Verse:Hmøøh/Earth: Difference between revisions
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==Regions== | ==Regions== | ||
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**Two large CW areas (one of them a subcontinent) | **Two large CW areas (one of them a subcontinent) | ||
*Africa (A continent to the south of Eurasia) | *Africa (A continent to the south of Eurasia) |
Revision as of 17:42, 4 January 2018
Yrþ (English: Earth /ɜrθ/; Mandarin: 地球 Dìqiú) is the creation of a Wibian conlanger, Schlomo Schngellstein.
Star system
Earth is the 3rd of 8 planets orbiting the yellow main sequence star Sol (English: Sun), in the Milky Way Galaxy. Here are the names of the planets in English and Mandarin Chinese (with Pīnyīn transliterations for the latter):
- Mercury / 水星 Shuǐxīng
- Venus / 金星 Jīnxīng
- Earth / 地球 Dìqiú
- Mars / 火星 Huǒxīng
- Jupiter / 木星 Mùxīng
- Saturn / 土星 Tǔxīng
- Uranus / 天王星 Tiānwángxīng
- Neptune / 海王星 Hǎiwángxīng
Languages
Many languages on Earth use phonologies very similar to languages of Tricin. But Schngellstein often groups them in weird ways, so that phonologies from totally unrelated languages can show up in the same language family, and vice versa.
Here are a few:
- Indo-European (Apple PIE gib)
- Latin (quasi-Thensarian gib with a Clofab touch)
- French (a jokelang; a counterpart to Eevo)
- Italian (quasi-Nurian)
- Portuguese (quasi-Bênôcian)
- Spanish (Bênôcian with a 5-vowel system and no nasal vowels)
- Romanian (Italian with a Trây touch)
- Greek (quasi-Phormatolidin)
- Celtic (a better Thensarian gib)
- Irish (playing with Bhadhagha orthography)
- Welsh (quasi-Eevo)
- Germanic
- German (Tei pseudo-gib)
- English (Tei pseudo-gib)
- Dutch
- Icelandic (loosely inspired by Tsjoen with an Eevo touch)
- Balto-Slavic (Trây pseudo-gibs)
- Indo-Iranian
- Sanskrit (quasi-Camalic)
- Persian
- Armenian
- Albanian
- Latin (quasi-Thensarian gib with a Clofab touch)
- Uralic
- Finnic
- Finnish (quasi-Verapamil with vowel harmony)
- Estonian
- Hungarian
- Finnic
- Sino-Tibetan
- Old Chinese (trying to fit a large phoneme inventory to a Kieng aesthetic)
- Mandarin Chinese (tonal quasi-Sjowaazheñ)
- Cantonese
- Shanghainese
- Tibetan (Proto-Clofabic jokelang)
- Burmese (pseudo-Modern Wibian)
- Old Chinese (trying to fit a large phoneme inventory to a Kieng aesthetic)
- Semitic
- Hebrew
- Israeli Hebrew (quasi-Tsrovesh gib)
- Arabic (triconsonantal Tumacan gib)
- Hebrew
- Mon-Khmer
- Khmer (quasi-Windermere)
- Vietic
- Vietnamese (tonal quasi-Trây)
- Tai-Kadai
- Thai (mutationless Kurmian pseudo-gib)
- Hmong-Mien
- Hmong (tonal Eevo + Roshterian; a counterpart to French in the "other Talma", where final consonants mark tone instead of being silent)
- Eskimo-Aleut
- Kalaallisut
- Ubykh
- Turkic
- Turkish (pseudo-Belen)
- Japanese (A CW language with a simple syllable structure, loosely Prepsocandin Clofabosin-like)
- Korean (A CW language where Sinitic borrowings sound like Tsjoen)
- Uto-Aztecan
- Nahuatl (ejectiveless Naquian gib)
- Salish
- Lushootseed (Adetsib gib with ejectives)
- Dravidian
- Tamil (fricativeless retroVerapamil; name is a meme)
- Drug generic names (Clofabosin gib)
- Na-Dené
- Navajo (quasi-Sjowaazheñ)
Regions
- Eurasia
- Two "Talman" areas in the northwest and southeast
- Two large CW areas (one of them a subcontinent)
- Africa (A continent to the south of Eurasia)
- Click heaven
- Prefixing heaven
- North America (loosely-Txapoalli gib continent)
- South America
- Australia
- Antarctica
Musical cultures
Indonesia
Non-octave tunings based on inharmonic spectra; various 5-note divisions of the octave
Instruments: large orchestras made up of metallophones and gongs are common
Western Europe
Another tradition of temperament and large orchestras
Arab world
Linear temperaments based on equal divisions of the fifth in common use, and their corresponding 17- and 24-tone MOS scales
Siberia
A style of "throat singing" making use of harmonic series scales
North America
A period of intense experimentation with just intonation and other linear temperaments. Key figures: Harry Partch, Ivor Darreg, Erv Wilson, Julián Carrillo, Ezra Sims