nablator > 03-03-2023, 03:40 PM
(03-03-2023, 02:17 PM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.To bring this back to the topic of the thread, the only factors that separate repetitions such as "daiin daiin" from repetitions such as "oror" would seem to be the length of the repeated segments and the presence or absence of spaces between the repetitions. Could these be manifestations of the same phenomenon?They could be. Spaces are too inconsistent to be trusted. A metric for sequential repetition without word breaks could be, with detection of sequentially repeated substrings, their % by length relative to the total length of the text or twice this value to include what is repeated.
R. Sale > 03-03-2023, 08:03 PM
nablator > 03-03-2023, 09:44 PM
Ahmet Ardıç > 03-03-2023, 11:56 PM
(03-03-2023, 02:17 PM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(02-03-2023, 08:38 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.
[Here's a French document dated January 4, 1399 (old style; modern January 14, 1400), in which we see a phrase clearly written as both "arpens de terres" and "arpens deterres" in close proximity.]
[And You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.'s a link to a published transcription of a German register with entries for 1500-1503 in which we see "mitnamen" and "mit namen" alternating in different years. Of course these could have been written by different people; I don't have a facsimile. But "mitnamen" is the unexpected variant based on modern expectations ("mit Namen"), and I can provide a facsimile of the first line of a document dated 1489 that clearly runs these words together, suggesting that we shouldn't assume in the other case that this was a mistake on the part of the transcriber.]
[To bring this back to the topic of the thread, the only factors that separate repetitions such as "daiin daiin" from repetitions such as "oror" would seem to be the length of the repeated segments and the presence or absence of spaces between the repetitions. Could these be manifestations of the same phenomenon?]
pfeaster > 04-03-2023, 03:05 PM
(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Although I do not know both languages in which these articles are written and I see the first letters of the words in the first image as different letters, this point for me will probably be a misreading due to my not knowing these languages.
(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The first image you choose is most likely just a blank space due to a typo.
<...>
When we enlarge the words a little, we see that during the writing of one of these words written on the same page, the second letter was written by sliding over the first letter (as a handwriting mechanical error). It looks like a gap has formed as a result of this scrolling.
(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.In the second image you were share, I could only read the word "mitnamen" once, but could not see the second one.
(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.However, you may think that I consider the examples you gave as successful by approaching from these rare finds. Even so, I think that few exceptions should not be compared with the frequent repetitions seen in many examples and on almost every page throughout the text.
(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.For my interpretation of "daiin daiin" and any other word, please pluck a photo of these repetitions from the original pages or a photo of a whole line with the meaning of the searched word.
Anton > 04-03-2023, 04:08 PM
Ahmet Ardıç > 04-03-2023, 11:52 PM
(04-03-2023, 03:05 PM)pfeaster Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Although I do not know both languages in which these articles are written and I see the first letters of the words in the first image as different letters, this point for me will probably be a misreading due to my not knowing these languages.
The way in which [e] was formed in the French handwriting of this period might be confusing because its two parts aren't joined. Below I've highlighted three tokens of [e] in red to illustrate their structure.
Otherwise, de is a preposition equivalent to English "of" and terres is the plural of terre ("land"). In modern French, these are treated in writing as two separate words. In Middle French, however, de was sometimes joined to the word that followed it. This is still done conventionally today when the following word begins with a vowel, e.g., d'eau ("of water").
(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The first image you choose is most likely just a blank space due to a typo.
<...>
When we enlarge the words a little, we see that during the writing of one of these words written on the same page, the second letter was written by sliding over the first letter (as a handwriting mechanical error). It looks like a gap has formed as a result of this scrolling.
Here are enlarged images of those two sequences, plus three tokens of "de terre" / "deterre" without an [s] from the same document.
The last case strikes me as ambiguously spaced -- if it were in the Voynich Manuscript, the ZL transcription might have shown it as a "comma break." But in the other cases, the spacing (or absence of spacing) appears to be as definite as it is anywhere in the document.
(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.In the second image you were share, I could only read the word "mitnamen" once, but could not see the second one.
You're right that the second image contains only "mitnamen"; as I wrote, I was presenting it only to show that this unspaced form was in use and shouldn't be rejected lightly as a transcription error in the other published source I cited. It literally means "with names" and was used in conventional legal expressions such as "we the hereinafter-mentioned with names X, Y, and Z."
(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.However, you may think that I consider the examples you gave as successful by approaching from these rare finds. Even so, I think that few exceptions should not be compared with the frequent repetitions seen in many examples and on almost every page throughout the text.
They're not "rare finds" or a "few exceptions" -- to the contrary, they turn up constantly in documents of this kind. I'm not eager to spend more time simply documenting their existence, so let me instead place the burden of proof on you: can you show that spacing was in fact as consistent in writings of the fifteenth century (in Italy, Germany, France, etc.) as your argument about prefixes requires it to have been?
(03-03-2023, 11:56 PM)Ahmet Ardıç Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.For my interpretation of "daiin daiin" and any other word, please pluck a photo of these repetitions from the original pages or a photo of a whole line with the meaning of the searched word.
[I wasn't looking for an interpretation of any specific case, but was just curious whether you had some alternative hypothesis about the phenomenon of spaced and unspaced pairs in general. Of course there are tools readily available which you could use yourself to look up where cases of these appear and link them back to facsimiles. But if you'd need to investigate the individual cases now in order to answer the question, that in itself might already answer the question -- i.e., you believe the pattern is illusory and that every apparent case of it actually has its own entirely separate explanation. Is that much fair to say?]
Aga Tentakulus > 05-03-2023, 01:33 AM
cvetkakocj@rogers.com > 05-03-2023, 05:58 AM
(05-03-2023, 01:33 AM)Aga Tentakulus Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Often you can see that the letter "8/d" does not belong to the actual word. This changes from word to word.
As already described, French uses the apostrophe. Whether "de terre" or "d'terre" is irrelevant. It is written out once and shortened once.
We do the same, but rarely use an apostrophe.
Look carefully. It's not always what it looks like.
You just have to know it and understand it. And if there are 2x 8 at the beginning, you can bet that the first one is an article. Written out "de
Ahmet Ardıç > 05-03-2023, 10:44 AM