There comes a time in a nerd's life when they have to take a good, long look at what they've done with their time on earth and think to themselves... FUCK! I HAVEN'T EVEN HAD A PROPER STAB AT A CONLANG!
Here is my first contribution to July's RPG BLOG CARNIVAL, hosted by the inestimable Rook. For this post I'm going to draft a syllabary and in doing so lay the foundations for a constructed language (conlang).
Cuneiform tablet |
Syllabary
A syllabary is a set of written symbols ("syllabograms") representing the syllables of which a language's words are comprised.
The Conlang
My understanding of linguistics is patchy. My entire knowledge of the subject arises from these 3 facts:
- My first major (incomplete, as I may have mentioned before) in Anthropology
- Teaching English as a foreign language in Vietnam, 2014-16 and 2018-19
- Studying bilingual language acquisition to understand how my children develop linguistically
Caveats:
- This conlang is not going to use tones (to reduce the number of possible syllables ) but also...
- ...this conlang will avoid (or attempt to avoid) the inclusion of Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary
- I omitted the vowels "ă", "ê" ad some of the tripthongs, though I did add the dipthong /ei/ as a substitute for the vietnamese "ây" ("ei" does occur in some place names, most notably Pleiku, but is non-standard and derived from the local indigenous language)
- I simplified the consonants:
- combing "k", "c" and "kh" as IPA /k/
- amalgamated "ch" and "tr" as /tr/ (which some local dialects do already)
- changed "th" into /θ/ (as opposed to /tʰ/)
- "d" and "gi-" combined into /z/
Base Grid
ao | âu | ac | |
- | ao | âu | ac |
/k/ (c,kh) |
cao | câu | cac |
/f/ (ph) |
phao | phâu | phac |
Syllables are thus comprised of a consonant from the first column and a vowel or vowel + consonant from the first row.
My stripped down, quasi-viet phonology consists of 20 initial consonants and 36 vowel/vowel+consonant "stems".
At first blush that looks like 20 x 36 = 720 syllables, factor in the further 36 syllables without an intial consonant and that makes for 756 syllabograms.
Which is a lot, and sort of makes me wish I'd gone for an alphabet...
But I made my bed, please allow me to shit and piss all over it.
Othography
The challenge of the syllabary is that one first has to deal with phonology, the organisation of sounds/phones in the language. After ham-fisting that, one then progresses straight into orthography:
An orthography is a set of conventions for writing a language (wikipedia)
Rather than produce a selection of the 756 syllabograms, the logical route (to me, at least) seems to be making a sort of halfway alphabet/syllabary (apologies in advance to linguists who are probably tearing their hair out at me reinventing the wheel or whatever).
This method entails coming up with two sets of symbols: one for the 20 initial consonants, and one for the 36 vowel/vowel consonant sets.
These symbols can then be connected to make a unique syllabogram, like so:
Links
There's this thing called Wikipedia you can use to look up things online, I've found it a vast improvement over my 1997 Encarta CD Rom.RPG BLOG CARNIVAL: WORDS
https://foreignplanets.blogspot.com/2024/06/words-etymology-onomatology-and.html
Galaxy 24|
https://bastionland.substack.com/p/a-galaxy-in-a-year
No comments:
Post a Comment