Types of Conlang

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  • čas přidán 12. 11. 2017
  • For those who need an end game before they start conlanging.
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    STUFF IN THE VIDEO I DIDN'T MAKE:
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    Thank you all so much for watching...Rao!
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @yoironfistbro8128
    @yoironfistbro8128 Před 6 lety +2013

    Does Artifexian pin comments

  • @desu38
    @desu38 Před 6 lety +1695

    Not gonna lie, I'm a little disappointed the burger didn't hinge open with a gaping maw full of sharp teeth while Bob reels in horror when it became "burgers ate Bob."

  • @Reluxthelegend
    @Reluxthelegend Před 6 lety +1193

    3:30 not drawing bob being eaten by burgers 2/10

  • @alexandermoltu4306
    @alexandermoltu4306 Před 5 lety +1043

    Speaking mandarin, I can with confidence say that you slaughtered that example sentence

    • @PhantomKING113
      @PhantomKING113 Před 4 lety +200

      He also completly broke my ears when pronouncing the Spanish word _comí_.
      The stress goes on "-mí", not on "co-" (like the difference between _a process_ and _to process_). He said ['kho.mi] instead of [ko.'mi] (if you don't understand this, search for IPA).
      So yeah, you are not the only one dissapointed here xd.

    • @stulebackery1363
      @stulebackery1363 Před 4 lety +117

      I'm learning Mandarin, and I barely know any, but that [ku] hurt.

    • @bledanevada4799
      @bledanevada4799 Před 3 lety +117

      alexander moltu i’m a Spaniard who takes Mandarin classes, i was shot at by multiple sides...

    • @relaxwhc
      @relaxwhc Před 3 lety +19

      The sound QU is confusing for non speakers, the U is more like german U umlaut

    • @Aeturnalis
      @Aeturnalis Před 3 lety +45

      I tried to learn Mandarin when I was in highschool, I can attest that it's quite challenging for an English speaker to master the pronunciation... in particular, Mandarin has sounds that don't exist in English, like ɤ, ɥ, and ɻ/ʐ , and the tones can be difficult to produce in any way that sounds natural. I used to criticize bad German on CZcams, but really, it isn't fair to expect someone who isn't actively learning the language to get the pronunciation perfect for a single sample sentence.

  • @cerberaodollam
    @cerberaodollam Před 6 lety +440

    Whenever someone mentions agglutinative languages I'm like "pick me! pick me!" XD (native Hungarian)

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +80

      Hehe

    • @Firnling
      @Firnling Před 6 lety +11

      Suomalainen Varis interestingly those are closely connected.

    • @danielholowaty2648
      @danielholowaty2648 Před 6 lety +10

      I was so angry when he didnt mention Hungarian. xD Majdnem földre vágtam a telefonomat.

    • @fienevandijk7224
      @fienevandijk7224 Před 5 lety +1

      Akkars gestenjeket dobli ră?

    • @133774c05
      @133774c05 Před 4 lety +5

      that was my first thought too, spanish speaker btw

  • @Fetch26291
    @Fetch26291 Před 6 lety +288

    From your channel, we know how to design a solar system, how to design a calendar, and how to design a language. But there is still a few bits missing. How do we design land masses on planet? How to we design the dominant species that lives on the planet? How do we design their cities, vehicles, and other things?

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +112

      Coming soon. Particularly the land mass part.

    • @OthEdden
      @OthEdden Před 6 lety +31

      Sounds like you want to put the artifacts in Artifexian.

    • @Frankdude72
      @Frankdude72 Před 6 lety +7

      Wow man, didn't think you could get cooler. But then you did. Thank you for all the hard work you put in.

    • @sofia.eris.bauhaus
      @sofia.eris.bauhaus Před 6 lety +3

      i'd really like to see a piece of fiction set in a civilisation of a decidedly non-human (but naturally evolved) species. perhaps inspired by arthropods or cephalopods. (reptiles would be too close, mushrooms too remotely related, i guess..)

    • @Frankdude72
      @Frankdude72 Před 6 lety +2

      That's essentially what I'm doing with my own sci-fi series. (Though my aliens may be too mammalian for your taste.) A good hard sci-fi galatic empire type series with some well done arthropod like aliens (the "Naxids") is Walter John Williams' Dread Empire Falls trilogy.

  • @GrothBrooks
    @GrothBrooks Před 6 lety +40

    One conlang that I am making (Though it's currently on hiatus) is polysynthetic-agglutinative (I think). It has rough, flowing sounds and a ridiculously small amount of base words. These are both for literary reasons. Namely, I want the language to sound rough and frightening, and for the structure to seem simple. The low base word count is pretty interesting because it makes me get creative with new words. For instance, there are no words for different colors. The word for 'color' is the same as 'see'/'look' and the word for any given color is a descriptive word followed by the word for 'color'. So 'red' is 'blood-color' -> 'blood-see'.
    An interesting example where my lack of base words really shows through is 'blue', which is 'not-down-see'. 'Sky' is the same word as 'up' but I don't have a word for 'up', so 'up' is actually 'not-down'. So, 'blue' -> 'sky-color' -> 'sky-see' -> 'up-see' -> 'not-down-see'.

    • @40watt53
      @40watt53 Před 7 měsíci +1

      God 5 years late but this is exactly what I'm thinking for mine. Start with few words from onomatopoeia and bastardize the shit out of it.

  • @kaiserinjacky
    @kaiserinjacky Před 4 lety +18

    “Very Few Morphemes, say, 100 or so.”
    *visible shaking with my conlang of literally 20 single-syllable morphemes*

    • @mateusmundstock8225
      @mateusmundstock8225 Před 4 lety +2

      Post your reference grammar on Google docs, please. It seems really interesting.

    • @kaiserinjacky
      @kaiserinjacky Před 4 lety +4

      Mateus Mundstock it’s already in a doc, though I am still working on some of the changes to the language.
      docs.google.com/document/d/1ikXuEIUO44DobnoervqKF3_374wQtqSdknh4yoY9kuY

    • @emilyrose3652
      @emilyrose3652 Před 3 lety +1

      That's cool!

  • @stelladavis1798
    @stelladavis1798 Před 5 lety +62

    As a musician, I was frustrated with the limitations of language to be euphonic. When writing lyrics, I would always try to leave out certain words because they contained too many hard (plosive) sounds. Sometimes it's hard to find words that mean the same thing but don't have hard sounds (unless you use words from different languages in the same sentence, which is extremely confusing). So, I decided to create my own language that would meet what I needed. This sparked a huge interest in linguistics within me. Within two days I was obsessing over Chonsky and generative grammar, verb tenses, writing systems, &c., and that's actually what introduced me to this channel. Anyways, my language (don't have a name for it) contains only sonorous consonants and light fricatives, and I took some liberties to stray away from the English grammar and instead go with what made most sense to me. (Of course, a lot of bits are the same as English, probably because I've been speaking it my whole life, and my thoughts have adapted to that.) but, for example, when thinking of word order, I went through different sentences and thought about what I would think of first. For me, SOV made the most since (I thought of who did it first, then who they did the thing to, then what they did. I also place adjectives after the nouns, like in Spanish, because that makes more sense to me. The defining characteristic of a brown dog is that it is a dog, not that it is brown. So I put the more important words first. The writing system is alphasyllabic, with vowels being marked as diacritics, although the diacritics look a bit like the letters, just oriented differently. They're about the same size. I don't have vowel killers or consonant killers, each consonant is just a consonant, and a lone vowel is attached to one of two "filler" symbols, depending on whether the vowel is part of the previous syllable (or if there isn't a previous syllable).

    • @Shadoefeenicks
      @Shadoefeenicks Před rokem +14

      Sorry to necro a really old comment, but did you ever make more progress in this? I'm fascinated by the idea of a language designed for lyrics.

    • @omargerardolopez3294
      @omargerardolopez3294 Před rokem +2

      Can you name it the in-language version of "musical" or "song-related"?

    • @zhaleyleitnib5150
      @zhaleyleitnib5150 Před 7 měsíci

      Neat project would like to know more about it

    • @Octavia_Goetia_666
      @Octavia_Goetia_666 Před 6 měsíci

      Thank you for providing this extremely wrong paragraph four years ago that I will not read.

    • @Octavia_Goetia_666
      @Octavia_Goetia_666 Před 6 měsíci

      Long*

  • @azhadial7396
    @azhadial7396 Před 6 lety +164

    French is not really fusional, it actually is in the process of shifting to isolating.
    We have recently lost the "passé simple" (replaced by the composed past made of an auxiliary), the subjunctive mood, and some people have even stopped using conditional mood. Besides verbs, there are no other word class which inflects greatly (most nouns do not distinguish singular from plural, and many adjectives do not distinguish plural and masculine-feminine agreement aside from writing French). That transition from highly fusional (Latin) to analytic (modern French) is almost completely done.

    • @M_Julian_TSP
      @M_Julian_TSP Před 6 lety +32

      A'zhadial The subjunctive mood? Wtf?
      Have you ever heard a French native speaker saying "Il faut que je fais"???

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +41

      Huh! I didn't know that. Thanks for pointing this out.

    • @M_Julian_TSP
      @M_Julian_TSP Před 6 lety +25

      Artifexian Yeah but he's exaggerating^^ French isn't as analytic as he says (even though he's right)

    • @azhadial7396
      @azhadial7396 Před 6 lety +14

      +Julien TSP C'est vrai que derrière "il faut que" ou "j'aimerais que", on l'utilise toujours mais c'est néanmoins un usage archaïque car à l'origine en Latin (comme en Allemand aujourd'hui) le subjonctif n'était pas exclusif à des propositions subordonnés mais indiqué une nuance de sens plutôt que simplement confirmer la subjectivité induite par le verbe en proposition principale ("j'aimerais que tu sois", le "sois" sert plus à rien car on sait déjà que le "j'aimerais" implique une réalité fictive).
      Dans beaucoup de cas où l'usage de subjonctif ne paraît "pas français", on utilise des propositions infinitives ("je t'interdis d'être" plutôt que"j'interdis que").
      De plus derrière des locutions verbales comme "jusqu'à ce que", on ne l'utilise plus dans la plupart des régions de France.
      Son usage est donc plus archaïque qu'autre chose.
      EN: It's true that after "il faut que" (~it must be that~SBJ must...) or "j'aimerais que" (I would like), we still use it but it is an archaic usage. In Latin (as with German nowadays), subjonctive was not exclusive to subordinate clauses but used to indicate a nuance in meaning rather than simply confirming that a verb inducts a fictuous reality by the verb in the main clause ("j'aimerais que tu sois", the "sois" is useless as we know that "j'aimerais" inducts a fictuous reality).
      In most cases where not using the subjonctive mood seems "not French", we use infinitive clauses ("I forbid you to" rather than "I forbid that you").
      Also, after verbal locutions like "jusqu'à ce que" (until ...), we do not use it in most regions of France.
      The use of subjonctive is more archaic than anything.

    • @azhadial7396
      @azhadial7396 Před 6 lety +28

      +Julien TSP The only non-analytic part of French is its verbs and it is currently in the process of losing inflection. Besides what I mentionned, 1st and 3rd singular person are almost never differenciated by the verb inflection, often the 2nd singular and 3rd plural also take the same form as the 1st and 3rd singular. The 1st plural and the 2nd plural are always clearly differenciated, but the 1st plural is often replaced by "on" which takes the same form as the 3rd singular person. The inflection of tenses is also ambiguous ("je mangerai", "je mangerais": pronounced the same but two different tenses).
      That's why French is (one of) the only Romance languages to have mandatory pronouns because verb inflection isn't enough.

  • @JayFolipurba
    @JayFolipurba Před 6 lety +202

    q is pronounced t͜ɕ and after j, x, q, [ʐ t͜ɕ ɕ] u is pronounced [y]. And now I resume my Chinese homework for tomorrow

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +60

      Good to know. Cheers, pal. :)

    • @iuriepripa3171
      @iuriepripa3171 Před 6 lety +26

      Artifexian Also, the difference between "b" and "p" is not not between voicing(?), but between aspiration. So, spin would be transcribed as "sbin", while the word Bharat, from Sanskrit, would be "parat". (according to my Mandarin proffesor, blame her if I'm not right :P)

    • @faheemsyed1674
      @faheemsyed1674 Před 6 lety +17

      Iurie Pripa
      So, b is p and p is ph in Chinese?

    • @najimacmillan
      @najimacmillan Před 6 lety +9

      हस्तगिरेः नमः सर्वेभ्यः Yes, In Devanagari Chinese pa would be फ and ba would be प (Ignoring tone).

    • @najimacmillan
      @najimacmillan Před 6 lety +16

      JayFolipurba Isn't q pronounced t͡ɕʰ,j t͡ɕ,x ɕ?

  • @celtofcanaanesurix2245
    @celtofcanaanesurix2245 Před 6 lety +157

    I mostly make synthetic languages, usually with case systems similar to Old Celtic or Germanic languages

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +39

      Very nice.

    • @otesunki
      @otesunki Před 5 lety +8

      My first conlang (Nevon) is agglutinative.

    • @supechube_k
      @supechube_k Před 3 lety +6

      my conlang family (màngrì) is synthetic

    • @The_name105
      @The_name105 Před 3 lety +2

      Cases and case endings are stupid. That is why latin died and the romance languages don't have cases. I still don't know how greek survived though, but cases are still stupid say what you mean don't say the root of a word with some gibberish tagged on to the end to say something else unless you are adding prefixes and/or suffixes. plus no one wants to learn languages like that anyways and if they do i'm sure they hate themselves for not researching the language before hand to see how stupid it is. These languages are good for making it really hard for people to discipher what you are saying though, or you could just make an alphabet that is really unique that no one understands.

    • @im3635
      @im3635 Před 3 lety +12

      @@The_name105 do you knpw how cases evolve? Because it's really useful,instead of having 2 or three words to make peoples understand what you mean you have one ending,it's more compacted. Plus ad Hominem attack is not an argument ;)

  • @inkyscrolls5193
    @inkyscrolls5193 Před 6 lety +213

    3:01 As an Englishman, I cannot tell you how nice it is to see the English language actually represented with the English flag for a change! Ta, pet.

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +46

      Thank my podcasting cohost, Bill, for that. I used to just use the union Jack...but this much much better.

    • @inkyscrolls5193
      @inkyscrolls5193 Před 6 lety +26

      It's good to give the ol' St. George's Cross flying now and again! I'm not fussed about bods using the Union Flag instead, though the English flag is better - it's when norberts from the States use the US flag for English that really riles me. It'd be like using the flag of Patagonia for Welsh, or something. =Þ

    • @colltonrighem
      @colltonrighem Před 4 lety +5

      Inky Scrolls I understand your complaint but tbf we do have more English speakers than you do in the UK due to our population size.

    • @LunizIsGlacey
      @LunizIsGlacey Před 4 lety +11

      @Collton Righem ye but you know what, mate? Straya here has the better English

    • @sully9767
      @sully9767 Před 4 lety +7

      @@LunizIsGlacey I dinna think enya ken the shir moun' o' dialecs we ha' o'er ere in Bligh'y. Tha poor fo'eign pe's winna stan unner eny o' us. We win by righ o' diversity.

  • @abowainmapping4803
    @abowainmapping4803 Před 6 lety +37

    I’ve actually been using these to create a crude Etruscan script. It’s been very useful, and a DnD character I made, Hercna Amria, speaks solely in this ‘pseudo-conlang’ I made...

  • @sophiejones7727
    @sophiejones7727 Před 4 lety +12

    I know why most languages are agglutinative (and nearly all languages have some kind of agglutination somewhere: even highly fusional languages like Greek and Valyrian). Agglutination is both intuitive and fun. Even baby humans understand the concept of sticking two separate things together to create a new thing. They also find doing so endlessly entertaining (and, if we're honest, we never really grow out of that). Why does everyone like Quenya so much? because it sounds epic, yet satisfies your inner two year old.

  • @kemoiii
    @kemoiii Před 6 lety +254

    Artifexian released a new video!
    And people say I am celebrating Christmas early.

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +16

      Looks like youtube isn't notifying subscribers as much as I like to be but tl;dr I'm back making videos again full time. Expect more videos.

    • @hdk5973
      @hdk5973 Před 6 lety +1

      Nah! Here in the Philippines, we're already celebrating Christmas here since Late September. =)

    • @hdk5973
      @hdk5973 Před 3 lety

      @@preacherofmusic We start on the beginning of -ber months (Sept. 1) and begin Christmas countdown on Sept. 16 (100 days before Christmas). The season lasts until Three Kings Day (Jan. 6) of next year when we remove all our Christmas decor.

  • @nazamroth8427
    @nazamroth8427 Před 6 lety +97

    Megszentségteleníthetetlenségeskedéseitekért... Analize that... yes, that is a legit word, even if it never, ever gets used even in really overdone text.

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +34

      What language?

    • @autokratao
      @autokratao Před 6 lety +29

      It appears to be Hungarian.
      According to a quick Google search I just did, it means “for your [plural] continued behaviour as if you could not be desecrated”

    • @iuriepripa3171
      @iuriepripa3171 Před 6 lety +8

      I actually had a Hungarian speaking friend show it to me! :)

    • @nazamroth8427
      @nazamroth8427 Před 6 lety +11

      Artifexian
      Hungarian. It means something like "For your(plural) repeated acts of un-desecrationalisms" or something like that

    • @nazamroth8427
      @nazamroth8427 Před 6 lety +7

      Iurie Pripa
      Also, "Elkelkáposztásítottalanítottátok", which basically means something like "You(plural) de-kale-d it" in a really roundabout way(Kale as in the vegetable)

  • @CalifornianMapping
    @CalifornianMapping Před 6 lety +51

    MOAR CONLANG

  • @idehnkovash1017
    @idehnkovash1017 Před 6 lety +26

    Man, after searching far and wide for help to create a conlang, I think yours has been one of the most helpful. Keep it up.

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +2

      Will do. Grab a copy of "The Language Construction Kit" by Mark Rosenfelder. It's great.

  • @michaeldavis9190
    @michaeldavis9190 Před 6 lety +25

    I *LOVE* agglutination and particles. They are my favorite and least favorite thing about Japanese.

  • @FreyasArts
    @FreyasArts Před 6 lety +35

    Artifexian: * mentions morophemes *
    Me: hey we just had that in uni :D thanks for helping me revise that subject. It was super helpful and very competently explained 😄

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +2

      Great! Glad you enjoyed.

    • @Amozmusicmaker
      @Amozmusicmaker Před 6 lety +3

      Sadly this video came one year late for me. I was like "hey, this is exactly the stuff I had to study during my first semester!"

  • @user-lc8lj9yh3c
    @user-lc8lj9yh3c Před rokem +4

    Hi! Amelie here. I'm actually working on 2 conlangs called Yindaunese ((or Yin for short)) and Euptian.
    A bit of overview:
    Yin is an isolating language which the ratio of words to morphemes is low, and does not use inflection to indicate grammatical features. Rather it uses particles, adverbs, word order or is deduced to context.
    Euptian is a fusional language which a word is inflected with an inflectional morpheme, displaying a myriad of grammatical features.

  • @santumChannelYes
    @santumChannelYes Před 3 lety +4

    the way he pronounced "comí"... my god
    the accent is right there

  • @RosheenQuynh
    @RosheenQuynh Před 6 lety +3

    Ahhhhhhh Inuktitut! I'm attempting to build a conlang based on the language since my character's background is heavily based on Inuit culture but, as expected, it's not going well... So I've just taken random words (according to what I need said in dialogue), put dashes in between them, and call it a day. I don't think I have capability of learning such an extensive language, but I'd love to.

  • @ConlangKrishna
    @ConlangKrishna Před 6 lety +7

    Thanks so much for adding oligosynthetic languages! I have been working on them for some years, but they turn out to become complex (polysynthetic-ish) too in the end.

  • @leavealoner
    @leavealoner Před 6 lety +19

    My Conlang is mostly agglutinitive nouns and fusional verbs, somewhere between synth and polysynth. I recently actually started using the language in a project of mine, so I wanted to thank you for all the useful info you've been providing

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +4

      No probs at all. Glad to be of service.

  • @ClockworkAvatar
    @ClockworkAvatar Před 6 lety +32

    Any day with new artifexian is a good day, even a rainy, cold, *monday*.

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +1

      It is very cold here at the moment.

  • @lynxddragon
    @lynxddragon Před 4 lety +18

    No one:
    Absolutely no one:
    Me, an intellectual:
    Morphemes are the atoms of Drug addictions °

  • @Stravant
    @Stravant Před 6 lety +6

    It would be interesting if you did a video on how modern codification / recorded media affects how languages change over time. For instance, it seems like it would be very hard for there to be any significant changes in the grammar of a language now that there's so much recorded video media and such strict spelling / grammar guidelines.

  • @t.k.abrams4720
    @t.k.abrams4720 Před 4 lety +2

    This is great. Your videos have been making me a better conlanger since you first started making them on this channel. Thanks for being awesome. Hopefully my conlangs can live up to whatever you make.

  • @Argimak
    @Argimak Před 6 lety +4

    Wow, the quality of your visuals and overall presentation has improved so much! Nice work!

  • @FreeThoughtsandIdeas
    @FreeThoughtsandIdeas Před 6 lety +3

    Great video man! I have always been interested in linguistics and your channel is one of the best for it! I am trying to create my own language and your videos have helped me do so.

  • @AmberScottProd
    @AmberScottProd Před 6 lety +12

    A pleasure to learn from your videos as always, Edgar.

  • @ndegeanaruka
    @ndegeanaruka Před 4 lety +4

    I'm working on a language that is highly analytic, evolving into this from it's early 'writing' system of naval flags. As you can't inflect a flag, the writing system moved it away from morphology and inflection. It is non-tonal, but has three vowel lengths (and the matter, as Ri is fingernail and Riii is breast). They now have a logo-syllabary based off of these flags, and still hold to no morphology, but have a huge aresnal of modals, auxiliaries, and particles to convey meaning. Phonology is Irish with weird phonotactics, and syntax is completely head initial. A vrry straightforward people put what is important first.

  • @MikhaelEternal
    @MikhaelEternal Před 6 lety +2

    I usually make agglutinative conlangs, because I like the intricate implied meanings of using some affixes but not others. The one I'm working now has attempted labiodental plosive and is intended to encourage thorough thought about what one says before one says it.

  • @Telsion
    @Telsion Před 6 lety +9

    This video reminded me of my Dutch lesson tomorrow, and in extension that I hadnt packed my bag yet. Thanks Artifexian! :)

  • @edwarddavis7858
    @edwarddavis7858 Před 6 lety +5

    As I may have mentioned before, I have been working on a set of conlangs for my fantasy world, but lost the notes, sadly, but I remember much of it by heart.
    My Elven language was written similar to LOTR elven, being an abjad, but had a leaf and vine style of writing that didn't look like Quenya. It contained, so far, a large set of words and grammatical rules that allowed for words to be altered to say the same sentence, with new meaning. Such as "Welcome to my home" Could be made to sound like you are greeting a friend "Kotuu Rewasya ri'lorwyr" or as if you are reluctantly allowing someone of distaste in "Kotau Rewasok ri'lorwyr".
    My Dwarven was basically a new version of Norse runes with the grammer of Gaelic, allowing for a lot of interesting writting and speech. They spoke there directly, as the previous sentence would directly be "Greeting - Subject - Home - Possessive - Personal"
    Lastly, I worked on an orcish that was based off Hangul, written vertically. Nothing more beyond that.
    I had planned next a few other minor races languages, as well as the language of the divines. That's all I had done... but it is lost for now...

  • @MyTubeofYouChannel
    @MyTubeofYouChannel Před 3 lety +1

    Fabulous ❤️ I actually understood this video. I'm needing to make a posteriori conlang from Sumerian and then evolve the language to create several other conlang from it and I've been completely lost, but I actually understood this so thank you!

  • @TSBoncompte
    @TSBoncompte Před 6 lety

    jesus, bro, your production values are through the roof. besides containing some solid basic conlanging foundation, this is visually and structurally tight. kudos

  • @itfunes
    @itfunes Před 6 lety +4

    I've got a question Artifexian. Are you go in depth and talk about grammar and the different ways that countries organize their sentences or how do verbs work in again, differnt languages.

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +1

      Yes definitely.

    • @itfunes
      @itfunes Před 6 lety

      Thanks, and also sorry for my bad english, I'm from southern Europe, soy de España 😂😅

  • @buttersquids
    @buttersquids Před 5 lety +2

    A while ago me and a couple of friends made a theoretical one called 'Bro'. IIt's not very fleshed out, but just to say 'sister' would be 'bro nobro' because we kept our morpheme count as small as possible.It's quite a fun little practice

  • @pixel-coyote5557
    @pixel-coyote5557 Před 6 lety

    Glad you are back! Your videos are very interesting to listen to.

  • @TheTronguy1
    @TheTronguy1 Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks, this really helped me understand the concepts you expressed. I do think it would be good to talk about other "categories" of conlangs, such as a piori or posteriori and auxialiary vs artistic. Although now that I said that, I remember that being talked about in your and Xidnaf's collaboration videos.

  • @randomfantasy9523
    @randomfantasy9523 Před 6 lety +3

    Your new style of videos are awesomeee!!!!!

  • @KainusGulch
    @KainusGulch Před 6 lety +162

    I'm trying to figure out what kind of language people would speak after a thousand years of a devastating apocalypse. What are your thoughts?

    • @covenawhite4855
      @covenawhite4855 Před 6 lety +61

      KainusGulch
      A mixture of multiple languages but a less intelligectual version than if all the languages mix after a great human futuristic global civilization. Plus, consider the postapocolyptic cultural meaning of words and current cultural meanings.

    • @KainusGulch
      @KainusGulch Před 6 lety +26

      Thanks. I was thinking a tribal atmosphere so I've been thinking about how neighboring languages have similarities but also differences, but also keep a semblance of English for the part that is in America so it connects with the reader perhaps? I'm still thinking about it all. And note taking. Thanks.

    • @Amozmusicmaker
      @Amozmusicmaker Před 6 lety +43

      Could you provide some more context? If your civilization has lots of people from different origins forced together for whatever reason you might want to read a bit about Creole languages. If your society is very tribal and people have lost the ability to easily communicate and travel over long distances due to an apocalyptic event, like you described, you might also want to avoid using one standard langue. It seems likely to me each tribe would have their own dialect and a sort of dialectal continuum would emerge between different tribes.

    • @KainusGulch
      @KainusGulch Před 6 lety +11

      I wanted to cut off the continents from each other, so the other languages mixing with english would come manly from mexico and canada and from immigrants that came over before the infrastructure fell apart. There's a group that keeps themselves educated by stealing all the artifacts of what we would call modern day, and they i figured would have the closest recognizable speech. But for the people that are a bit ghoulish and mutated beings I'm not sure how to modify the language, but I think some thing that involves tones or clicks might make abnormal throats and mouths easier to communicate with. Does that make sense?

    • @valiantstag
      @valiantstag Před 6 lety +16

      For one thing, if this language is based on English for example, keep in mind the amount that English has changed over the last thousand years- quite a lot, but it was still somewhat recognizable, so this language a thousand years from now might be similarly comprehensible. Same goes for any other language, check out the rate they've been changing at.

  • @antonionio7977
    @antonionio7977 Před 2 lety +2

    -"[oligosynthetic languages] would have very few morphemes, say a hundred or so"
    -Oh it's like in toki pona...
    -"Think newspeak and you're kind of in the right ballpark"
    -Fuck

  • @OmegaTaishu
    @OmegaTaishu Před 6 lety

    Thanks for this awesome vid, man.
    Glad to have you back.

  • @Raakhushili
    @Raakhushili Před 6 lety +3

    Spanish worldbuilder here, awesome video (as always) and I hope for more. I just want to make a quick remark: the pronunciation of "comí" is /ko-mee/, with special emphasis on the "mee", and not /koh-mee/, with an aspirated sound in the middle. But I understand our language is dificult sometimes so I have no problem at all with the mispronunciation, just wanted to collaborate as much as possible ^^

  • @agnetalykins7564
    @agnetalykins7564 Před 6 lety +2

    It's always fun to work on languages, the most recent one I've been working on is a pseudo-north germanic language.
    "ᚦᛊ 𐌺𐌰𐍂𐌻 𐍃ᛏ𐌿𐌲𐌰𐍂 ᚺ𐌵𐌽𐌳𐌿𐍂" or "Þé karl stígar hundír" or "the man walked the dog
    with Þé being the definite article
    Karl of course meaning man
    Stígar, meaning walk (stíg) with the past tense suffix "-ar"
    And hundír (with the -ír suffix indicating a single dog)

  • @andrewnewman5945
    @andrewnewman5945 Před 6 lety +1

    4:45
    Correction! Preterite tense. Spanish has 2 past tenses. One is used for a completed action in a specific time in the past. That is preterite. The other is imperfect, which talks of an action being repeated over and over again or uncompleted.

  • @Giranii
    @Giranii Před 6 lety

    Im hyper excited to see a new video from you in my feed. Its like christmas

  • @anderji
    @anderji Před 6 lety +101

    Creating languages is one of the funniest things to do when bored. I do have my own called Segehii. Have an example :D
    "aer don shai kaekaldos" (may his/her holy light (refering to god) stay within you, a formal farewell)
    aer - may
    don - possessive 3rd p singular
    shai - holy light or the light of truth
    kaekal - verb in root-form
    -dos - possessive 1st p singular
    The structure of this phrase doesn't differ a lot from English but that's not always the case. Hope you liked it :D

    • @grimtheghastly8878
      @grimtheghastly8878 Před 5 lety +4

      Is it complete? I'd like to learn it.

    • @kzeriar25
      @kzeriar25 Před 5 lety +2

      mine main conlang is valendhirdven, it got pretty complex over time, with some complex grammar and thousands of words. It's mainly agglutinative out of the video's types. I'm curringly making songs on it

    • @kzeriar25
      @kzeriar25 Před 5 lety +2

      in my conlang that sentence you translated would be: thëldunus aëra ahr o Tudussáth
      :)

    • @pepperdayjackpac4521
      @pepperdayjackpac4521 Před 5 lety +4

      Ka’ mohlah ga’t xahrix ae yahaiR
      (May) His holy light stay within you
      Ka’ - original form (Kai) get rid of i so it sounds better; His, he, him
      Mohlah - holy, spiritual-related
      ga’t - original form (gait): light
      xahrix - to stay
      Ae - in, within, inside, internal
      yahaiR - you, your,
      My conlang is called Yarinox.
      It’s no where near finished, but there are alphabets and the writing system, I think, is very cool.

    • @martindouge4504
      @martindouge4504 Před 5 lety +1

      Suwamal 'agasaf ni'ab
      Su : prefix indicating a wish or a conditional
      Wamal : to be, to exist
      'ag : he/she
      -a- : genitive particle (like the 's in English)
      Saf : light
      ni : prefix indicating a place
      'ab : you.
      "May his light be within you"
      Barajan is still at an early state of development. The apostrophe serves the same role as in Hawaiian, being a glottal stop that is treated as a consonant. It's a mostly agglutinative language inspired from Arabic for the sentence structure and sounds. I'll definitely work on it more in the future :)

  • @XXX3RX0
    @XXX3RX0 Před 6 lety +3

    Thanks to your channel, I've made my own language which I use in a book I'm writing. It is called Thomian and it is an analytical language if I understood it correctly. It is a vowel heavy language even though there are fewer vowels in the alphabet than English. For example, the word for world or earth is Eia. The phonotactics are (C)(C)(V)V(V)(C)(C).
    I based this on where the people lived on the globe along with the age of their civilization. Since they live on and near the north pole, it is almost always cold, and you know how difficult it is to pronounce some consonants when it's cold.
    The sound K doesn't exist and the sound P is only used in words with a negative meaning and swear words, like Paora meaning enemy and Plam meaning fall, fall over or trip.
    The system of questions and questioning is rather simple. The sentence set up isn't important, you just need to end it with an É sound. However, asking the base questions like, what,who,where,when,why and how is done by just saying "É". Those questions are more often than not used as response questions to gain more information about a previous statement.
    I saw a rabbit. translates to: Eji tesh fiamo imona.
    Litterally translated to: I one rabbit saw.
    If you were to add an É at the end. (Eji tesh fiamo imona É) This is now a question: Did I see a rabbit?
    If someone were to ask "where" they would just say É.
    Understanding what has been asked is established by the previous statement. Since we know he saw it we know how and who. Since we know "a rabbit" we know both what and how many. And asking "why" to that statement is just silly. This leaves us with just two questions: When and where. By just asking É, we try to gain more information and he just needs to answer with when and where he saw it.
    I also sprinkled in some easter eggs in the language for fun, like Chathulu that translates to unusual and Chrashen that translates to unexpected.
    There is much more to it, but this is just a youtube comment.

  • @op4000exe
    @op4000exe Před 6 lety

    I don't really world build, or language build, but I use it for analysing worls other people have made, and these videos on your channel have definatily helped me be better at spotting these flaws, or in a rare few cases hints at a more detailed world building behind the scenes.

  • @eboysix
    @eboysix Před 6 lety +1

    This video is amazing! Thank you for your explanation.
    I'm making an oligosynthetic language, but still making it suitable as an art form by having several different dialects to convey different tones.

  • @petersmythe6462
    @petersmythe6462 Před 6 lety +3

    I remember trying to make an Oligosynthetic language that was actually useful. I had around ~60 morphemes and could actually express a lot of basic ideas (including some in one nice compact word that took multiple sentences in English), but symbols got quite complex, especially because each word was a 2-dimensional arrangement of symbols for morpheme monosyllables. I remember for fun creating a word that was more or less a giant jigsaw puzzle and had around 40 morphemes in it, some of which were repeated.

  • @isaacthedestroyerofstuped7676

    I usually ɡive my conlanɡs a lot of affliction and conjuɡations as I am a huɡe latin fan thouɡh recently I've started playinɡ around with heavily derivated lanɡs! This has led to some monsterous words like: witunaimarɛnɛi (i.e. the only animal is currently preforminɡ the body action associated with «nam» as an indirect object) and ɪtɪnʊnaimɛno (the small animal associated with «nam» as a sinɡular, subject noun, in the context of memory)! Lovinɡ your content btw!

  • @melonlord4889
    @melonlord4889 Před 4 lety +1

    My favorite conlang is Old Gelfling from Dark Crystal/Age of Resistance. We’ve only ever heard it in song, but when we do, it feels amazing.

  • @rijahun6721
    @rijahun6721 Před 6 lety +2

    Glad you're still making videos

  • @thetherrannative
    @thetherrannative Před 4 lety +3

    This is super cool! The language I've been putting most of my effort into is synthetic agglutinative. I didn't actually realize most of the world's languages are agglutinative. I just did it because I liked how the system felt. It's awesome to learn that there are legitimate terms and real-world examples of things I've been throwing in because I thought they were fun.

  • @schwa0839
    @schwa0839 Před 4 lety +2

    A lot of my conlangs have been more on the polysynthetic side, but I want to try that oligosynthetic type. It sounds really cool, and I hope some real world languages could exist like so.

  • @ksawerykaminski2606
    @ksawerykaminski2606 Před 2 lety +1

    There's a theory that oral french is partly becoming polysynthetic in some structures though it does move to analytic.

  • @Wookiee925
    @Wookiee925 Před 2 lety

    When filming the Star Trek movies there were times where actors didn't remember their Klingon lines correctly and said them wrong, and other times where lines were rewritten but there wasn't budget to reshoot. So Orcrand had to keep going back and changing the grammar and vocabulary of Klingon so the recorded lines became correct, thus forcing a sort of simulated evolution of the language

  • @WolfWalrus
    @WolfWalrus Před 6 lety +11

    My first and current conlanging project is polysynthetic. It's called "Pwódga" (or "horse runes") and is inspired heavily by the Dené-Yeniseian languages.

  • @bensonkwok951
    @bensonkwok951 Před 6 lety +194

    rip chinese pronunciation

  • @Socksshoesandhats
    @Socksshoesandhats Před 6 lety +2

    Yes! I was hoping you would do a video like this!

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety

      Hope it lives up to your expectations.

  • @whatevermatewhatevermate6638

    I am in the process of writing a book (which is hard enough by itself😂), and I recently decided to throw in a conlang for my people because why not😂😂
    Your videos have been very helpful to me because I had no idea how much planning went into making languages. Please keep making these kinds of videos, they really help!

  • @bluthemeth
    @bluthemeth Před rokem +3

    4:32 “cómi”
    *dies*

  • @yeetusselfdefeetus4566
    @yeetusselfdefeetus4566 Před 5 lety +16

    It's not CO-mí, it's co-MÍ
    -every triggered Spanish speakers

    • @masicbemester
      @masicbemester Před 3 lety +3

      Why else would there be a diacritic specifically present for stress marking?

  • @ParkerJustham
    @ParkerJustham Před 6 lety +1

    Sentence order is one of the things I love about German. German inflects its Verbs really specifically depending on who’s verb-ing (I, you, he/she/it/one, we, pl. you, they, formal you), as well as using different cases to show subject, object, etc. so sentence structure is really flexible.
    For instance, „der Hund beißt mich,“ meaning, “the dog bites me.” The infinitive verb beißen becomes beißt to show third person, as opposed to saying “ich beiße...” which would show first person. Plus, “me” being the object of the dog’s biting puts “me” in the accusative case, so „ich“ becomes „mich.“ You could say „mich beißt der Hund,“ and it would still technically be correct as long as you keep your cases and verb endings the same.
    On the other hand switching “me” into nominative and “the dog” into accusative and conjugating beißen for first person, you’d get „ich beiße den Hund,“ “I bite the dog,” which is still correct as „den Hund beiße ich.“

  • @TenebraePatruus
    @TenebraePatruus Před 6 lety

    Hey Edgar, How is the new teaching job going? I know I'd love an update of the more personal front. So glad to see you're making vids again!

  • @adityagupta5713
    @adityagupta5713 Před 6 lety +11

    YESSSSS! HE'S BACK!!!!!!

  • @angeldude101
    @angeldude101 Před 6 lety +11

    Now I want to see a proof of concept oligosynthetic language.
    Granted, I should probably finish my programming language before starting work on a human-ish language.

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +1

      Check out this: czcams.com/video/dvOfnHJpQes/video.html

    • @FromRussiaWithLuv007
      @FromRussiaWithLuv007 Před 6 lety +1

      Toki Pona

    • @hdwe1756
      @hdwe1756 Před 6 lety

      What programming language are you working on?

    • @angeldude101
      @angeldude101 Před 6 lety

      A custom one that resembles Haskell, but is low level like C. Currently its equivalent to C, but I have plans to implement either linear or unique types to provide memory safety.

  • @flatmars7072
    @flatmars7072 Před 5 lety

    Due to your videos(which are awesome) ive managed to make a solar system and on the fourth planet, the acriv’s speak acrivi(a conlang that i made from YOUR videos) keep it up man, love it

  • @fgvcosmic6752
    @fgvcosmic6752 Před 6 lety +2

    Been waiting for something like this

  • @nullmaton5667
    @nullmaton5667 Před 6 lety +47

    qu is pronounced 'chu' in Mandarin btw, nice video!

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +11

      Ye, Chinese isn't my bag unfortunately. :/

    • @gayvideos3808
      @gayvideos3808 Před 6 lety +3

      Not "chu." The Q is like ch, except your tongue is flat.

    • @5up3rp3rs0n
      @5up3rp3rs0n Před 6 lety +3

      Like Tsüsch in German, without the sch

    • @kori228
      @kori228 Před 5 lety +4

      [tɕʰy]

    • @Alice-gr1kb
      @Alice-gr1kb Před 5 lety +1

      And qù means it has falling tone

  • @chevtothemax
    @chevtothemax Před 6 lety +16

    Drop everything and watch.

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +6

      I'm not responsible for any broken objects. Just so we're clear. :P

    • @chevtothemax
      @chevtothemax Před 6 lety +2

      Artifexian I promise not to blame any broken objects now or in the future on Artifexian

  • @TaiFerret
    @TaiFerret Před 3 lety

    I want to make a fusional isolating language. In such a language, morphemes are separate words but also fuse multiple meanings together. For instance, there can be words that express the subject person and number, but at the same time tense, or polarity, or maybe even the object person and number, all while it's just a one syllable word that cannot be broken down into smaller parts.

  • @pidgeoncrossing963
    @pidgeoncrossing963 Před 2 lety

    Ive been wanting to make a conlang for years, and I think this year I will put my mind to it!

  • @EmberArcher
    @EmberArcher Před 6 lety +5

    Agglutnative for life!

  • @zobososhizion6478
    @zobososhizion6478 Před 6 lety +3

    So computers and AI would create an Olgiosynthetic language because such entities would only have 2 morphemes i.e. 1 and 0.

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety

      Kinda I guess.

    • @ryuko4478
      @ryuko4478 Před 6 lety

      1 and 0 are not the only possible morphemes
      0 = open circuit
      1 = closed circuit
      If you make anything that holds more meaning than that then you are making a new morpheme

  • @amjthe_paleosquare9399
    @amjthe_paleosquare9399 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for the vid! It helps me on my process to create words for different languages I'm creating (not sure if I'll ever make grammar rules since I'd have to do them for all languages...).
    Also, how funny that whenever you start pronunciating stuff from not your first language, there's always the risk to butcher it. I don't know a single word in Mandarin, but I could tell there was no chinese accent there.
    The point of Spanish "comí" is that the "I" has an accent, a signal that it's pronounced (ko-MEE), not (KO-mee). If it had followed the former sound, it would've been written "comi", or "cómi", although the last one's not even Spanish.
    Despite this nitpick, the rest of the vid was informative, interesting and very enjoyable :)

  • @IanCroak2
    @IanCroak2 Před 6 lety

    I'm so happy everytime I see a new Artifexian video!!!

  • @codekillerz5392
    @codekillerz5392 Před 6 lety +56

    I CAME AS SOON AS I HEARD

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +11

      Glad you did.

    • @fairycat23
      @fairycat23 Před 6 lety +4

      I don't think I have to tell you in whose voice I read that.

    • @grimtheghastly8878
      @grimtheghastly8878 Před 5 lety

      Same

    • @parthiancapitalist2733
      @parthiancapitalist2733 Před 5 lety +5

      What a compass!

    • @maximus4375
      @maximus4375 Před 5 lety +4

      Angelicaaaaa
      ( all the way from London? Damn)
      Somone who understands what im here to do
      Im not here for you
      I know my sister like i know my own mind you will never find anyone as trusting or as kind
      Put what we had aside, im standing at her side, god i hope youre satisfied

  • @theironcross7557
    @theironcross7557 Před 6 lety +3

    HE LIVES!

  • @lubenicmackavic2780
    @lubenicmackavic2780 Před 3 lety

    I would like to say this video is really helpful

  • @fl-v8843
    @fl-v8843 Před 6 lety +1

    The first language I tried to make was like a step beyond Oligosynthetic Agglutinative. There were 6 morphemes that combined into concepts that combined into more concepts that combined into words that combined into sentences which were considered a single statement. They were also used to represent numbers, colours, directions, etc. and combinations codes to tell you what they're representing. This was a complete nightmare so I gave up and it became canonically a kind of decorative scribble used to convey basic concepts.

  • @MrRyanroberson1
    @MrRyanroberson1 Před 6 lety +5

    So I came up with a 2 dimensional gender suffix structure... And another 2d prefix setup. This video is good for calling attention to methods and habits.... I'll definitely get there soon! Already got like 6 roots and 20 combinations (is there a way to get a summary of English roots and basic pairings so I can pan through them?)

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +2

      I don't have anything like that to hand. If it exists, I'd like to know about it too.

    • @moth.monster
      @moth.monster Před 6 lety

      Two dimensional gender? What SJW bullshit is this?
      (Jk let your fiction have a fuckin gender square gender cube whatever fuck it i don't care it's fiction have fun)

    • @MrRyanroberson1
      @MrRyanroberson1 Před 6 lety +2

      lol. i actually act with a kind of "avoiding but polite" method in english, but my language has a more advanced tactic:
      there are four base genders (this is inspired from an ausie language
      Edible, Female, "Male", and Objects. then the second half of the "gender" is whether it is a verb (acting with the object, like 'to ice'), an object (like ice itself, or a pizza), and a premonition/future tense (like planning on doing something, or wanting a pizza)
      Male being simply a human which is not female, as the culture is (naturally) fertility centric, you either can or you cannot eventually make a baby.
      hence the 2d gender structure. what are trans peoples? what are nonbinaries? they are either objects, or men. this is assuming that they even use different pronouns, since "female" and "male" are not defined as man and woman, but as having a functional womb, or not.

    • @MrRyanroberson1
      @MrRyanroberson1 Před 6 lety

      so i found something that has /most/ of what i was looking for, turns out when i asked you actually i'd forgotten something i found months ago. just remembered!
      wold.clld.org/vocabulary/11

    • @Tulanir1
      @Tulanir1 Před 6 lety

      Don't you mean /moʊst/? ;)

  • @jakvos342
    @jakvos342 Před 6 lety +3

    Wasn't ancient Sumerian oligosynthetic?

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +2

      Could be. I've no idea.

    • @fluffysaffron5719
      @fluffysaffron5719 Před 2 lety

      Sumerian was agglutinative. The one really unusual thing about it is that it's a language isolate with no known relatives, past or present.

  • @yog-sothothery5720
    @yog-sothothery5720 Před rokem +1

    I have been making an analytical language. Still working on selecting the consonants.

  • @artpatterson57
    @artpatterson57 Před 5 lety +1

    The description of oligosynthetic languages is how I visualize Entish from Tolkien's LoTR. They take a long time to say anything in their own language, so they're probably having to string together lots of morphemes to get across any single idea, and when they speak in English, they're descriptive, using a small number of objects as reference points to direct you to what they want to refer to. The big difference is that Tolkien described the language as having lots of vowels and tones to boot, so likely lots of morphemes.

  • @ayushsharma9270
    @ayushsharma9270 Před 6 lety +6

    "tumi ke lingu be pera"
    Translate that if you can...
    BTW, I am off to creating a Conlang generator program...

    • @PhantomKING113
      @PhantomKING113 Před 4 lety +1

      I am not atempting it, but that looks like Toki Pona to me.
      Actualy, on second thought, maybe Toki Pone wouldn't have a word such as "lingu".

    • @tibethatguy
      @tibethatguy Před 3 lety +1

      @@PhantomKING113 The sounds b, g and r aren't present in Toki Pona.

    • @muhtesemsiyanur
      @muhtesemsiyanur Před 3 lety

      if it was toki pona, it would be something like "tumi ke linu pe pela"

    • @the_sky_is_blue_and_so_am_I
      @the_sky_is_blue_and_so_am_I Před 3 lety

      How is the program going

  • @OrchidAlloy
    @OrchidAlloy Před 6 lety +4

    Not comi, comí. The tilde in Spanish marks the stress syllable

    • @Jerimbo
      @Jerimbo Před 5 lety +4

      Not a tilde

    • @pablomunoz3119
      @pablomunoz3119 Před 3 lety

      @@Jerimbo Si lo es. En Español la palabra tilde se usa para referirse a diacriticos en general. Los primeros incisos en el Diccionario de la Lengua Española dictan:
      1. f. acento (‖ signo ortográfico español). _Raúl se escribe con tilde en la u._
      2. f. Signo en forma de rayita, a veces ondulada, que forma parte de algunas letras, como la ñ, y que antiguamente se usaba en algunas abreviaturas.
      Lo que probablemente tienes en mente es la virgulilla de la ñ.

    • @Jerimbo
      @Jerimbo Před 3 lety

      @@pablomunoz3119 no sabía eso, gracias, siempre me enseñaron que el tilde es solamente el acento en ñ

  • @qantuum7567
    @qantuum7567 Před rokem +1

    im currently creating phonology for a conlang that I'll try to have both agglutinative and fusional, because I'm a french native and I live in Türkiye, and I've learned english since I'm a child. All these 3 languages have really cool grammatical features and I want to blend them into a neat conlang ahah!
    Makes me review 3 grammars at once to choose what is the best I can come with and it will be a long process.

  • @senesterium
    @senesterium Před 5 lety +1

    For the last language I'm creating, I decided to make it agglutinative, slightly fusionning (with actual affixes that merges in some cases and doesn't in others). BUT it's based on an isolating protolang, and merged things very differently from us. For example, tense clitic didn't merge with the verb, but with the subject, and the verbs ended grammatically merging with adjectives in a single category.

  • @msmsmsms8515
    @msmsmsms8515 Před 6 lety +6

    2:45
    'qu' is pronounced [t͡ɕʰy˥˩] not [kʰu]

    • @PhantomKING113
      @PhantomKING113 Před 4 lety +2

      That is a very complicated sound transcribed as two letters and one diacritic. That's what I call efficiency.

    • @yangkong7935
      @yangkong7935 Před 3 lety +1

      To simplify, say "ch" and "ui" st the same time. Still a bad simplification, but it's as close as I can write it in english without more mandarin words

    • @that_orange_hat
      @that_orange_hat Před 3 lety

      Yang Kong i think Artifexian probably knows the IPA, but yeah. pinyin is so confusing lol

  • @eufalesio1146
    @eufalesio1146 Před 6 lety +4

    my language is fusional-agglutinative

    • @Artifexian
      @Artifexian  Před 6 lety +1

      Lot's of people seem to be doing the agglutinative thing. I wonder why that is?

    • @eufalesio1146
      @eufalesio1146 Před 6 lety +2

      to make longer words i suppose

    • @Alphathon
      @Alphathon Před 6 lety +2

      I'd guess most people here are English speakers and many will have some knowledge of another major European language (French, Spanish, German… ) so agglutinativity seems more interesting and different.

    • @eufalesio1146
      @eufalesio1146 Před 6 lety

      Alphathon agreed

    • @CanaryMapping
      @CanaryMapping Před 6 lety

      My native language is Spanish and I find agglutination curious.

  • @Sabersonic
    @Sabersonic Před 6 lety

    An interesting and enlightening video as always Edgar.
    Morphemes and how they construct Inflectional Morphology as opposed to Derivational Morphology does allow options when it comes to word building for one's conlang lexicon and potentially easier to construct compared to the latter, though I can't help but ponder as to when one Morphology would be preferred over another since, in the end, they fulfill the purpose of creating derivative words from a single root word with the only difference being execution. Though I can only assume that the bounded morphemes would have to be constructed in a similar manner to root words for Derivational Morphology since, well, they can be used in more words in a single lexicon as opposed to engineering numerous variations of the root word. That and, well, I think a good chunk of at least English's bounded morphemes is derived from other, older languages such as Greek and Latin so I wouldn't be too surprised if someone were to construct their own bounded morphemes in a parallel manner.
    The types of languages also sprout about interesting ideas and useful questions on how one not only approach their conlang, but also to add flavor and life to it. Granted, the examples given in the Analytical and Isolating languages does go over the head of those of us that are neither familiar with them nor linguists ourselves and can only postulate how a conlang would be considered thus compared to the environment in question. Though with the word examples of both Agglutinative and Fusional languages, I can understand the appeal for conlang when it comes to building words but I can only assume that there's an upper limit to the amount of meanings a single morpheme could have if only to keep the clutter under control. Still, something to jump off with when it comes to setting an overarching "theme" for lack of a better vernacular of the conlang as a whole.
    Granted, the rather brief mention of word order in a conlang did feel a bit brief since it doesn't really give many ideas as to why a conlang's word order is made to follow that order in the first place, but limited time to spend on the subject matter I guess. Future conlang video perhaps?
    Polysynthetic morphemes, I'm figuring would be more ideal conlang-wise as a way to build a proper noun for an object that has numerous attributes or features, especially for latter developed conlang in terms of advanced technologies, social interactions, or even philosophical theories compared to earlier, more simpler words to reflect a less complex culture if only to show a passage of time. Then again, that's just me.
    And speaking of passage of time, Dixon's theory of language evolution does offer up ideas not only on a suggested stage of development of the culture that created it, but also allow different morpheme word-building types to intermingle between the different language systems that would offer an even richer, more immersive feel to the conlang that really tightens that string of suspension to the audience in question and give greater depth to the overall narrative illusion.
    Overall, thanks for bringing to light these interesting systems of language and how to approach them for conlang in a form that's easier to provoke one's creative thoughts and spring forth ideas. I have attempted to perform something similar on my own, but I got overwhelmed and stalled on the creative front in the past. Speaking of which, I do have two lexicon jumping points for two proto-conlang for one of my own settings that I just might be able to turn into actual- okay, maybe not "actual" languages but some facsimile of it. One is for an extrasolar species of horse-sized pseudo-pachyderms with two trunks/proboscides on either side of their heads serve as manipulative limbs, which I can only assume that the "handiness" of their trunks could have a consequence to their own languages. This particular word is "Tavan" which is used by this species not unlike our contemporary usage of the latin word "terra" in which it has become a kind of (what I just learned thanks to this video) fusional morpheme that can mean a people, place, a nation or even a world/planet. Probably would have to work out the phonotactics of the word in consideration of a species whose nose not only is used to handle objects but whose handiness might have a consequence.
    The other jumping point is from a fictional evolution of English that is largely the standard for this galactic superpower, and I use the term very loosely. I'm not sure if I should call it Engish, Engarin, Enganese, Engbach or some other weird name, but the general pronunciation of the USMC motto "Semper Fi" sounding more like "Zephyr Fae" to the native speakers. Thanks to your videos, I should be able to reverse engineer these jumping point ideas into something a little more substantial as a conlang or at least start a more viable lexicon.

  • @TheWittywarrior
    @TheWittywarrior Před 6 lety +2

    i'm making a conlang that treats nouns/prepositions polysynthetic-agglutinatively, and its verbs synthetic-fusionally. it isn't anywhere close to done but the main structures are fleshed out at this point

  • @coolvideos5550
    @coolvideos5550 Před 2 lety +2

    I created Qinda-Maary, or l'awzsian. It is a language that based on the Semitic Family (and a little bit of English and Spanish). With that, I created a world for those speakers, and a mythology about the history of them, plus a story about how the language created (clue: by Qinda and mary).
    Also I am working on a new language that will be easy to learn and I call it "PIDGIN HESAJON" for now.
    Actually, I am in a binge of this channel and I have to go on so bye...
    Oh , do you pin comments?