Verse:Avishviya: Difference between revisions

From Linguifex
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
(12 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
(Ilithian ''avišvijá'' 'world' (<- 'what we perceive') <- h₂ewiswiyeh2)  
(Ilithian ''awiſſwijá'' 'world' (<- 'what we perceive') <- h₂ewiswiyeh2, hypothetical reconstruction of Aoife)  


An India-inspired setting
An India-inspired setting


Creation of 20th-century [[Verse:Lõis|Lõisian]] author Aoife O'Flaherty; conlangs in this setting are mainly inspired by Sanskrit, Czech, Arabic, Tamil, Pama-Nyungan, Irish, and Danish.
Creation of 20th-century [[Verse:Lõis|Lõisian]] author Aoife O'Flaherty, a Lõisian Irish-American polyglot who spoke Czech, Sanskrit, Modern Irish, Old Irish, Hebrew, etc.; conlangs in this setting are mainly inspired by Sanskrit, Czech, Arabic, Tamil, Pama-Nyungan, Irish, and Danish.
== Languages ==
== Languages ==
* [[Ilithian]] ("Czecho-Sanskrit"; a typical old IE language)
"Everything evolves into Danish gib"
** [[Zeuhi]]
* IE
** A quasi-Czech gib, a favorite for "Carnatic singing language"
** [[Ilithian]] ("Czecho-Sanskrit"; a typical old IE language)
* [[Wīäkkarung]] (a-priori Australian/Tamil/Polynesian/Danish hybrid)
*** [[Zeuhi]]
* [[Séiseal]] (Max-Dano-Hiberno-Arabic)
** Sanskrit
*** Marotlism Prakrit (where ''pida'' derives from Skt. ''pitā'' 'father')
* [[Řeuŋnie]]
* [[Verse:Avishviya/Zvetanda|Zvetanda]]

Latest revision as of 01:37, 9 June 2024

(Ilithian awiſſwijá 'world' (<- 'what we perceive') <- h₂ewiswiyeh2, hypothetical reconstruction of Aoife)

An India-inspired setting

Creation of 20th-century Lõisian author Aoife O'Flaherty, a Lõisian Irish-American polyglot who spoke Czech, Sanskrit, Modern Irish, Old Irish, Hebrew, etc.; conlangs in this setting are mainly inspired by Sanskrit, Czech, Arabic, Tamil, Pama-Nyungan, Irish, and Danish.

Languages

"Everything evolves into Danish gib"

  • IE
    • Ilithian ("Czecho-Sanskrit"; a typical old IE language)
    • Sanskrit
      • Marotlism Prakrit (where pida derives from Skt. pitā 'father')
  • Řeuŋnie
  • Zvetanda