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18 word language

door k1attack, 6 maart 2010

Berichten: 147

Taal: English

k1attack (Profiel tonen) 11 maart 2010 15:51:54

Puna, Bon Wen, Toki Pona or Vuyamu?
You choose!

jan aleksan (Profiel tonen) 11 maart 2010 16:03:27

... Toki IO, Ta Ti...

Bon Wen seems a bit set aside.

k1attack (Profiel tonen) 11 maart 2010 16:05:58

jan aleksan:... Toki IO, Ta Ti...

Bon Wen seems a bit set aside.
What???

jan aleksan (Profiel tonen) 11 maart 2010 16:13:35

k1attack:
jan aleksan:... Toki IO, Ta Ti...

Bon Wen seems a bit set aside.
What???
there is no activity since the last time I vizited the website, several months ago.

(Toki IO and Ta Ti are other examples of tokipona-like languages)

k1attack (Profiel tonen) 11 maart 2010 16:15:56

And what about Puna, Bon Wen and Vuyamu?

jan aleksan (Profiel tonen) 11 maart 2010 16:51:11

k1attack:And what about Puna, Bon Wen and Vuyamu?
They are on the top of my list, with Konya, Ilomi and Kaqwan

Greyshades (Profiel tonen) 11 maart 2010 17:17:11

k1attack:I support Esperanto, but I admit, the minimalistic languages also look really tempting. They're not for idiots, I was wrong. They're made just for fun!!!

I think Vuyamu should add an extra word, "li", which could be used before and after a proper name, since every other syllable has a meaning.

Also, I think adjectives should go before a noun, not after it, in order to make compund words easier to understand. E.g. it should be "fasting-moving-object" rather than "object-moving-fast" and the new name of the language will be "Muyavu" (li muyavu li" in the language itself) instead of "Vuyamu".
To me, it seemed that "object-moving-fast" makes more sense, especially when reading. The four parts of speech really help with grammar, and I think "categorizing" the roots by order of importance (isn't that how they classify things in the animal kingdom?) works well.

The 5 "m" roots (ma, mo, mu, me, mi) are sort of quantifiers in my opinion. In my work, I combined "ma" and "mo" into just "mo" because they have the same essential meaning (each/every).

However your idea of using "li" for titles would solve a lot of problems and I think it is great rido.gif and I'm glad to see your interested in the language.

And for your curiosity:
1. Vuyamu
2. Toki Pona
3. Bon Wen
4. Puna

ceigered (Profiel tonen) 12 maart 2010 04:38:53

Neo Patwa 2.0! ridego.gif

(although that language seems to be currently in a state of developmental flŭ - last time I checked with Jens (a good while ago, maybe May 09?), the creator, he was investigating different orthographies and I think we had a discussion on, for example, the pronunciation of "h" (which is basically a stand in for a whole lot of (loosely) guttural sounds all the way to the alveolar approximate R (English R), but you might as well pronounce it "ĥ" or "h").

But Neo Patwa, strictly speaking, is more pidgin than Toki-Pona-ish (which is conversly also like a pidgin but not the same as Neo Patwa).

BTW - This looks interesting. Not necessarily promising, but interesting as it provides insight as to how a world language may be formed - over time.

This also looks very interesting, not so much because it answers the question of the essay (it doesn't seem to do so very well, at least, I didn't really understand why the initial IAL phonology should be Western-biased - I mean, I kind of do, but using my own reasoning rather than the article's) but because it discusses some interesting topics in language creation.

k1attack (Profiel tonen) 12 maart 2010 13:08:10

Greyshades:
k1attack:I support Esperanto, but I admit, the minimalistic languages also look really tempting. They're not for idiots, I was wrong. They're made just for fun!!!

I think Vuyamu should add an extra word, "li", which could be used before and after a proper name, since every other syllable has a meaning.

Also, I think adjectives should go before a noun, not after it, in order to make compund words easier to understand. E.g. it should be "fasting-moving-object" rather than "object-moving-fast" and the new name of the language will be "Muyavu" (li muyavu li" in the language itself) instead of "Vuyamu".
To me, it seemed that "object-moving-fast" makes more sense, especially when reading. The four parts of speech really help with grammar, and I think "categorizing" the roots by order of importance (isn't that how they classify things in the animal kingdom?) works well.

The 5 "m" roots (ma, mo, mu, me, mi) are sort of quantifiers in my opinion. In my work, I combined "ma" and "mo" into just "mo" because they have the same essential meaning (each/every).

However your idea of using "li" for titles would solve a lot of problems and I think it is great rido.gif and I'm glad to see your interested in the language.

And for your curiosity:
1. Vuyamu
2. Toki Pona
3. Bon Wen
4. Puna
Why Vuyamu? Why not the others?

Greyshades (Profiel tonen) 12 maart 2010 15:02:50

Vuyamu seems the most structured. Don't get me wrong, Toki Pona is interesting and Bon Wen probably is too, but I see Vuyamu with more potential to be understandable (at least more so than the other three).

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