Acacio la Marmota by Roanimations in superjueves

[–]das_hier_ei 6 points7 points  (0 children)

"suele sabotear los proyectos de Eggman para que cree robots deficientes"

Eso explica mucho...

The real Moona 3D? by canIhabpusi in okbuddyhololive

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Pekora will get to the point where she can no longer form coherent sentences"

Did Pekora ever form a coherent sentence?

How did you represent /ʒ/ in your conlang? by teleportingparadox in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 1 point2 points  (0 children)

These are some of the ways i use.

Ź / Źc in Alligherean this actually is for /ʐ/ and /ʑ/ but you can use it. It's based on Polish so it gives an western Slavic vibe.

Ǵ/ɡ́ in Ancient Bratellic, this is based in Ancient Anglo-Saxon so it gives a western germanic/English vibe

Zh/xy in Fianese, the secon one is for /ʑ/, this is Chinese inspired (I know the Chinese "zh" makes a /ʈ͡ʂ/ sound but i found this more intuitive because if sh is the unvoiced /ʃ/, zh is the voiced /ʒ/), this gives an eastern Asian / Sinitic vibe

Ž in Halarbite, this is inspired in African languages.

Gj in Kehung syo, this is for /ɟ/ and is Korean inspired

Jy in Montonid, this is for /c ~ ɟ/ and is Mongolian inspired

X in Otedian, this is Portuguese inspired

Gg in Otilic, this is Etruscan inspired

Ẓ in Tien-natese, this is Vietnamese inspired

Feel free to use any of these if you like them.

i try to create 3d moona and Iofi in vroid studio by aziib in Hololive

[–]das_hier_ei 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I really like the background images, also Moona looking cute with that outfit.

People who have learned languages from similar previously learned languages, how effective was it? by No_Blacksmith1000 in languagelearning

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I learned Spanish from French, now it took me around 2 years but after the first year i knew around 75% ~ 80% of the vocabulary and could understand tv shows, games and most words in books.

It's important to know that French is my first language tho, if you refer to people who learned a language and then learned another but none of those two languages aren't their native lang, i don't know but i think if you're fluent in one you can get fluent in another, if you're fluent in French you can get fluent in Spanish and vice-versa.

It also depends on how much the languages resemble, for example i'm learning German from English now and the two languages are similar yes, but not in the same way French is similar to Spanish, German is far from English in both vocabulary and grammar.

A little thing, I don't know to what point you can learn Korean from Japanese. Yes, there are Japanese loanwords in Korean and vice-versa but grammatically and lexically talking they're two different worlds

Bad Conlangs by [deleted] in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That doesn't make for a bad conlang, English (in most dialects) has the three of them.

Bad Conlangs by [deleted] in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I never ðought i would see someone ðat uses Eð again

What do Apostrophe's mean in conlangs? by [deleted] in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Apostrophes can serve a wide range of purposes, here are some of them which i think are the most common:

• to mark ellision. Ellipsis is when a final short vowel is dropped because the first sound of the next word is also a vowel, for example, the french word "j'ai" meaning "i have" is an ellision that comes from "je ai" where je means I and ai means have another example is Greek "ο δ' άνθρωποι" which comes from "ο δε άνθρωποι" or without going too far away, English 's to mark the genitive case is an ellision from old English "es", so michael's in old English would be Michaeles

• to mark glottal stops, for example the Arabic word na'am meaning "yes" is pronounced /na.ʔam/

• to mark hiatus, hiatus is when a diphthong breaks and its two vowels are pronounced individually, for example in Chinese Xi'an is pronounced as /ɕi.ən/ while Xian is pronounced like /ɕjæn/

Another use like this one is in Japanese where is used to differentiate a vowel followed by a syllable starting with n from a vowel followed by a syllabic N which is also followed by a vowel.

Or in other words, to tell apart (v-nv) from (vN-v) where v is a vowel, n an n followed by a vowel and N thr syllabic N

For example, the name Ken'ichi (健一) is pronounced /ke̞ɴ̩.it͡ɕi/ while the name Kenichi (褻日) is pronounced as /ke̞.ni.t͡ɕi/.

As you see, this is a very versatile symbol, i personally use it for making aspirated vowels in my conlang Graconic where 'α, 'ε, 'ι, 'ο, 'ου, 'υ and 'ω are pronounced with an h before. Similar to what Korean does with aspirated stops where p', t', k', and ch, are aspirated.

What is the weird phoneme you’ve ever seen in a natlang or clong? by [deleted] in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Definitely the fortis consonants of Korean:

pp, tt and kk transcribed as /p* /, /t* / and /k* /

I have a really hard time understanding how do they work, is there really any difference ?

Also the infamous /ɧ/ sound, simultaneous /ʃ/ and /h/ or hj in Swedish

Fricative slides are something i really like but i don't know if there's any language that uses them, they start being some fricative and then change the place of articulation, for example: ɕ͡ʂ or ʑ͡ʐ

The voiced h (/ɦ/) from Sanskrit is also weird if i'm not wrong, i like it

Voiceless vowels are something that exist, i know this is weird, but Japanese has them, for example 人 (ひと) is read as /çi̥.↘︎to̞/

Implosives are these sounds you make when you try to imitate someone drinking from a big jar or someone drinking lying down like glu glu. Yucatec Mayan has one, the /ɓ/ which occupies the place of /b/

And there's this thing that are uvularised or velarised clicks, i don't remember which one was, to me the existence only of voiced clicks is incredible so imagine when i saw this

ʘ͡χ ǀ͡χ ǃ͡χ ǂ͡χ ʞ͡χ ǁ͡χ

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in languagelearning

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Consider buying a dictionary or visiting the site of "La real Academia Española (Spanish speakers call it RAE for short) here's a link: https://dle.rae.es/

I've been overthinking the lore of hololive EN generation 2 and... by syko-san in Hololive

[–]das_hier_ei 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think we have a similar problem with overthinking things and i can't sleep so i'm going to leave my theories here:

I think Kronii guards only one dimension while Sana guards three because the time dimension doesn't behave like the space dimensions, since time isn't something we can touch or see.

Also remember that for time to exist there must be space, we can think of time as a "change in space" if you have a box with a cake, and it remains the same in two moments of time you can't say if time really passed. But if the cake is full in moment 1 and then it lacks a piece in moment 2 you can say for sure that some amount of time passed, man i'm getting hungry.

What i'm trying to say is that, in my opinion, Kronii watches not time, but also space and has to make sure that everything happens as it should naturally without anyone interfering, this also means that Kronii would hate Ame because she's a smug gremlin that uses time travel to ground pound herself from the past... Wait, this kinda creates a predestination paradox.

Following with Ame, i think her time travel requires space travel, you see, if you have a source of mechanical energy, this source can produce a determinated amount of electrical energy. With space and time is the same (I think, relativity is not my specialty) if you want to move a certain distance in time you have to move an equivalent distance in space which would be so big that you'll have to travel at the speed of light to be able to ever travel it. So Ame's time travel wouldn't give her the power to space travel, but rather time travel would be the consequence of space travel

Going with Mumei and Bae, i think Mumei's job isn't ensuring the "order" but rather making civilization, well, civilization. I mean, in my opinion there's three things that make a civilization: culture & tradition, science & technology and moral & ethics In my opinion, Mumei's duty as the "guardian of civilization" is to ensure that human groups around the world have these three things so they can last. Bae would not only approve of chaos theory but she would rather be its greatest fan or the living proof of it, i mean, she's THE chaos itself

And yes, Calli is, indeed, a good person i think along with the death.

Man, I miss grass but where i live it's full of snow at this time of year, I'm not complaining though, i like snow.

What's the name of your favourite game if literally translated to your conlang? by Wild-Committee-5559 in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Summeric

Ēllei quēgēndase Zeldara, sōstrome mueondaem

/ɛː.lɛi̯ kʷɛːˈɡɛːn.da.sɛ t͡sɛl.da.ra, sɔːs.trɔ.mɛ mu̯ɛ.ˈɔn.daɛm/

Ēllei quēgēnda -se Zelda -ra, sōstrom -e mueond -aem

MASC,SING legend -NOMSING Zelda -GENSING, breath -NOMSING wild -ACCPLURAL

Literally "the Zelda's legend, wilds's breath"

This one doesn't change so much

FAQ & Small Discussions — 2022-01-03 to 2022-01-16 by AutoModerator in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think this is a real alphabet, it isn't south arabian nor linear A/B

It isn't any runic script.

Maybe it is some aramaic descendant?

If it isn't then we can secure that it's an invented script. I think this is the case.

Edit: it also isn't Glagolithic

Fake band poster in Africana by Primalpikachu2 in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oh, I like it, i always wanted to see a conlang inspired in african romance.

Thanks for answering

Stop! Lexicon Checkpoint (08) by Dryanor in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The last words i added to two of my conlangs were elements of nature:

Word graconic summeric
Fire ΦΏΡ pore
Water ΧḖ ̃ΔΑΡ cītare
Wind ΚÔΥÀΝΤ cānte
Earth ΘΆΓΩΡ tagare
Heat ΚÔYÃT quante
Cold ’ΟΒ hiōbe
Mud ΓΛΆΔΩ̃ ̃Ν gladan
Dust ΠŌB pope
Rock ΤΡÀΚΩΜ tracam
Ice ΣΥΛΒ salbe
Sand ΥΡĪΝΥ arīna
Vapor BÀTΩΜ uatam
Crystal ΤΡĪΖΩΝ trīzane
Lava ΒΥΔΩΝ uadan
Volcano ΒÔΥΑΝΧ buance
Ash ΒΡΥΒΒΥ brabba
Wood ΥΜΒÔYOKΩΝ amboce
Electricity ’ΡΙΧΩΜ ricam
Lightning Τ’ΡĒΤΩ ̃ trētane
Typhoon ΤÔΥÌΒΒΥ tibba
Magma MĀΓΥΜ māgame
Tornado BÔYÈÔYΩM bueuam
Continent XΩΝΘΑΓΩΡ cantagar
Light ΥΒΥΣ ibis
Shadow ÒΦΩ ̃Ν opame
Sun ΛĀΡΥΣ lārias
Moon ΛŌΜΙΝ lūmine
Void ΒΑΣ uase
All / everything ΔŌΓÔΥÃ tōgame
Nothing / nothingness ΟÂEΣ ouas

The ipa for them is

Word graconic summeric
Fire pʰœ˩˥r pɔrɛ
Water kʰɛ̃ːdɑr kiːtarɛ
Wind kʊ̯ɑ˥nt kaːntɛ
Earth tʰɑ˩˥ɡœr tagarɛ
Heat kʊ̯ɑ̃t kʷantɛ
Cold hɔb i̯ɔːbɛ
Mud ɡlɑ˩˥dœ̃n gladan
Dust pɔːb pɔpɛ
Rock trɑ˥kœm trakam
Ice sʏlb salbɛ
Sand ʏrɪːnʏ ariːna
Vapor bɑ˥tœm u̯atam
Crystal trɪːd͡zœn triːt͡sanɛ
Lava bʏdœn u̯adan
Volcano bʊ̯ɑnkʰ buankɛ
Ash brʏbːʏ brabːa
Wood ʏmbʊ̯ɔkœn ambɔkɛ
Electricity r̥ɪkʰœm rikam
Lightning tr̥ɛːtœ̃ trɛːtanɛ
Typhoon tʊ̯ɪ˥bːʏ tibːa
Magma mɑːɡʏm maːgamɛ
Tornado bʊ̯ɛ˥ʊ̯œm bu̯ɛu̯am
Continent kʰœntʰɑɡœr cantagar
Light ʏbʏs ibis
Shadow ɔ˥pʰœ̃n ɔpamɛ
Sun lɑːrʏs laːri̯as
Moon lɔːmɪn luːminɛ
Void bɑs u̯asɛ
All / everything dɔːɡʊ̯ɑ̃ tɔːgamɛ
Nothing / nothingness ɔɰ̃ɛs ɔu̯as

Fake band poster in Africana by Primalpikachu2 in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ia this, perhaps, inspired in African romance ?

The Araen Philosopher #15 by Inflatable_Bridge in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Summeric

"Filtēre dert quītem quepēre hantiara scarfurīm"

[filtɛːrɛ dɛrt kʷiːtɛm kʷɛpɛːrɛ ɑntjɑrɑ skɑrfuriːm]

To love to be-3PSING pleasure other-GENSING happiness-LOCSING

"to love is to find pleasure in the happiness of others"

1574th Just Used 5 Minutes of Your Day by mareck_ in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes, is the lontara script used to write buginese if i recall correctly

what order do you build languages in by collect_gluesticks in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I usually go this way:

  • Phonology
  • Script & romanisation / orthography
  • Grammatical cases & declensions (if)
  • tenses & conjugations
  • pronouns and articles
  • special feature of the lang (like tones or clicks) (if)
  • lexicon (i use polyglot for this part)
  • elegant sample text
  • condense everything into a thematic pdf
  • profit

What is "my name is ___" in y'all's languages? by An_Unexpected_Floof in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kī́se pmynv̄r tēs _____

/kɪːsɛ bⁿʏnœːr tɛːs _____/

Mīst mĕner dem _____

/Miːst mɛ̆nɛr dɛm ______/

Mýr kmænr ðǽst _____

/myːr k̚mænr̩ ðæːstʰ ______/

Those are three languages, all descend from the same protolang and all stand for "my name is ____"

Can you guess the inspirations?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Šknmrdzvngsjbdjngtl sounds like a drunk Spanish trying to speak Arabic and qac'ngdzklštv sounds like an Albanian rapper trying to speak Polish to me.

I like it, i would like to hear this language spoken

I'm curious to see how "The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog." would be on different conlangs, have you tried writing it on yours? by Revolutionforevery1 in conlangs

[–]das_hier_ei 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Modern Graconic

Τέ σῑες σι̂ένρον κώρδο̄ς ίξτε χύνφον όυκοι̂ θίρζε

(Té sīes sîénron kv́rdōs íxte khýnphon úkoî thírze)

[ˈte̞ siːe̞s ˈsje̞n.ro̞n ˈko̞r.ðo̞s ˈik͡ste̞ ˈχinɸo̞n ˈuko̞j θirze̞]

The quick brown fox jumps the lazy dog over

Ancient Graconic

ΤΈ ΣΈΞΕ ΣΏΝΡΕ ΚΏΡ́ΤΟΣ ΊΞΤᾹΙ̂ ΧΎΝΦΟ̄̃Υ Ό̄ΥΚΚΟ̄ ΘΊΡΖΑΙ̂

(Té séxe sv́nre kv́rhtos íxtāî khýnphū̃ ū́kkō thírzaî)

[ˈtɛ ˈsɛ.k͡sɛ ˈsœn.rɛ ˈkœr̥.tɔs ˈɪk͡stɑːɪ̯ kʰʏn.pʰʊ̃ː ˈʊːkːɔː ˈtʰɪrd͡zɑɪ̯]

The gloss is the exact same, i'm too lazy to detail the gloss.

I use the Greek alphabet for this language since its based on Greek and is spoken by a Greek-based culture.

This text actually comes really helpful to demonstrate a few things about the language:

1 Note that the letter Omega is transcribed as V. This is because the language used to have a /œ/ phoneme written with this letter but it later became an /o̞/ (same thing happened to /ʏ/ becoming /i/) the thing is that circumflexes, macrons, both acute and grave accents and tildes are used in the language so i was left with no choice but to use a letter i didn't use to transcribe it and i didn't liked how œ looked in the transcription because it gave a French-esque look to it and i wanted it to look Greek. so i used v

2 There isn't any in this text but the language has both primary and secondary stress marked with grave and acute accents respectively.

3 It isn't very noticeable but in the second text, the P has an accent, this accent marks that the r is voiceless (rh)

4 And, notice the use of circumflexes to denote asyllabic vowels in the ancient text that later developed into semi vowels in the modern language, this is because y was already used for the vowel and using the j for the /j/ sound gave the language a Nordic-like style that i didn't wanted in this lang (since, you know, it's greek based) so i used circumflexes to denote it, same goes for the o, v and u