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Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Mon Oct 10, 2011 5:51 pm
by Ouagadougou
There are hordes of banal romlangs floating in the tepid sea of abandoned conlangs, but on occasion some jewels arise that are truly innovative or intriguing. What romlangs have you encountered or created that stand out?

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 12:59 pm
by Thry
Ouagadougou wrote:There are hordes of banal romlangs floating in the tepid sea of abandoned conlangs, but on occasion some jewels arise that are truly innovative or intriguing. What romlangs have you encountered or created that stand out?
My romlang is pretty much banal, it's not intended to be outstanding or anything, but maybe some of its characteristics are interesting.

For example, I've created an alternative for the conjunction que "that" deriving from the nexus (well, it actually is the nexus) i "and", which originates from subjunctive wishes; I've tried to devise a very marginal causative but I don't how credible that is (posted it in Quickies), I have a distinction between strong and weak infinitive originating from Latin second/third conjugation stress patterns, and probably something else I don't remember well.

Other than that, it's really intended to be similar in syntax, grammar and phonetics to things like Spanish, Portuguese and Catalan, so it's not exotic. That doesn't mean it's gonna get lost in any sea, though!

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 1:10 pm
by Ziz
I used to have a romlang (Sharshali) replete with ugly retroflexes and a pretty un-Romance set of fricatives. It was supposed to be a North African (Southern Romance) romlang, closest related to Sardinian. I also planned on Semiticizing it with Phoenician and Arabic influences, but eventually the whole project boiled down to picking random Romance words to replace with Semitic ones, and looking up Arabic phrases and calquing them into Sharshali. I got bored with it and stopped working on, but I still like the idea, so maybe I'll overhaul it and develop a better methodology and see what happens...

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 1:12 pm
by Astraios
Like a mirror-version of Maltese? Do it! :o

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 1:20 pm
by Ziz
Astraios wrote:Like a mirror-version of Maltese? Do it! :o
Now that I'm thinking about it again, I've suddenly got a bunch of new ideas! Maybe I will, if I can find some time. :P

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 1:23 pm
by Kvan
That makes me think of "The Years of Rice and Salt" by Kim Stanley Robinson, where ~99% of Europe was wiped out by the Bubonic Plague. The entire time I read the book I kept thinking of what wonderful languages would have evolved in Europe. And even more interestingly how the indigenous populations of North America contacted and lived beside Chinese colonists and on the East Coast I believe Arab colonists. The whole book makes for wonderful linguistic speculation. Hell, maybe I should reread the book for some specifics of the placement of the colonists try to make a language based off it. Hmm... I guess that's neither here nor there though.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 3:28 pm
by Bristel
Eandil's romlang's causative forms are pretty cool, it's something that is a bit different from most romlangs I have seen.

I like Antirri's Sharshali, I wish he'd work on it more. :)

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 4:26 pm
by Herr Dunkel
I've semitised Romanian...
Yeah...

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 4:40 pm
by Ziz
Bristel wrote:Eandil's romlang's causative forms are pretty cool, it's something that is a bit different from most romlangs I have seen.

I like Antirri's Sharshali, I wish he'd work on it more. :)
Wowie, a fan!! :mrgreen:

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 4:52 pm
by Thry
Bristel wrote:Eandil's romlang's causative forms are pretty cool, it's something that is a bit different from most romlangs I have seen.
Thank you!
Bristel wrote:I like Antirri's Sharshali, I wish he'd work on it more. :)
Yea, if you Antirri retakes it I'd like to see it.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Tue Oct 11, 2011 5:45 pm
by Acid Badger
One of my first real conlangs was a romlang. It was supposed to be a southern Romance language, obviously. :( I took some sound changes from Southern Italian dialects, and some unique ones and then I added a lot of semitic loan words.
I also have a romlang that is supposed to be a modern day version of the hypotetical romance language along the river Mosel in Germany. It shares some sound changes with french, but there is also a great German influence, of course.

Generally spaking, I'm a fan of romlangs. The only thing is, that most of them seem to be quite poor done and just look like Spanish or Romanian to me. An interesting romlang has to have some unique yet not unrealistic sound changes, some unique traits in its grammar (that's not "My romlang X retains the Latin case system") etc.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 7:13 am
by WeepingElf
My own romlang, Roman Germanech, doesn't do much of interest, I think, though there is a phonetic development which I am quite fond of despite being not planned that way but falling out from the combination of Romance and German sound changes:

We start with Vulgar Latin: /i e E a O o u/.

1. /E/ and /O/ are diphthongized, which happened in many Romance languages: /E/ > /ie/ and /O/ > /uo/. So far, ordinary Romance development. What now happens is based on what happened in German.

2. Back vowels before /i/ in the following syllablle are fronted: /u uo o a/ > /y yø ø e/.

3. The diphthongs are monophthongized: /ie yø uo/ > /i y u/. What you can see here is that /E/ and /O/ have leap-frogged /e/ and /o/, respectively.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 9:16 am
by Rui
I've tried a Romlang before as well (it's a rite of passage, in a way :D), and I tried to be interesting by giving it an ablaut system in verb conjugations. It was actually really interesting, but I abandoned the project when I realized I don't really know anything about Latin and I probably wouldn't be able to bullshit my way through it to make a realistic Romlang. Here's a sample, taken from some Latin textbook that I found online (only words put through sound changes, not much in the way of grammar changes, semantic drift, neologisms, etc.):

"El deo sümón dól mal quie grav sópletj, mai ji, qui paren el léyé dól deu, són cürad pos qua mert. El vét es dhel deo el plü grat, quiai avab esj dhel uomnié el plü üdel. Ló plü buon dié quó tód pramj er qu’iemuortalet. Tal priemj es dad a Ercól."

Something about Hercules, judging by the name and what I can remember of the sound changes. Apparently it was something like: /El dEu s_aymOn dOl mal kiE gRav s_auplEts\ mEj z_ai ki paREn El leje dOl dEu s_aOn ts\yRad pOs_a ka mEtS). El vet Es_a DEl dEu El ply gRat kiE avab Es\ DEl uOmnie El ply ydEl. lu ply buOn die ku tud pRam_j ER k-iEmuOtS)alEt/

I also had an idea to do a bogolang thing with Old Chinese > Mandarin sound changes, but then I couldn't find much in the way of sound changes...I tried to fudge it a little and did a little word list, with stuff like this:

avis > wéi
sanguis > sàn
pōns > pěng
mors > mèng (also came from mensis...)
oculus > kú
ignis > néi
manus > mán

etc. etc. I would actually really like to see something more serious done along these lines though, it would be really interesting.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 2:05 pm
by Gojera
Sharshali was such an awesome idea.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 2:23 pm
by brandrinn
I kind of like "banal" Romlangs. Most Romlangs try to be as weird as possible, which defeats the purpose. Why would you get into a group of extremely similar languages with a unified aesthetic if your end result has nothing to do with their history, areal features, or euphony? If your Romlang is weirder than Sardinian, that's a good sign you need to stop. I prefer Romlangs that could blend effortlessly into the langscape (this was supposed to be "landscape," but I'm leaving it as it's the greatest typo ever), as if it sprang straight out of the mountains of its particular region.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 2:44 pm
by WeepingElf
brandrinn wrote:I kind of like "banal" Romlangs. Most Romlangs try to be as weird as possible, which defeats the purpose. Why would you get into a group of extremely similar languages with a unified aesthetic if your end result has nothing to do with their history, areal features, or euphony? If your Romlang is weirder than Sardinian, that's a good sign you need to stop. I prefer Romlangs that could blend effortlessly into the langscape (this was supposed to be "landscape," but I'm leaving it as it's the greatest typo ever), as if it sprang straight out of the mountains of its particular region.
Fine. I have seen romlangs which are blatantly implausible, either by popping up in areas far removed from anywhere the Romans ever went, or by assuming radical grammatical changes which seem utterly gratuitous, or by both combined. Any possible alternative-historical Romance language would be quite similar to those we know, though some may show some oddities. I can live with a romlang which has Welsh-like phonology and Welsh-like initial mutations, but a romlang in the heart of Africa and with clicks? No way.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 2:49 pm
by con quesa
I've never created a Romlang per se because vulgar latin bores me. I did toy with creating a descendant of Classical Latin (i.e. keeping the case system), whose main feature was the development of lexical tone. For instance the nasalization of the accusative -m became low tone and that eventually got analogized as a marker of the accusative case. I might come back to this someday - contrary to brandrinn's opinion, I am absolutely in favor of "weird" Romlangs, especially to the point of not really caring about what proto-romance actually did historically and trying *not* to be banal. There's plenty of actual romance languages out there already if you're going to be slavish about authenticity.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 2:57 pm
by Ouagadougou
^^
One of my current romlangs does that, having simplified all diphthongs into falling tones. I also am toying with devoicing voiced consonants and fricativizing the previously devoiced ones. I am also adding glottal stops to replace intervocalic t, and metathesizing initial clusters so that initial [st] > [ts] > [t͡ʃ], for example. There's also m-nasalization, but that isn't very exciting.
EDIT: I turned Classical Latin's cases into politeness suffixes: the genitive became a polite register (since it is indirectly addressing someone), the accusative became a fossilized neutral register, and the dative became a pejorative register (since it is sort of a "direct" address)

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 3:54 pm
by Thry
brandrinn wrote:I kind of like "banal" Romlangs. Most Romlangs try to be as weird as possible, which defeats the purpose. Why would you get into a group of extremely similar languages with a unified aesthetic if your end result has nothing to do with their history, areal features, or euphony? If your Romlang is weirder than Sardinian, that's a good sign you need to stop. I prefer Romlangs that could blend effortlessly into the langscape (this was supposed to be "landscape," but I'm leaving it as it's the greatest typo ever), as if it sprang straight out of the mountains of its particular region.
I agree with you, in fact I wanted my romlang to be close to Spanish and similar in the feel, because I wanted something I could talk fluently in without that much effort and learning if I wanted to, and I didn't have the will to investigate and invent outlandish features.

Plain lol at langscape hahahahhaa.

@Con quesa, I can see you're careless about proto-romance, but cheese will always be masculine! What's next, la fromaggia? It's like a linguistic drag queen. (just joking :P)

Also, in one moment of frustration that Tolkien's Sindarin wasn't useable and I wanted something to have its wonderful taste, I developed a way to cipher Latin into something very Sindarin-sounding, of course with modified grammar (in favor of Sindarin). I don't know if the result is a sin or alright, though. It's obviously not a conlang, but it's got mutations and all that so I remembered it when you talked about Welsh.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 4:12 pm
by brandrinn
I think I've put my finger on exactly why I hate weird Romlangs. Making a Romlang automatically means you are curating linguistic history. Your audience needs to be language nerds because nobody else gives a shit. So if you agonize over something like the palatization of /n/ people will appreciate it, even though it's not a particularly flashy sound change, because we enjoy diving into the minutiae of Romance diachronic phonology. In contrast, retroflexes only make sense if it is in some way related to Sardinian. Otherwise, you're ignoring all the yummy things we come to see when we read about Romlangs. It's like going to a seafood restaurant and ordering a hamburger.

Weird shit for the sake of weird shit belongs in sci-fi conlanging. Go nuts. Everybody loves Dritok.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 4:44 pm
by communistplot
I was working on a romlang(s) in it's own branch of the family that was formed in the Crimea. The idea is kind of shelved right now but I want to work on it eventually. It's major influences would have been Greek, Crimean Tatar and Ukranian. It also had some limited contact with Romanian on the one hand and Caucasic languages on the other.

a couple of sound changes that I remember:

C > 0 _#
o: > ou > oU > ow
k > S > h > 0
e > jE V_V
e > i
Nt > n
Ct > pt > f

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 7:43 pm
by Dewrad
brandrinn wrote:I think I've put my finger on exactly why I hate weird Romlangs. Making a Romlang automatically means you are curating linguistic history. Your audience needs to be language nerds because nobody else gives a shit. So if you agonize over something like the palatization of /n/ people will appreciate it, even though it's not a particularly flashy sound change, because we enjoy diving into the minutiae of Romance diachronic phonology. In contrast, retroflexes only make sense if it is in some way related to Sardinian. Otherwise, you're ignoring all the yummy things we come to see when we read about Romlangs. It's like going to a seafood restaurant and ordering a hamburger.

Weird shit for the sake of weird shit belongs in sci-fi conlanging. Go nuts. Everybody loves Dritok.
Eu craizu ca tan amu. Antel acast post tai e lu tai d'anuant, spraime exactamant cal ca man san maçnat sanglo dele romlange.

I think I love you. In this and your previous post you have articulated exactly that which I've always personally thought about romlangs.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 8:10 pm
by Rui
brandrinn wrote:I think I've put my finger on exactly why I hate weird Romlangs. Making a Romlang automatically means you are curating linguistic history. Your audience needs to be language nerds because nobody else gives a shit. So if you agonize over something like the palatization of /n/ people will appreciate it, even though it's not a particularly flashy sound change, because we enjoy diving into the minutiae of Romance diachronic phonology. In contrast, retroflexes only make sense if it is in some way related to Sardinian. Otherwise, you're ignoring all the yummy things we come to see when we read about Romlangs. It's like going to a seafood restaurant and ordering a hamburger.

Weird shit for the sake of weird shit belongs in sci-fi conlanging. Go nuts. Everybody loves Dritok.
I think that's exactly the reason why others (including myself) like to see weird/interesting things in Romlangs. I'm only going to speak for myself here, but if I want to see something that could theoretically fit into Roman history, unless it's something that doesn't exist currently like a theoretical modern-day North African Romlang or something in Eastern Europe, I would just look at real life. I'm interested to see what quirky things make it stand apart from natural Romance languages. Or in the case of my interest in Latin with Old Chinese > Mandarin sound changes, what a cross between Romance and Mandarin would sound like. Then again, I don't care much for conworlding, and therefore would not be as perturbed by a Romlang with retroflexes that is not related to Sardinian; in other words, I am more interested in the conlang aspect than in the historical context.

The "minutiae of Romance diachronics" is boring to me because it already happened in real life, and then again in the "banal" Romlangs that are created by the people who, like you, are more interested in the realism than the quirkiness.

ETA: That's not to say that I don't think that there are any realistic, "banal" Romlangs that aren't interesting, though. I do appreciate the effort that someone puts in to thoroughly research Roman history to create a seemingly realistic Romlang as well, because they *are* going to be different than natural Romance languages, and seeing what differences the creator included is also interesting in its own right. I just really like the quirks as well.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 8:34 pm
by Ollock
My question, if just making an alt-history lang is so interesting, why not branch out into other families more? Especially outside Indo-European. I would love to see some Chinese conlangs (bonus if you go so far as to create an orthography using Chinese characters that includes repurposed or entirely new characters). Or, say, an extra Bantu language. Or Athabaskan, Uto-Aztecan ... anything, really.

Re: Interesting things you've done/seen done in a Romlang...

Posted: Wed Oct 12, 2011 8:46 pm
by Rui
Because a) Latin is the most well-documented and commonly taught (at least in English, not sure about other langs) of the "classical" languages, and b) I like the idea of taking something familiar and accessible and making it really different. I would equally love a really weird Germanic lang, for instance.

But Chinese, Bantu, Athabaskan, Uto-Aztecan, et al. are so foreign to me (well, except Mandarin, and even then, I'm not familiar with any other Chinese languages) that I wouldn't be able to appreciate the oddity for what it was. Of course, making an althistory or conlang from the older forms of any of those languages would be "weird" from the start, since I don't know much about them.

However yes, I do think that althistorians (? is that the term?) could do with branching out to more families, though I'm not really one to be telling people what to do, since I hardly have any conlang of my own to show........