loroi to have spoken words for those things (although words for written records would I guess exist).
The advantage of port/starboard that it is absolute, assigned regardless of the viewer's position on the ship. No matter where a sailor stands or which way he faces, he will always know that starboard means not
his right, but the
ship's (or the imaginary paddle-wielding mate's). Thus, for what is essentially 2D movement on the sea's surface, you'll have special words denoting the 2 sides of a ship, without forcing people to check whose right or left it is right now, every time.
If the Trade terms for those concepts are based on seafaring traditions, you'll end up with 2, no matter what the words themselves are based on. However, if they are coming from the original (space-age) Trade, there will be 4 separate terms for 3D movement. That's because there's no true up or down in space, (except for the planetary disc of a system or even the galactic plane as a point of reference), thus you'll need to establish the up and down of a starship, too.
And if you have a spherical doomstar with a reactionless drive and not a torchship, you'll need 6.
Great, I think I won that award...
Arioch wrote: ↑Sun Jul 25, 2021 9:03 pm
There is no specific term for an adult cutting off her own hair; it's not a ritual.
Oh, I thought that since this was part of their culture (Stillstorm did cut her hair to ?atone? for what she considered a personal loss of honor), there would be a ritual and word for it. Well, I can always invent a subculture-specific one.
Arioch wrote: ↑Sun Jul 25, 2021 9:03 pm
Loroi speech is being translated for the reader by the narrator; it shouldn't be taken literally. The Loroi are not saying words that literally mean "star-board." They're just saying left (
tidit) and right (
nenes). The narrator is using nautical terms because he's a pilot and those are the terms he uses. Plus it sounds cooler.
I know it's not meant to be literal, that was just an example on how they could be derived.
But how do they know whose left/right it is over radio? Starboard is meant to be relative to the ship itself, so maybe it's nasi-nenes, "ship-right"?
Sorry for nitpicking, I'll take my neutronium pick and join the Golim in their mining endeavors.