Welcome to the Lingufacture wiki!
Featured Conlangs
The Aterran Languages are a group of languages created for Anthony Gutierrez for his graphic novel series
The Lost Children.
Alderxmanuvgöm, also known as Dhënuvgöm or simply Northern, is a language spoken in Aterra.
Ashian is an ancient language spoken in Aterra.
Hakdor is a dialect continuum spoken by the Hakdor race on Aterra (also know as The Blighted).
Modern Standard Imperial is the official language of much of Aterra. Descended from a very formal fusional language, modern Imperial is very analytic, and is arguably moderately creolized, though not to the extent that would rise to the definition of a true creole. It retains a somewhat deep orthography harkening back to its ancient predecessor.
Arbulian is alone among the Aterran languages in that it is not presently spoken on the planet, nor indeed even from the planet. It is highly fusional, and is spoken by a race of deities.
Western is a language spoken on the western continent on Aterra.
Chardane is the language spoken by the pack animals of the same name on Aterra.
Braereth was a Western Romance language spoken in pockets of mountainous areas from the Alps to the Carpathians until the mid-sixteenth century. It was created for CJ Kavanaugh’s upcoming Kindle Vella series
The Chronicles of Braereth.
Iskan is an
a priori language created for author Gavin Hamilton for an upcoming novel series. It is intended to invoke the flavour of Ancient Greek with notes of Hebrew and Adûnaic.
Lezyalu is an
a priori language created for author Ty David Sheetz for an upcoming novel series.
Nymeran (or
Tlíl Nime) is the language spoken in the land of Nym, the backdrop of
Mythopoeia Mythopoeia’s comic
Glow. The language and alphabet were created in 2015 by linguist Niamh Doyle. In 2021, gearing up for the fourth issue of Glow, Mythopoeia hired
Jamin Johnson to take over the “care and feeding” and further development of Nymeran.
Zjenavi is an
a priori language created for author Luca-Fabio Di Franco for an upcoming novel series.
Personal Languages
Dlatci is an
a priori language that Jamin has been working on since 1994. It has undergone some massive changes over the years, though, and barely resembles its former self.
Building off of the original idea of what
Valthungian was supposed to be, before it became what it is instead,
Gothic Romance is actually a collection of three languages in several stages. It starts with the idea that the Goths who sacked Rome in 410ᴀᴅ continued to speak
Gothic (or a close relative thereof) in parallel with Latin, rather than just switching to Latin completely as they did. This gave way to
Old Valthungian, much as described, but from there, the development changes course from what eventually leads to
Middle Valthungian, and by around 1200ᴀᴅ we find ourselves in a remote northern Italian town where the locals all speak both a form of Gothic and a form of
Extemplar Latin which come to have a roughly equivalent phonology. From this point, the two languages exist in tandem, borrowing words back and forth between them until eventually we end up with
Gothic Romance. Is it a
Romance language with a lot of
Gothic vocabulary? Maybe. Is it a
Germanic language with a lot of
Latin vocabulary? Maybe. Is it a creole? Probably not, but also maybe. Is it dark and spooky and probably something that vampires would speak if they were feeling particularly poetic? Definitely.
Gothic Romance is the result of the evolution and gradual merging of two historic languages, Italian Gothic (a 13ᵗʰ-century descendant of Old Valthungian) and Bad Romance (a 13ᵗʰ-century descendant of Extemplar Latin):
Italian Gothic is the direct
Germanic ancestor of
Gothic Romance, descended in turn from
Old Valthungian. This isn’t really a conlang so much as a snapshot of various sound changes leading to
Gothic Romance.
Old Valthungian isn’t so much a conlang as a snapshot in the development of
Italian Gothic (and
Valthungian, below). To the casual observer it probably looks like a Roman spelling Gothic badly, which would not be entirely inaccurate.
Old Valthungian represents a period in the development of
Italian Gothic lasting from around 800‒1200
ad marked mainly by changes to geminates and intervocalic consonants, as well as the introduction of Germanic ī/j-umlaut and some small but important changes to all of the vowels. Though this is a range which experienced many changes, the most representative example of “Old Valthungian” is the language as captured in a few surviving texts believed to date to around 950‒975
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Griutungi is the theoretical ancestor of
Gothic Romance which was likely a dialect of, or at least mutually intelligible with,
Gothic. Griutungi isn’t so much a conlang as it is just Gothic, but not so much how Gothic really was as how I wish Gothic had been.
Adzaay, also know as
Ox-Yew, is an
a priori language that is still very much under construction, without much to look at yet. It has a fairly limited but unconventional phonology (involving several types of affricates and liquids), and most of its infrastructure can be broken down into groups of three. (E.g. 3 vowels, stops, nasals, liquids, 3 genders, moods, types of cases, nonal number system (based on an earlier trinary base), tripartite morphosyntactic alignment… you get the idea.)
Valthungian, or the Grey Tongue (ISO-639-3:qgt, BRCL:grey), another
Germanic a posteriori, this time a close relative of Gothic. Not directly descended from
Gothic, as such, but maybe a great-great-nephew. Jamin aspired to maintain a blog about it as it developed, but as you know, he’s seriously bad at that:
https://blog.benjaminpauljohnson.com (keyword Valthungian). Jamin formally presented Valthungian as a theoretical descendant of Gothic at the 53rd International Congress on Medieval Studies in Kalamazoo in 2018, which was attended by twos or even threes of people.
Like
Italian Gothic and
Bad Romance,
Middle Valthungian isn’t so much a conlang as a snapshot in the development of
Valthungian, though it is actually fairly well-developed and could be coerced into a functional conlang in a pinch.
Middle Valthungian represents a period in the development of
Valthungian lasting from around 1200‒1600
ad marked mainly by palatalization of a great many consonants as well as some minor reduction to unstressed vowels. Though this is a range which experienced many changes, the most representative example of “Middle Valthungian” is the language as captured by the suddenly-prolific Valthungian writers at the beginning of the Renaissance, circa 1450‒1500
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Like
Middle Valthungian,
Old Valthungian isn’t so much a conlang as a snapshot in the development of
Valthungian. To the casual observer it probably looks like a Roman spelling Gothic badly, which would not be entirely inaccurate.
Old Valthungian represents a period in the development of
Valthungian lasting from around 800‒1200
ad marked mainly by changes to geminates and intervocalic consonants, as well as the introduction of Germanic ī/j-umlaut and some small but important changes to all of the vowels. Though this is a range which experienced many changes, the most representative example of “Old Valthungian” is the language as captured in a few surviving texts believed to date to around 950‒975
ad
Griutungi is the theoretical ancestor of
Valthungian which was likely a dialect of, or at least mutually intelligible with,
Gothic. Griutungi isn’t so much a conlang as it is just Gothic, but not so much how Gothic really was as how I wish Gothic had been.