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So first I'd like to apologize to the OGP community for leaving abruptly. My interests are rotative, and sometimes I'm more into Romance languages, sometimes Germanic and other times Celtic. Sometimes I'm not even into linguistics and research other things, like history or mythology/folklore.
Even though I don't edit, I still use Wiktionary a lot and really like it. As I'm writing this I'm kind of coming back to editing actively, though I can't tell if it will last or not.
To Do
This list is out of date, since I keep getting new ideas that I don't write down here.
Also I'll probably never finish anything here :v (sorry)
- Romance langs:
- Turn the examples used in the Portuguese language 'neutral' — BP discussion
- Help with Old Galician-Portuguese
- Create missing entries
- Create missing secondary entries (non-lemmas, feminine forms, etc.)
- Add citations for secondary entries — BP discussion)
- Add gender and plural (g=f|p for example) to entries
- Make the examples resemble the manuscripts better
- Add descendants that are missing (mostly Fala)
- Create missing Fala secondary entries
- Germanic langs:
- Improve Vilamovian/Wymysorys (adding etyms, descendants to their ancestors, etc.)
- Celtic langs:
- Add references to Proto-Celtic entries missing them
- (Celtic and Romance) Add missing Portuguese lemmas whose etymologies are Celtic
Sources
This will be used to help with the above to do's.
Galician entries with parts that should be OGP
Entries with quotations prior to 1500
User:MedK1/list/OldGPNeedsLemma
Northern Portuguese
Putting here some aspects where it differs from the default dialect and my thoughts about it since some stuff isn't in Wiktionary. It might be relative, since it's based of what I've noticed around me.
Things in which it is similar to Galician
- Pronouncing words such as homem and ontem as home and onte (sometimes), thus dropping (or never developing) the m Portuguese added to OGP -e (Galician kept is as -e)
- Natural pronounciation of também and ao (to a less extent) being tamém and ó (tamém being closer to Galician tamén, and ó also being a nonstandard form of ao in Galician)
- Some speakers pronounce /ʒ/ and /z/ as /ʃ/ and /s/. Might not be related, but similar to how the phonemes evolved from OGP to Galician
- Some vocabulary, such as anho ("lamb"), ervanço ("chickpea") and auga ("water")
Transmontan Portuguese
- Pronouncing the ⟨s⟩ in, for example, "mas é" as /ʒ/ instead of /z/
Further Reading
Linking stuff I didn't talk about
Wikipedia