Fri 27 Jan 2006
With a hectic week winding down, I finally get to get back to my conlanging.
If you have no interest whatsoever in conlanging, you don’t need to read beyond the cut. here’s a joke, so your trip wasn’t wasted:
Why won’t sharks attack lawyers? Professional courtesy.
What? Like I’m a comedian?
Right, conlanging.
The good kit tells me it’s time for noun phrases. Word order at last.
I’ve already given this some thought, since I knew this step would come up eventually. I want to be a bit stricter than English is. I’m partial to head-first, I just like that set up. So, all modifiers will follow the head word, consistently. Take for instance the noun “Oþa”, ‘father’. Let’s say I want to say ‘my old father’. That would go something like this:
te oþa nit oÄ¥ þam, literally ‘the father old of me’.
To make it more complex, I’ll try another word, “trâĥ”, ‘person’. Let’s say I want to say ‘the two very happy old persons’, to steal from Mark’s example. It would be:
te trâĥd ÅŸaÄ¥ fetni ÅŸam nit, or ‘the persons two happy high old’. Notice that I use ‘high’ in the place ‘very’, since there isn’t a word for ‘very’. Degrees of the adjective are made by comparisons to height.
Moving on to the full sentence and it’s components. The S, V and O, you know. A file I have tells me that head-first languages tend to be VSO or SVO. Personally, I’m a bit weak for SOV, but VSO sounds fun as well, so I think I’ll go with that. Complications? Not at this point.
A drum roll please, what follows is the first complete sentence in proto-Froido-Egan:
ben þam şan te îloki kani kelg,
meaning, ‘I live in the largest house’.
Ta-daa.
January 28th, 2006 at 17:08
Of *course* you’re a comedian. You told a joke, ergo you are a comedian.
I have to say, though, you seem to be a rather *bad* comedian. :\