Verse:Anachron: Difference between revisions

From Linguifex
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (→‎Dialects and lost sisters: "What if we switched vowels and tones in a triconsonantal language?")
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Line 4: Line 4:
=== Sino-Xenic ===
=== Sino-Xenic ===
* [[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/Sino-Bantu]]
* [[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/Sino-Bantu]]
* [[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/Boethian]]
 
* [[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/Llun]]
=== Greco-Latino-Xenic ===
=== Greco-Latino-Xenic ===
* [[Shemroghian]]
* [[Shemroghian]]

Revision as of 18:37, 20 May 2023

In this versespace:

Verse talk:

Anachron, or Anarchon, is where all our (User:IlL and User:Praimhín's) historically hard-to-justify a-posteriori conlangs go.

Xenic languages

Sino-Xenic

Greco-Latino-Xenic

Hispano-Xenic

  • Hispano-Koiné Greek

Arabo-Xenic

Hiberno-Xenic

  • Hiberno-Japanese

Hmoobo-Xenic

  • Hmoobo-Occitan

Chittagono-Xenic

Armeno-Xenic

  • Armeno-Thai

Miscellaneous

  • Ancient Greek-Xenic Japanese
  • A Japano-Chinese

Dialects and lost sisters

  • A triconsonantal IE branch with one vowel and 3 to 6 tones
  • A tonal dialect of Armenian, reflecting certain PIE stop phonations as tones; in the Caucasian tonal sprachbund
  • A Romlang that retains Old Latin clusters as clicks, etc.

Bogolangs