<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Arial Unicode MS'; font-size: medium; "><div><font class="Apple-style-span" face="monospace"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="white-space: pre;">2009/7/9 Jim Henry <jimhenry1973 at <a href="http://gmail.com">gmail.com</a>></span></font></div>
<pre>>2009/6/12 Paul Roser <<a href="http://lists.conlang.org/listinfo.cgi/conlang_learners-conlang.org">pkroser57 at gmail.com</a>>:
>
>><i> Does anyone know what the status of Matt Pearson's Tokana is? There is an
</i>>
> If you manage to get a hold of the full PDF grammar (and lexicon?),
> could you post a review of it here? I've been looking at the small
> amount of the grammar that's online, and it's nowhere near complete
> enough for us to use for this project; but I remember being impressed
> with it when I looked at it some years ago, when more of the grammar
> was online.</pre><pre>I've written Matt to see if there's a more up-to-date version as well as a lexicon, and also to see if he'd be available to answer questions we might have.</pre><pre>There are at least two fairly complete grammars on line at </pre>
<pre><<a href="http://mpearson.narod.ru/tok.toc.html">http://mpearson.narod.ru/tok.toc.html</a>></pre><pre>and at</pre><pre><<a href="http://cs-people.bu.edu/dgd/tokana/tok.toc.html">http://cs-people.bu.edu/dgd/tokana/tok.toc.html</a>></pre>
<pre>which appear to be mirrors of the same grammar, and look fairly complete. If you're looking at the grammar he had up at the UCLA site, I think that he never finished that version.</pre><pre>Once I hear from Matt and get an updated grammar/lexicon I'll write up a quick summary and report back to the list.</pre>
<pre><br></pre><pre>Paul</pre></span>