LISTSERV mailing list manager LISTSERV 16.0

Help for CONLANG Archives


CONLANG Archives

CONLANG Archives


CONLANG@LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU


View:

Message:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Topic:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

By Author:

[

First

|

Previous

|

Next

|

Last

]

Font:

Proportional Font

LISTSERV Archives

LISTSERV Archives

CONLANG Home

CONLANG Home

CONLANG  January 1999, Week 3

CONLANG January 1999, Week 3

Subject:

Re: constructed romance languages

From:

Dale Morris <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Constructed Languages List <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 19 Jan 1999 21:39:17 EST

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (211 lines)

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

--part0_916799961_boundary
Content-ID: <[log in to unmask]>
Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII

In a message dated 99-01-19 02:28:38 EST, you write:

<< >Has anyone else on this list created constructed romance languages? I've
 >already seen Brithenig (which I love).
 >
          I've done one, and I'm currently putting it on the web. I know
others that
 exist but I must find their URL. I think the creators will know better than
 me.
  >>

I'm working on a project tenatively called Ierma^nsc (<GERMANICE) which I
intend to be the hypothetical Romance of Germania, if the events of 9 A.D. had
gone a little better for the Romans.  It's inlfuenced a lot by Rhaeto-Romance,
Franco-Provencal, and Italian, with substantial Germanic lexical component.
It's the dominant dialect of my "North Romance" family, which shares features
with both East and West, along with some peculiar innovations of its own.

Anyway, the beginings of a web page are attached for your amuzement...critique
and suggestions welcome :-)

Dale Morris

--part0_916799961_boundary
Content-ID: <[log in to unmask]>
Content-type: text/html;
        name="IERMANSC.HTM"
Content-transfer-encoding: quoted-printable
Content-disposition: inline

<HTML>
<BODY BGCOLOR=3D'#111111'>
<BODY BGCOLOR=3D"#ffffff" LINK=3D"#0000FF" VLINK=3D"#0000FF" TEXT=3D"#000=
000">
<CENTER><h1>La Lengua Ierm=E2na</h1>
<h3><i>The Ierm=E2nsc Language</i><BR>By Dale Morris</h3></CENTER>

<h3>I. Introduction</h3>
The Ierm=E2nsc language is the sole representative of the Northern subfam=
ily of the Romance languages.  This statement may strike the linguisticly=
 inclined as odd, for in fact there <i>is</i> no Northern Romance subfami=
ly.  But what if there had been?  My hypothesis is that it would have bee=
n derived from Vulgar Latin just as its cousins - though with its own par=
ticular sound changes, and a decidedly Germanic substratum.  Closly relat=
ed to Northern Italian, Franco-Provencal, and Romansch, Ierm=E2nsc is thi=
s language.

<h3>II. Spelling and Pronunciation</h3>
The scribes of the ages following the collapse of the Roman Empire did no=
t write down the local speech until hundreds of years later, and when the=
y did so, the Roman alphabet was employed for the task.  Since then, of c=
ourse, there have been some sound changes, so the correspondence of lette=
r to sound is not always perfect:<BR>

<=FC=F6=E2=F0=FE>

<table border =3D 0 width =3D 250>
<tr><td><h4>Letter</h4></td><td><h4>Sound</h4></td></tr>
<tr><td>  a </td><td>/a/ fAther
<tr><td>  =E2 </td><td>/O/ bOUght
<tr><td>  b </td><td>/b/ Bin
<tr><td>  c </td><td>/k/ Cat
<tr><td>  d </td><td>/d/ Dog
<tr><td>  =F0 </td><td>/D/ THose
<tr><td>  e </td><td>/e/ thEy
<tr><td>  f </td><td>/f/ Ford
<tr><td>  g </td><td>/g/ Go
<tr><td>  h </td><td>/x/ German BaCH
<tr><td>  i </td><td>/i/ machIne
<tr><td>    </td><td>/j/ York
<tr><td>  ie </td><td>/jE/ YEn
<tr><td>  l </td><td>/l/ Lump
<tr><td>  m </td><td>/m/ Moon
<tr><td>  n </td><td>/n/ North
<tr><td>  o </td><td>/o/ rOpe
<tr><td>  =F6 </td><td>/0/ German =F6st
<tr><td>  p </td><td>/p/ Pin
<tr><td>  r </td><td>/r/ Road
<tr><td>  s </td><td>/s/ Size
<tr><td>  sc </td><td>/S/ SHoe
<tr><td>  t </td><td>/t/ Tomb
<tr><td>  =FE </td><td>/T/ THin
<tr><td>  u </td><td>/u/ glUE
<tr><td>  =FC </td><td>/y/ German =FCber
<tr><td>  v </td><td>/v/ Very
<tr><td>  z </td><td>/ts/ biTS
</table>
The vowels letters <i>a </i>and <i>e</i> are prnounced as /@/ (schwa) in =
final position.  Therefore the final sounds in the forms <i>bona~bone</i>=
 rhyme.

<h3></h3>

<h3></h3>

<h3></h3>
<h3>III. Phonology.</H3>

<i>Vowels.</I>  The vocalic system of Northern Romance is unique, though =
it bears some resemblance to Western Romance, especially early varieties =
of Gallo-Romance.  Tonic vowels are the most radically affected.  The Pro=
to-Romace /a/ was retained as such, except before nasals where it was rai=
sed to /O/.  The /E/ from Latin 'short e' dipthongised universally to /jE=
/.  /e/ from Latin 'long e' and 'short i' remained as such.  Likewise, /i=
/ did not change except before nasals, lowering to /e/.  'Short' /O/ tran=
slated to /o/ in most cases, unless it was in an umlauting environment, w=
hich is to say it is followed directly by /i/ or /u/ in the next syllable=
.  In such an environment, the front vowel /0/ arose.  In all cases /o/ r=
ose to /u/, while /u/ fronted to /y/.<P>
The diphthongs are not complicated: /aw/ became /O/ very regularly; /oi/ =
and /ai/ were realized as /e/ and /E/, respectively.<P>
  Atonic (non-final) vowels aside from /a/ were usually eliminated by syn=
cope.<P>
  Final vowels are another matter.  /u/ and /o/ disappeared altogether.  =
The front vowels fared better: /i/ survived though reduced to /e/, while =
/e/ was retained only when supporting certain consonant clusters (such as=
 in the old word /nuSre/ 'our').  Final /a/ was the only one to survive u=
naltered.  Eventually conditions conspired to eliminate the distinctions =
between the three remaining sounds, reducing all of them to [log in to unmask]<P>

<i>Consonants.</i>  Ierm=E2nsc underwent the process of lenition in its o=
wn peculiar Germanicized way.  The stops /p t k/ and /b d g/ become /v D =
G/ intervocalicly (including consonants between vowels and liquids, notab=
ly /r/, as well).  The first of these two resultant phonemes were stable,=
 as long as they did not become final through apocope.  /G/ on the other =
hand, always became /j/ (=91y=92 in the old orthography) and sometimes di=
sappeared.  Hence AMICA > /OmiGa/ > [log in to unmask]  When these voiced fricatives=
 become final (a frequent occurrence in many masculine nouns), they also =
devoiced.  Therefore /v D G/ give way to /f T x/.  This produced many con=
sonant variations between singular and plural in masculine nouns: =E2mih~=
=E2mie /Omih Omj@/ < AMICU~AMICI, l=FCf~l=FCve /lyf~lyv@/ < LUPU~LUPI, ha=
=FE~ha=F0e /xaT~xaD@/ < CATTU~CATTI, etc.<P>

  The plural -s common in so many Western Romance tongues has been lost, =
not only in substantives but in verbs and almost everywhere else, saving =
a few monosyllabic particles.<P>

  The status of palatalized /k/ and /g/ is relatively straightforward.  I=
n the old language, the segments would become /tS/ and /dZ/.  The former =
has softened to /ts/, while the latter has gone even further to /j/ proba=
bly via /Z/.  The standard orthography reflects the /ts/ pronunciation as=
 'z'; the /j/ is represented by =91i=92.  When Latin =91c=92 and =91g=92 =
occurred before /a/ (which would sometimes later became /O/ ), they palat=
alized.  The outcome is /x/ and /G/.  Again, the derivative of /g/ soften=
s to /j/.  Hence ziel /tsjEl/ < CAELUM, ient /jent/< GENTEM, h=E2n /xOn/ =
< CANEM, Iala /jal@/ < GALLIA.<P>

<h3>IV. Morphology.</H3>

<i>Nouns.</i>  The great majority of nouns are either masculine or femini=
ne, coming from the second and first declensions of Latin, respectively. =
 Masculines end in '-e' or a consonant in the singular, and '-e' in the p=
lural.  As discussed earlier, the nouns ending in /f T x/ in the singular=
 regularly alter these to /v D j/.  Feminines take '-a' (or more rarely, =
a consonant) in the singular and '-e' plural.  There is a small class of =
nouns (arm, braz, zil, c=F6rn, di=FE, f=F6l, ien=FCl, gr=E2n,
lavre, lenz=F6l, len, ovre, =F6f, vazel, and v=F6=FE) which are masculine=
 in the singular, but feminine in the plural.  <P>

The singular forms are derived from the Latin accusative while the plural=
 comes from the nominative, as in the Eastern Romance languages.
Those nouns of the other declensions mostly followed suit with one of the=
 surviving declensions.  The most prominent example is to be found in the=
 case of third declension masculine nouns, which all take the '-e' plural=
, by analogy to the second declension inherited terms (e.g. hypothetical =
MONTE~MONTES > *mont~mont; only application of '-e' by analogy produces t=
he correct mont~monte.<P>

<i>Adjectives.</i>

The adjective is a little more complex than the noun.  There are two type=
s of adejective.  One is the variable adjective, which when used attribut=
ativly agrees with the number and gender of the word it modifies, meaning=
 this type inflects for masculine and feminine, singular and plural.  Tak=
e for example the common b=F6n~b=F6ne~bona~bone < BONU~BONI~BONA~BONE.  T=
he other kind of adjective varies only in number (e.g. fort~for=F0e < FOR=
TEM~FORTES).<P>

The comparitive degree is expressed by the term pl=FC < PLUS.  A few word=
s which use flexion rather than the particle survive: mielur < MELIOR, pe=
ur < PEIORE, maur < MAIOREM, menur < MINIOREM.  The term senur < SENIOREM=
 is used as a title conveying respect.  The complement of the comparative=
 is expressed by ha < QUAM (e.g. mielur ha Pie=F0re).<P>

The superlative is in general expressed by m=FC=FE < MULTU, though again =
there are a handful of exceptions: mase < MAXIMUM, mienen < MINIMUM, pese=
m < PESSIMUM, pr=F6sen < PROXIMUM.<P>

<i>Numerals.</i>

The term for 'one' has quite a large semantic area to cover, meaning not =
only the number, but also serving as the term for "a certain" and as the =
indefinite article.  Its forms are: =FCn~=FCna~=FCne.  The rest of the fi=
rst ten numerals are highly unchanged from the Vulgar Latin: d=FC, tre, h=
a=F0or, zenc, sesc, se=FE, o=FE, n=F6f, dez.  Up to seventeen, the forms =
=FCndez, d=FCdez, tredez, etc. are found.  Eighteen is dezo=FE, nineteen =
dezn=F6f.  Compounds of ten starting with twenty ascend as vent, trenta, =
haranta, zencanta, sezenta, se=F0enta, o=F0enta, novanta.  One hundred is=
 zient.  Thousand is mil.
<P>
The the first ten ordinals are: premar, seunt, ter=FE, har=FE, zin=FE, se=
zen, se=F0en, o=F0en, noven, dezen.


--part0_916799961_boundary--

Top of Message | Previous Page | Permalink

Advanced Options


Options

Log In

Log In

Get Password

Get Password


Search Archives

Search Archives


Subscribe or Unsubscribe

Subscribe or Unsubscribe


Archives

May 2013, Week 3
May 2013, Week 2
May 2013, Week 1
April 2013, Week 5
April 2013, Week 4
April 2013, Week 3
April 2013, Week 2
April 2013, Week 1
March 2013, Week 5
March 2013, Week 4
March 2013, Week 3
March 2013, Week 2
March 2013, Week 1
February 2013, Week 4
February 2013, Week 3
February 2013, Week 2
February 2013, Week 1
January 2013, Week 5
January 2013, Week 4
January 2013, Week 3
January 2013, Week 2
January 2013, Week 1
December 2012, Week 5
December 2012, Week 4
December 2012, Week 3
December 2012, Week 2
December 2012, Week 1
November 2012, Week 5
November 2012, Week 4
November 2012, Week 3
November 2012, Week 2
November 2012, Week 1
October 2012, Week 5
October 2012, Week 4
October 2012, Week 3
October 2012, Week 2
October 2012, Week 1
September 2012, Week 5
September 2012, Week 4
September 2012, Week 3
September 2012, Week 2
September 2012, Week 1
August 2012, Week 5
August 2012, Week 4
August 2012, Week 3
August 2012, Week 2
August 2012, Week 1
July 2012, Week 5
July 2012, Week 4
July 2012, Week 3
July 2012, Week 2
July 2012, Week 1
June 2012, Week 5
June 2012, Week 4
June 2012, Week 3
June 2012, Week 2
June 2012, Week 1
May 2012, Week 5
May 2012, Week 4
May 2012, Week 3
May 2012, Week 2
May 2012, Week 1
April 2012, Week 5
April 2012, Week 4
April 2012, Week 3
April 2012, Week 2
April 2012, Week 1
March 2012, Week 5
March 2012, Week 4
March 2012, Week 3
March 2012, Week 2
March 2012, Week 1
February 2012, Week 5
February 2012, Week 4
February 2012, Week 3
February 2012, Week 2
February 2012, Week 1
January 2012, Week 5
January 2012, Week 4
January 2012, Week 3
January 2012, Week 2
January 2012, Week 1
December 2011, Week 5
December 2011, Week 4
December 2011, Week 3
December 2011, Week 2
December 2011, Week 1
November 2011, Week 5
November 2011, Week 4
November 2011, Week 3
November 2011, Week 2
November 2011, Week 1
October 2011, Week 5
October 2011, Week 4
October 2011, Week 3
October 2011, Week 2
October 2011, Week 1
September 2011, Week 5
September 2011, Week 4
September 2011, Week 3
September 2011, Week 2
September 2011, Week 1
August 2011, Week 5
August 2011, Week 4
August 2011, Week 3
August 2011, Week 2
August 2011, Week 1
July 2011, Week 5
July 2011, Week 4
July 2011, Week 3
July 2011, Week 2
July 2011, Week 1
June 2011, Week 5
June 2011, Week 4
June 2011, Week 3
June 2011, Week 2
June 2011, Week 1
May 2011, Week 5
May 2011, Week 4
May 2011, Week 3
May 2011, Week 2
May 2011, Week 1
April 2011, Week 5
April 2011, Week 4
April 2011, Week 3
April 2011, Week 2
April 2011, Week 1
March 2011, Week 5
March 2011, Week 4
March 2011, Week 3
March 2011, Week 2
March 2011, Week 1
February 2011, Week 4
February 2011, Week 3
February 2011, Week 2
February 2011, Week 1
January 2011, Week 5
January 2011, Week 4
January 2011, Week 3
January 2011, Week 2
January 2011, Week 1
December 2010, Week 5
December 2010, Week 4
December 2010, Week 3
December 2010, Week 2
December 2010, Week 1
November 2010, Week 5
November 2010, Week 4
November 2010, Week 3
November 2010, Week 2
November 2010, Week 1
October 2010, Week 5
October 2010, Week 4
October 2010, Week 3
October 2010, Week 2
October 2010, Week 1
September 2010, Week 5
September 2010, Week 4
September 2010, Week 3
September 2010, Week 2
September 2010, Week 1
August 2010, Week 5
August 2010, Week 4
August 2010, Week 3
August 2010, Week 2
August 2010, Week 1
July 2010, Week 5
July 2010, Week 4
July 2010, Week 3
July 2010, Week 2
July 2010, Week 1
June 2010, Week 5
June 2010, Week 4
June 2010, Week 3
June 2010, Week 2
June 2010, Week 1
May 2010, Week 5
May 2010, Week 4
May 2010, Week 3
May 2010, Week 2
May 2010, Week 1
April 2010, Week 5
April 2010, Week 4
April 2010, Week 3
April 2010, Week 2
April 2010, Week 1
March 2010, Week 5
March 2010, Week 4
March 2010, Week 3
March 2010, Week 2
March 2010, Week 1
February 2010, Week 4
February 2010, Week 3
February 2010, Week 2
February 2010, Week 1
January 2010, Week 5
January 2010, Week 4
January 2010, Week 3
January 2010, Week 2
January 2010, Week 1
December 2009, Week 5
December 2009, Week 4
December 2009, Week 3
December 2009, Week 2
December 2009, Week 1
November 2009, Week 5
November 2009, Week 4
November 2009, Week 3
November 2009, Week 2
November 2009, Week 1
October 2009, Week 5
October 2009, Week 4
October 2009, Week 3
October 2009, Week 2
October 2009, Week 1
September 2009, Week 5
September 2009, Week 4
September 2009, Week 3
September 2009, Week 2
September 2009, Week 1
August 2009, Week 5
August 2009, Week 4
August 2009, Week 3
August 2009, Week 2
August 2009, Week 1
July 2009, Week 5
July 2009, Week 4
July 2009, Week 3
July 2009, Week 2
July 2009, Week 1
June 2009, Week 5
June 2009, Week 4
June 2009, Week 3
June 2009, Week 2
June 2009, Week 1
May 2009, Week 5
May 2009, Week 4
May 2009, Week 3
May 2009, Week 2
May 2009, Week 1
April 2009, Week 5
April 2009, Week 4
April 2009, Week 3
April 2009, Week 2
April 2009, Week 1
March 2009, Week 5
March 2009, Week 4
March 2009, Week 3
March 2009, Week 2
March 2009, Week 1
February 2009, Week 4
February 2009, Week 3
February 2009, Week 2
February 2009, Week 1
January 2009, Week 5
January 2009, Week 4
January 2009, Week 3
January 2009, Week 2
January 2009, Week 1
December 2008, Week 5
December 2008, Week 4
December 2008, Week 3
December 2008, Week 2
December 2008, Week 1
November 2008, Week 5
November 2008, Week 4
November 2008, Week 3
November 2008, Week 2
November 2008, Week 1
October 2008, Week 5
October 2008, Week 4
October 2008, Week 3
October 2008, Week 2
October 2008, Week 1
September 2008, Week 5
September 2008, Week 4
September 2008, Week 3
September 2008, Week 2
September 2008, Week 1
August 2008, Week 5
August 2008, Week 4
August 2008, Week 3
August 2008, Week 2
August 2008, Week 1
July 2008, Week 5
July 2008, Week 4
July 2008, Week 3
July 2008, Week 2
July 2008, Week 1
June 2008, Week 5
June 2008, Week 4
June 2008, Week 3
June 2008, Week 2
June 2008, Week 1
May 2008, Week 5
May 2008, Week 4
May 2008, Week 3
May 2008, Week 2
May 2008, Week 1
April 2008, Week 5
April 2008, Week 4
April 2008, Week 3
April 2008, Week 2
April 2008, Week 1
March 2008, Week 5
March 2008, Week 4
March 2008, Week 3
March 2008, Week 2
March 2008, Week 1
February 2008, Week 5
February 2008, Week 4
February 2008, Week 3
February 2008, Week 2
February 2008, Week 1
January 2008, Week 5
January 2008, Week 4
January 2008, Week 3
January 2008, Week 2
January 2008, Week 1
December 2007, Week 5
December 2007, Week 4
December 2007, Week 3
December 2007, Week 2
December 2007, Week 1
November 2007, Week 5
November 2007, Week 4
November 2007, Week 3
November 2007, Week 2
November 2007, Week 1
October 2007, Week 5
October 2007, Week 4
October 2007, Week 3
October 2007, Week 2
October 2007, Week 1
September 2007, Week 5
September 2007, Week 4
September 2007, Week 3
September 2007, Week 2
September 2007, Week 1
August 2007, Week 5
August 2007, Week 4
August 2007, Week 3
August 2007, Week 2
August 2007, Week 1
July 2007, Week 5
July 2007, Week 4
July 2007, Week 3
July 2007, Week 2
July 2007, Week 1
June 2007, Week 5
June 2007, Week 4
June 2007, Week 3
June 2007, Week 2
June 2007, Week 1
May 2007, Week 5
May 2007, Week 4
May 2007, Week 3
May 2007, Week 2
May 2007, Week 1
April 2007, Week 5
April 2007, Week 4
April 2007, Week 3
April 2007, Week 2
April 2007, Week 1
March 2007, Week 5
March 2007, Week 4
March 2007, Week 3
March 2007, Week 2
March 2007, Week 1
February 2007, Week 4
February 2007, Week 3
February 2007, Week 2
February 2007, Week 1
January 2007, Week 5
January 2007, Week 4
January 2007, Week 3
January 2007, Week 2
January 2007, Week 1
December 2006, Week 5
December 2006, Week 4
December 2006, Week 3
December 2006, Week 2
December 2006, Week 1
November 2006, Week 5
November 2006, Week 4
November 2006, Week 3
November 2006, Week 2
November 2006, Week 1
October 2006, Week 5
October 2006, Week 4
October 2006, Week 3
October 2006, Week 2
October 2006, Week 1
September 2006, Week 5
September 2006, Week 4
September 2006, Week 3
September 2006, Week 2
September 2006, Week 1
August 2006, Week 5
August 2006, Week 4
August 2006, Week 3
August 2006, Week 2
August 2006, Week 1
July 2006, Week 5
July 2006, Week 4
July 2006, Week 3
July 2006, Week 2
July 2006, Week 1
June 2006, Week 5
June 2006, Week 4
June 2006, Week 3
June 2006, Week 2
June 2006, Week 1
May 2006, Week 5
May 2006, Week 4
May 2006, Week 3
May 2006, Week 2
May 2006, Week 1
April 2006, Week 5
April 2006, Week 4
April 2006, Week 3
April 2006, Week 2
April 2006, Week 1
March 2006, Week 5
March 2006, Week 4
March 2006, Week 3
March 2006, Week 2
March 2006, Week 1
February 2006, Week 4
February 2006, Week 3
February 2006, Week 2
February 2006, Week 1
January 2006, Week 5
January 2006, Week 4
January 2006, Week 3
January 2006, Week 2
January 2006, Week 1
December 2005, Week 5
December 2005, Week 4
December 2005, Week 3
December 2005, Week 2
December 2005, Week 1
November 2005, Week 5
November 2005, Week 4
November 2005, Week 3
November 2005, Week 2
November 2005, Week 1
October 2005, Week 5
October 2005, Week 4
October 2005, Week 3
October 2005, Week 2
October 2005, Week 1
September 2005, Week 5
September 2005, Week 4
September 2005, Week 3
September 2005, Week 2
September 2005, Week 1
August 2005, Week 5
August 2005, Week 4
August 2005, Week 3
August 2005, Week 2
August 2005, Week 1
July 2005, Week 5
July 2005, Week 4
July 2005, Week 3
July 2005, Week 2
July 2005, Week 1
June 2005, Week 5
June 2005, Week 4
June 2005, Week 3
June 2005, Week 2
June 2005, Week 1
May 2005, Week 5
May 2005, Week 4
May 2005, Week 3
May 2005, Week 2
May 2005, Week 1
April 2005, Week 5
April 2005, Week 4
April 2005, Week 3
April 2005, Week 2
April 2005, Week 1
March 2005, Week 5
March 2005, Week 4
March 2005, Week 3
March 2005, Week 2
March 2005, Week 1
February 2005, Week 4
February 2005, Week 3
February 2005, Week 2
February 2005, Week 1
January 2005, Week 5
January 2005, Week 4
January 2005, Week 3
January 2005, Week 2
January 2005, Week 1
December 2004, Week 5
December 2004, Week 4
December 2004, Week 3
December 2004, Week 2
December 2004, Week 1
November 2004, Week 5
November 2004, Week 4
November 2004, Week 3
November 2004, Week 2
November 2004, Week 1
October 2004, Week 5
October 2004, Week 4
October 2004, Week 3
October 2004, Week 2
October 2004, Week 1
September 2004, Week 5
September 2004, Week 4
September 2004, Week 3
September 2004, Week 2
September 2004, Week 1
August 2004, Week 5
August 2004, Week 4
August 2004, Week 3
August 2004, Week 2
August 2004, Week 1
July 2004, Week 5
July 2004, Week 4
July 2004, Week 3
July 2004, Week 2
July 2004, Week 1
June 2004, Week 5
June 2004, Week 4
June 2004, Week 3
June 2004, Week 2
June 2004, Week 1
May 2004, Week 5
May 2004, Week 4
May 2004, Week 3
May 2004, Week 2
May 2004, Week 1
April 2004, Week 5
April 2004, Week 4
April 2004, Week 3
April 2004, Week 2
April 2004, Week 1
March 2004, Week 5
March 2004, Week 4
March 2004, Week 3
March 2004, Week 2
March 2004, Week 1
February 2004, Week 5
February 2004, Week 4
February 2004, Week 3
February 2004, Week 2
February 2004, Week 1
January 2004, Week 5
January 2004, Week 4
January 2004, Week 3
January 2004, Week 2
January 2004, Week 1
December 2003, Week 5
December 2003, Week 4
December 2003, Week 3
December 2003, Week 2
December 2003, Week 1
November 2003, Week 5
November 2003, Week 4
November 2003, Week 3
November 2003, Week 2
November 2003, Week 1
October 2003, Week 5
October 2003, Week 4
October 2003, Week 3
October 2003, Week 2
October 2003, Week 1
September 2003, Week 5
September 2003, Week 4
September 2003, Week 3
September 2003, Week 2
September 2003, Week 1
August 2003, Week 5
August 2003, Week 4
August 2003, Week 3
August 2003, Week 2
August 2003, Week 1
July 2003, Week 5
July 2003, Week 4
July 2003, Week 3
July 2003, Week 2
July 2003, Week 1
June 2003, Week 5
June 2003, Week 4
June 2003, Week 3
June 2003, Week 2
June 2003, Week 1
May 2003, Week 5
May 2003, Week 4
May 2003, Week 3
May 2003, Week 2
May 2003, Week 1
April 2003, Week 5
April 2003, Week 4
April 2003, Week 3
April 2003, Week 2
April 2003, Week 1
March 2003, Week 5
March 2003, Week 4
March 2003, Week 3
March 2003, Week 2
March 2003, Week 1
February 2003, Week 4
February 2003, Week 3
February 2003, Week 2
February 2003, Week 1
January 2003, Week 5
January 2003, Week 4
January 2003, Week 3
January 2003, Week 2
January 2003, Week 1
December 2002, Week 5
December 2002, Week 4
December 2002, Week 3
December 2002, Week 2
December 2002, Week 1
November 2002, Week 5
November 2002, Week 4
November 2002, Week 3
November 2002, Week 2
November 2002, Week 1
October 2002, Week 5
October 2002, Week 4
October 2002, Week 3
October 2002, Week 2
October 2002, Week 1
September 2002, Week 5
September 2002, Week 4
September 2002, Week 3
September 2002, Week 2
September 2002, Week 1
August 2002, Week 5
August 2002, Week 4
August 2002, Week 3
August 2002, Week 2
August 2002, Week 1
July 2002, Week 5
July 2002, Week 4
July 2002, Week 3
July 2002, Week 2
July 2002, Week 1
June 2002, Week 5
June 2002, Week 4
June 2002, Week 3
June 2002, Week 2
June 2002, Week 1
May 2002, Week 5
May 2002, Week 4
May 2002, Week 3
May 2002, Week 2
May 2002, Week 1
April 2002, Week 5
April 2002, Week 4
April 2002, Week 3
April 2002, Week 2
April 2002, Week 1
March 2002, Week 5
March 2002, Week 4
March 2002, Week 3
March 2002, Week 2
March 2002, Week 1
February 2002, Week 4
February 2002, Week 3
February 2002, Week 2
February 2002, Week 1
January 2002, Week 5
January 2002, Week 4
January 2002, Week 3
January 2002, Week 2
January 2002, Week 1
December 2001, Week 5
December 2001, Week 4
December 2001, Week 3
December 2001, Week 2
December 2001, Week 1
November 2001, Week 5
November 2001, Week 4
November 2001, Week 3
November 2001, Week 2
November 2001, Week 1
October 2001, Week 5
October 2001, Week 4
October 2001, Week 3
October 2001, Week 2
October 2001, Week 1
September 2001, Week 5
September 2001, Week 4
September 2001, Week 3
September 2001, Week 2
September 2001, Week 1
August 2001, Week 5
August 2001, Week 4
August 2001, Week 3
August 2001, Week 2
August 2001, Week 1
July 2001, Week 5
July 2001, Week 4
July 2001, Week 3
July 2001, Week 2
July 2001, Week 1
June 2001, Week 5
June 2001, Week 4
June 2001, Week 3
June 2001, Week 2
June 2001, Week 1
May 2001, Week 5
May 2001, Week 4
May 2001, Week 3
May 2001, Week 2
May 2001, Week 1
April 2001, Week 5
April 2001, Week 4
April 2001, Week 3
April 2001, Week 2
April 2001, Week 1
March 2001, Week 5
March 2001, Week 4
March 2001, Week 3
March 2001, Week 2
March 2001, Week 1
February 2001, Week 4
February 2001, Week 3
February 2001, Week 2
February 2001, Week 1
January 2001, Week 5
January 2001, Week 4
January 2001, Week 3
January 2001, Week 2
January 2001, Week 1
December 2000, Week 5
December 2000, Week 4
December 2000, Week 3
December 2000, Week 2
December 2000, Week 1
November 2000, Week 5
November 2000, Week 4
November 2000, Week 3
November 2000, Week 2
November 2000, Week 1
October 2000, Week 5
October 2000, Week 4
October 2000, Week 3
October 2000, Week 2
October 2000, Week 1
September 2000, Week 5
September 2000, Week 4
September 2000, Week 3
September 2000, Week 2
September 2000, Week 1
August 2000, Week 5
August 2000, Week 4
August 2000, Week 3
August 2000, Week 2
August 2000, Week 1
July 2000, Week 5
July 2000, Week 4
July 2000, Week 3
July 2000, Week 2
July 2000, Week 1
June 2000, Week 5
June 2000, Week 4
June 2000, Week 3
June 2000, Week 2
June 2000, Week 1
May 2000, Week 5
May 2000, Week 4
May 2000, Week 3
May 2000, Week 2
May 2000, Week 1
April 2000, Week 5
April 2000, Week 4
April 2000, Week 3
April 2000, Week 2
April 2000, Week 1
March 2000, Week 5
March 2000, Week 4
March 2000, Week 3
March 2000, Week 2
March 2000, Week 1
February 2000, Week 5
February 2000, Week 4
February 2000, Week 3
February 2000, Week 2
February 2000, Week 1
January 2000, Week 5
January 2000, Week 4
January 2000, Week 3
January 2000, Week 2
January 2000, Week 1
December 1999, Week 5
December 1999, Week 4
December 1999, Week 3
December 1999, Week 2
December 1999, Week 1
November 1999, Week 5
November 1999, Week 4
November 1999, Week 3
November 1999, Week 2
November 1999, Week 1
October 1999, Week 5
October 1999, Week 4
October 1999, Week 3
October 1999, Week 2
October 1999, Week 1
September 1999, Week 5
September 1999, Week 4
September 1999, Week 3
September 1999, Week 2
September 1999, Week 1
August 1999, Week 5
August 1999, Week 4
August 1999, Week 3
August 1999, Week 2
August 1999, Week 1
July 1999, Week 5
July 1999, Week 4
July 1999, Week 3
July 1999, Week 2
July 1999, Week 1
June 1999, Week 5
June 1999, Week 4
June 1999, Week 3
June 1999, Week 2
June 1999, Week 1
May 1999, Week 5
May 1999, Week 4
May 1999, Week 3
May 1999, Week 2
May 1999, Week 1
April 1999, Week 5
April 1999, Week 4
April 1999, Week 3
April 1999, Week 2
April 1999, Week 1
March 1999, Week 5
March 1999, Week 4
March 1999, Week 3
March 1999, Week 2
March 1999, Week 1
February 1999, Week 5
February 1999, Week 4
February 1999, Week 3
February 1999, Week 2
February 1999, Week 1
January 1999, Week 5
January 1999, Week 4
January 1999, Week 3
January 1999, Week 2
January 1999, Week 1
December 1998, Week 5
December 1998, Week 4
December 1998, Week 3
December 1998, Week 2
December 1998, Week 1
November 1998, Week 5
November 1998, Week 4
November 1998, Week 3
November 1998, Week 2
November 1998, Week 1
October 1998, Week 5
October 1998, Week 4
October 1998, Week 3
October 1998, Week 2
October 1998, Week 1
September 1998, Week 5
September 1998, Week 4
September 1998, Week 3

ATOM RSS1 RSS2



LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU

CataList Email List Search Powered by the LISTSERV Email List Manager