Smiley Award: Difference between revisions

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Below is a list of the winners of the Smiley Award, listed in inverse chronological order:
Below is a list of the winners of the Smiley Award, listed in inverse chronological order:


* 2019: [[Fith]], by Jeffrey Henning
* 2020: [[Verdurian]], by Mark Rosenfelder.
* 2018: [[Tapissary]], by Steven Travis
* 2019: [[Fith]], by Jeffrey Henning.
* 2017: [[Idrani]], by Trent Pehrson
* 2018: [[Tapissary]], by Steven Travis.
* 2017: [[Idrani]], by Trent Pehrson.
* 2016: [[Ilaini]], by Irina Rempt.
* 2016: [[Ilaini]], by Irina Rempt.
* 2015: [[Kash]], by Roger Mills.
* 2015: [[Kash]], by Roger Mills.
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=== Kēlen ===
=== Kēlen ===
{{Quote|text=I suppose if one had to categorize it it would be an engelang, but unlike most engelangs I've seen, whose descriptions are usually about three hundred times the size of its vocabulary, Kēlen has the life and vibrancy of a full-fledged artlang. Take the relational se, for example. In fact, go here right now, scroll down a little more than halfway, and take a look at the conjugation (for lack of a better word) of ''se''. That's not something a typical engelang does. [...] Sylvia's got a ton of information on Kēleni culture and society, a description of the Kēlen calendar, this crazy divination thing that I don't really get but really like to look at (it has a button you can press, and stuff happens when you press it!), not one, not two, but ''three'' scripts, a translation of an utterly intolerable prose passage, an online dictionary that immediately makes me want to stop using it and do something else because I'm so jealous of how well the freaking thing works and so frustrated with my feeble attempts to try to create something that's even half as good as it, and tons more!|sign=''David J. Peterson''|source=Smiley Award}}
{{Quote|text=I suppose if one had to categorize ['''Kēlen'''] it would be an engelang, but unlike most engelangs I've seen, whose descriptions are usually about three hundred times the size of its vocabulary, Kēlen has the life and vibrancy of a full-fledged artlang. Take the relational se, for example. In fact, go here right now, scroll down a little more than halfway, and take a look at the conjugation (for lack of a better word) of ''se''. That's not something a typical engelang does. [...] Sylvia's got a ton of information on Kēleni culture and society, a description of the Kēlen calendar, this crazy divination thing that I don't really get but really like to look at (it has a button you can press, and stuff happens when you press it!), not one, not two, but ''three'' scripts, a translation of an utterly intolerable prose passage, an online dictionary that immediately makes me want to stop using it and do something else because I'm so jealous of how well the freaking thing works and so frustrated with my feeble attempts to try to create something that's even half as good as it, and tons more!|sign=''David J. Peterson''|source=Smiley Award}}


== External Links ==
== External Links ==
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== Notes ==
== Notes ==
<references/>
<references/>
[[Category:Conlangery]]
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