Having nothing else to do apart from my Oceania-style world populated entirely by people from Britain who arrived there 10,000 years ago and have evo...But I digress. Not even being able to do that, because of not being able to get the books on historical linguists yet, I decided to sit down and translate something into Verdurian.
I looked around. There was the Bible! But how boring, and those nice Eledhe people have got that sorted anyway. There's always /The Hobbit/? Nah. Then my eyes set upon... well. You figure it out from the hideously mangled, amateurish Verdurian below. It's only a tiny, tiny part of the whole thing, but this was all I managed to do before getting a little sleepy, so if the whole thing isn't even worth redeeming by offering suggestions, I have that in my defence.
SIĎĎIMLAK?
?er?
SO DUNA PERE ? SO ATUNY SIĎĎIMLAKI?
E so hora cre?en perčena u dom Siďďimlaki?. Persy er Siďďimlak? cre?i yonog Elizabeďem.
PERSY:
Lačai mizec, Edmund, dy ei unye! E rodo intoran perčena l? cum et i? soi lanc? er sfai so dem?i.
SIĎĎIMLAK?:
Mizu, Persy, dy so belacatom telle r?cora razumbr? er tisir? pro lialan ir so malfaom er be?ir muďe rak Aď?n.
PERSY:
(Rauete)Ar, acinco tot!
SIĎĎIMLAK?:
Ac řo et. Ditaurai urkbem cumpognul se ?esan suzamen dy ai so muďe dobre.
Siďďimlak? lialve er l?de lazec soi pisi.
-Pthag of Sandelfon
And then some mistakes were probably introduced when trying to transcribe my handwriting, too.
So Bala^H^H^H^HSidhdhimlak
So Bala^H^H^H^HSidhdhimlak
Last edited by Pthagnar on Tue Jun 24, 2003 9:18 am, edited 1 time in total.
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In a vain attempt to draw everyones eyes towards the Verdurian, I'll spoil everyones fun and say that it's from the first scene of Blackadder the Second in Beer.
The original English version in my memory follows:
-Spoily
The original English version in my memory follows:
Pthag of SandelfonThe Whole Damn Dynasty wrote: BLACKADDER
Beer
SCENE 1 ? BLACKADDER'S PLACE
It's breakfast-time at Blackadder's place and Percy and Blackadder are eating the Elizabethan equivalent of toast.
PERCY:
I must say, Edmund, that it was awfully kind of you to invite me to share breakfast with you before the rigours of the day"
BLACKADDER:
They say, Persy, that the civilised man seeks intelligent conversation so that he might rise above the savage and come closer to God.
PERCY:
(Delighted)Yes, I heard that!
BLACKADDER:
I, however, choose to have breakfast with a complete dickhead just to show that I'm best.
Blackadder goes to check the post.
-Spoily
To be fair, I did manage it with Blackadder, but Percy and Edmund are harder as I don't have one of those Big List of Baby Names With Meanings book.Raphael wrote:You should have tried to find Verdurian equivalents for the names- this way, they give it away even to someone who doesn't know one Verdurian word.
However, I do have the Interweb, so let us go for a look:
*looks around a little*
And as PERCIVAL is awww.behindthename.com wrote:PERCY m English
Pronounced: PUR-see
This name can either be a short form of PERCIVAL or else it can derive from a surname which was itself derived from a Norman place name. Percy Bysshe Shelley was a romantic poet from England whose works include 'Adonais' and 'Ozymandias'.
we'll go with the place name, so we're stuck with Persy.www.behindthename.com wrote:Celtic name of unknown meaning.
Now we're getting somewhere!www.behindthename.com wrote:EDMUND m English, German
Pronounced: ED-mund
Means "rich protector" from Old English ead "rich, blessed" and mund "protector"
*looks up the list of Verdurian Names*
So Edmund could (as there seems to be no "protector" part) be Verdurianised into Veranlet.Verdurian Names wrote:leti - wealth - LETA
vuran - warrior
Pthag of Sandelfon
-Overusing the quote function
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No, that occured a while back:Pthag wrote:-Overusing the quote function
http://www.spinnoff.com/zbb/viewtopic.p ... c&start=50
I think the record was between 25-30 before it deleted my starting quote.


