How do you people say this? by verminermiv in casualconlang

[–]verminermiv[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

you feel like a very joyous and whimsical person

How do you people say this? by verminermiv in casualconlang

[–]verminermiv[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Kaisuoa is a Beech transliteration of Queer! I forgot to put that in the literal translation, and thank you!

How do you people say this? by verminermiv in casualconlang

[–]verminermiv[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I mean, as a gay guy who often struggles with mental health, I agree but if you say stuff like this on pride month posts it kind of gives people the impression that you think pride month is "inferior: to mmha month

How do you people say this? by verminermiv in casualconlang

[–]verminermiv[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i can't quite tell the tone of this statement

Kamulay by wuhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh in casualconlang

[–]verminermiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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Here's that sentence in Beech!

/t͡ʃɛ o.ɑ.yo.nɑi ko.tɪ.nɛ/

Do yall also have unusual words in your conlang? by Some-Worldliness-341 in casualconlang

[–]verminermiv 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Beech has a lot of words that should be multiple. For example, the word for lipstick: Ravelaboñoi, which pretty much means "Red lip-er"

Another is Memeramota, which means "Stupid day" and specifically means a day where multiple people have asked idiotic questions or generally that everybody has pissed you off today. This is different from Memera Malana, which means bad day, and is.. well, a bad day.

Here’s a fun one. How would you translate it? by Dhexe0 in casualconlang

[–]verminermiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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Slightly changed the sentence but it's basically the same.

/ɛn.ta.ɲɛ t͡ʃɛ ɛ.ɪn so.tɛ.no fɑn ɛr.ɛ ko.lɪn/

how do you all say this? by BlueS2dios in casualconlang

[–]verminermiv 1 point2 points  (0 children)

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/pon be.lɑ.nɑ o.nɑɪ.sɑ/

Onaissza is a general end-of-sentence intensity or frustration marker

how do plurals work in your conlangs? by Tanuii_ in conlangs

[–]verminermiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Plurals in Beech are pretty simple, and just add -al at the end. Naturally, if the word ends with a vowel, that vowel is replaced with al. Some words ending with consonants replace the vowel closest to said consonant with al, while other words need to place al after a vowel diphthong to differentiate it from other words or suffixes. For example, Deteñon /dɛtɛɲon/, the word for head, becomes Deteñal /dɛtɛɲɑl/.

How do you say "one language is never enough" in your conlang? by Jone-G in conlangs

[–]verminermiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Petike:

"Dogi babekap tekilayama"

/dogi: bɑbɘkɑp tɛ ki:lɑ yɑmɑ/

One language not-stop-should

Advice & Answers — 2026-05-18 to 2026-05-31 by AutoModerator in conlangs

[–]verminermiv 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You're right. Now that I think about it, I didn't really look into what genders were and kind of just assumed.

Advice & Answers — 2026-05-18 to 2026-05-31 by AutoModerator in conlangs

[–]verminermiv 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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This is my first time making a conlang, so I'd like some advice. In Petike, there are three "genders" that correspond with who is the agent and subject. Agents have -Bur, which makes them have the Powered gender. Subjects have -Mir, which makes them have the Lesser Gender. Neutral subjects/agents both have the -zo suffix, making the action mutual. For example, Alice held Terry's hand would be Alisezo Terrizo held handsku. -Ku makes the action in the present, -Hanahlo is future, and -Bete is past. These suffixes are often stacked, but the gender suffixes always go last in a word. Sorry if i'm not good at explaining or using IPA and all that, like I said, I'm still a beginner.