[YG Conlang Archives] > [romconlang group] > messages [Date Index] [Thread Index] >


[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next]

Re: [romconlang] Re: Need some elementary help



David: Google Mail has been Unicode-friendly since it went online in
early beta.  Whatever messed up your ç wasn't on their end.

As to Jamie's question: If you want the language to sound French,
david's approach is a good one. If you just want it to sound "as
beautiful as French", there are lots of other options.  First, decide
what it is about French that you like so much. Also, does the setting
require that it be a Romance language?  If not, you could do something
interesting by developing, say, a Germanic language in a Frenchlike
direction (as opposed to English, which is largely a case of taking
French in a Germanic direction...).

On 10/23/06, old_astrologer <david_mccann@hidden.email> wrote:
--- In romconlang@yahoogroups.com, "Jamie Holm" <jimholm@...> wrote:
>
> I'm trying to create the bones of a language with a mostly French
> flair. I'd like it to be similar to French enough to sound as
> beautiful as FIench does, but not to look like I just rearranged
> syllables from a map of France.

We're all game players here, Jamie! As Marion Bradley used to say,
"You're never too old to have a happy childhood".

You need to keep your creations within the limits of natural languages
if they are to look plausible (let alone look French).

You could try creating your own French dialect by altering some of the
features of standard French. For instance, Latin <k> becomes French
<ch> before <a>. But you could keep it as in Picard: that's how we get
both "catch"  and "chase" from a Latin *captiare. Notice how the
standard has also got ti > ts > s, but Picard had ti > ch. So instead
of the standard "chasser" you could have "cacher". Similarly, you can
alter the vowel system. Retaining stressed <a> would give "cha�ar".
Modern "avoir" was once pronounced as it is spelled, and developed
from an earlier "aveir"; suppose the latter had changed instead so
that the <ei> was pronounced as in "Eiffel". Get a book on the history
of French from the library and experiment.

Just a few ideas, but if you just need a naming language for people
and places, or a few tourist-style phrases, this appreach misght help.

David

PS that "cha�ar" should have a c-cedilla in the middle! Perhaps some
ome could tell me what went wrong! Why can't Google join the 21st
century and use Unicode?




To unsubscribe, send an email to:
romconlang-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com


Yahoo! Groups Links







--
Mark J. Reed <markjreed@hidden.email>