(no subject)
2007-Apr-24, Tuesday 17:15* Last Thursday I went to the doctor's for a checkup and yesterday had the blood tests done.
* Today, I renewed my bus pass, the old one expiring at the end of the month. I had to go to Social Security first to get a letter stating what my income was; this involved taking two buses before even going downtown. Afterwards, I remembered that I hadn't paid my water and sewer bill for a couple months, so I went to the post office and got that done too.
* Tomorrow I see the psychiatrist.
* I haven't done much with my languages, except for some work on MNCL4 (another revision of a language I started several years ago).
Except for some particles, MNCL words are composed of an initial root, zero or more medial suffixes, and a final suffix. For MNCL4 the roots are C(L) or C(L)V(X)C(L), where X is either a vowel or a consonant and L is either /l/ or /r/. The medial suffixes are mostly V(X)C(L), and the final suffixes are V(X). The final suffix indicates the syntactical part of speech. It also indicates the mood for verbs and the case for nouns. The word order is free but tends to be head-last.
* Today, I renewed my bus pass, the old one expiring at the end of the month. I had to go to Social Security first to get a letter stating what my income was; this involved taking two buses before even going downtown. Afterwards, I remembered that I hadn't paid my water and sewer bill for a couple months, so I went to the post office and got that done too.
* Tomorrow I see the psychiatrist.
* I haven't done much with my languages, except for some work on MNCL4 (another revision of a language I started several years ago).
Except for some particles, MNCL words are composed of an initial root, zero or more medial suffixes, and a final suffix. For MNCL4 the roots are C(L) or C(L)V(X)C(L), where X is either a vowel or a consonant and L is either /l/ or /r/. The medial suffixes are mostly V(X)C(L), and the final suffixes are V(X). The final suffix indicates the syntactical part of speech. It also indicates the mood for verbs and the case for nouns. The word order is free but tends to be head-last.