Eti, a "birdlang"
Posted: Sat Jun 21, 2014 6:38 am
Hi all,
I'm currently splitting my conlanging efforts between two projects, one being another Celtic conlang, and one being this.
At the moment, it is not a lot more than a phonology, though a broad, basic idea about the grammar is forming in my head....
Eti is a language spoken by a species of sentient bird-like animals that live on a planet orbiting a star in a co-orbital "horseshoe" cycle (like Saturn's moons, Epimetheus and Janus) with another, smaller planetoid.
The vowel letters are used to write vocal tones of different frequencies -- these being nothing like human vowels, which are shaped using the tongue, cheeks and lips. I have set <a> as being the lowest Eti tone (at about 100 Hz) and <i> being the highest (at about 800 Hz).
The consonants are equally varied, involving the animal's beak, two parts of its tongue, its nostrils and its syrinx ("voicebox"). With these it can produce beak snaps (sharp closures of the mouth so that the beak snaps shut), and numerous clicks, plosives, fricatives, "explosives" (i.e. forceful plosives that sound more like coughs or barks) and a shriek (a semi-vowel).
Essentially, Eti is the product of some research into bird vocalisation and acoustics.
I am rather shaky on the planetary physics at the beginning of the document, this being completely new to me, so if someone could fine-toothed-comb it and make it more plausible, that would be appreciated!
Click below to view the document:
sa pe͠ıx#acs
sa pe͠ı–x–#ac–s
FOC it.ANIM–NEG–be.wug–PRES
'This is not a wug.'
NEW! Now with labelled diagrams of the vocal tract! *jazz hands*
I'm currently splitting my conlanging efforts between two projects, one being another Celtic conlang, and one being this.
At the moment, it is not a lot more than a phonology, though a broad, basic idea about the grammar is forming in my head....
Eti is a language spoken by a species of sentient bird-like animals that live on a planet orbiting a star in a co-orbital "horseshoe" cycle (like Saturn's moons, Epimetheus and Janus) with another, smaller planetoid.
The vowel letters are used to write vocal tones of different frequencies -- these being nothing like human vowels, which are shaped using the tongue, cheeks and lips. I have set <a> as being the lowest Eti tone (at about 100 Hz) and <i> being the highest (at about 800 Hz).
The consonants are equally varied, involving the animal's beak, two parts of its tongue, its nostrils and its syrinx ("voicebox"). With these it can produce beak snaps (sharp closures of the mouth so that the beak snaps shut), and numerous clicks, plosives, fricatives, "explosives" (i.e. forceful plosives that sound more like coughs or barks) and a shriek (a semi-vowel).
Essentially, Eti is the product of some research into bird vocalisation and acoustics.
I am rather shaky on the planetary physics at the beginning of the document, this being completely new to me, so if someone could fine-toothed-comb it and make it more plausible, that would be appreciated!
Click below to view the document:
sa pe͠ıx#acs
sa pe͠ı–x–#ac–s
FOC it.ANIM–NEG–be.wug–PRES
'This is not a wug.'
NEW! Now with labelled diagrams of the vocal tract! *jazz hands*