[Doctor Who] audio dramas
The BBC can't possibly be making a profit off any of these, can they? Why aren't they in the Public Domain, or on a collection disc?
[Doctor Who] audio dramas
I still need to track down copies of the old BBC radio dramas:
* Doctor Who and the Pescatons
* Exploration Earth
* Slipback
* The Paradise of Death
* The Ghosts of N-Space
I'm particularly interested to listen to the Pescatons, because the story was "unusual for its depiction of a genocide devised and led by Sarah and the Doctor, without either character displaying even a tinge of remorse."
Classic Doctor Who | Season 10 | Frontier in Space
The Draconians are really cool aliens – they have a lot of political flexibility, unlike a lot of other non-human-shaped aliens.
My only frustration is that I was starting to headcannon them as a single gendered species, until suddenly one of them was pointlessly sexist.
DurgyDoodleCember 26
@fluffdragom Here's Addi as she might appear on a card. It's half of a card anyway.
I also tried copying the halve to make a full one, but I didn't plan anything so things don't line up neatly.
Classic Doctor Who | Season 10 (death mention)
Yesterday, I watched Carnival of Monsters – it's fun, but it feels like it should do something more with the political plotline.
Today I'm going to watch Frontier in Space, which is the last story to feature Roger Delgado as the Master before his unfortunate death in an accident. He was intended to show up one last time in the next season, but this never came to be.
the average number of segments in a language
it's important to note: this is only according to what's in phoible's database, it's not a definitive answer (especially since defining segments is.... harder than it seems)
the average number of segments in a language
I downloaded the phoible database of language inventory sizes, and wrote some code to calculate the average number of segments in a language:
35.2125
request for help
Actually, I'm more interested in the average number of *phonemes* in a language, which should be much easier to know
request for help
I'm trying to find somewhere that will tell me the average number of segments in a language, but I can't seem to find anything.
Does anyone know of a database or resource that has an answer to this? I don't need it to be an accurate answer, but I do need it to be justified
so ['fɔɪ.bɫ] (phoible) has a list of phonetic segments (sounds) used in all the world's languages. There's approximately 2,160 segments.
1,800 of them are in less than 1% of the world's languages.
Only 19 of them are in more than 50% of languages.
DurgyDoodleCember 25
@fluffdragom Addi sails the seas, on her way to be affectionate with her girlfriends.
Addison the cuddle pirate~
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