Peter von Kaehne wrote: >> It appears there's no ISO 639-3 code for Fnhd. I'll draw up a change >> request to see if we can get a new code. If not, we should add a subtag >> to the language of GerLut1545 to separate it from the real Nhd. material. > > Not sure whether I like this. Luther and his German is so much part of > our culture, to separate him out as somehow unreadable, only for > scholars, feels totally wrong. Giving the date of the translation is IMO > enough to keep it apart. > > The orthographical changes are actually rather few, fairly systematic > and easy to get used to. It is not that his language is hugely different > - e.g. if he would walk into a room today and start speaking any modern > German should understand him without much problem - unlike e.g. Chaucer > and modern English.
There are two issues here. One is whether ISO 639-3 should have a new code for Fnhd. to distinguish it from Nhd. It really should because 639-3 is nearly exhaustive, but fails to meet the needs of a particular user community. Since I'm a member of that community, I care and will petition the 639-3 registrar for a new code. Most modern linguists working on Germanic or Indo-European recognize Early New High German as being a separate stage, on par with New, Middle, and Old High (as well as New and Middle Low) German. Separate is the issue of how CrossWire should employ such a separate code for Fnhd. I would argue that we have two Luther translations from 1545. One is in the original form, which should be tagged as Fnhd. The other has modernized orthography, which should be tagged as Nhd. The average user who just wants to read and understand what Luther actually wrote is more likely to want the modernized text, so I don't see a problem with separating the Fnhd. version. I think Manfred's messages illustrates the kind of responses that we should expect from users who see the Fnhd. text mixed in with all of the Nhd. texts: They will assume it has spelling or OCR errors or believe that the text is actually intended for linguists or other scholars rather than casual Bible study. There's no reason not to locate Fnhd. modules near Nhd. modules. Expanding the code to English, we would probably use "German, Early New High". In German it could be "Deutsch (Frühneuhochdeutsch)". --Chris _______________________________________________ sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel Instructions to unsubscribe/change your settings at above page