
I love what I've done.

thedukeofnuke wrote:Telèmor is, I think, a nice example of a conlang created for a certain style or aesthetic rather than worrying over realism.
Also, I'm on a banknote! This makes me feel happy inside


Well, I borrowed the comma from Romanian... worked best with the orthography, plus it distinguished it from the other languages I've made. And, since it is heavily derived from Romance languages, there should be some similarities evident (if there weren't, there'd be problems!). But thanks.abaddamn wrote:It's very reminiscent of Romanian, you know, with the whole de, ş and ţ's. Hell, even if I translate what you've written at the top of the notes (Bancaro Naţiunalor de Fedèraţio Telémor) into Romanian it looks pretty damn similar -
In limba romana:
Banca Naţională a Federaţiei Telemor
And en Español:
Banco Nacional de la Federación Telemor
& Français:
Banque nationale de la Fédération Telemor
And mon limbată: (lol)
Banca Naţiănal-a Telemaún Federáşe (Using loanwords only)
Don't worry, I'm not criticising your conlang. I like it too - it looks great. Definitely has given me some ideas of how my conlang should look


You forgot to mention that they're all borrowings from Vasco-Caucasian.Qwynegold wrote:An Octavian comparison of Finnish and IE-langs and Japanese.
Finnish word – meaning Other language word – meaning Notes
-kO - INTERROGATIVE SUFFIX Jp: ka – INTERROGATIVE PARTICLE
anoa – beg (for money or help) Jp: tanomu – to ask a favor
antaa – to give Jp: watasu – to hand
ei – no, not Sw: nej – no, ej – not (old-fashioned); Jp: iie – no
hammas – tooth Jp: ha – tooth
istua – sit Jp: isu – chair
ja – and Jp: ya – and (used when listing examples of something)
kampa – comb Sw: kam – comb; Eng: comb
kasa – heap Jp: kasaneru – to pile up
kuu – moon Eng: moon
lippu – ticket Jp: kippu – ticket Just a joke!
lukko – lock Eng: lock; Sw: lucka – hatch
maito – milk Eng: milk; Sw: mjölk
matto – carpet Jp: matto – mat Just a joke!
meri – sea, ocean Lt: mare – sea
mukaan – tag along Jp: mukae – pick up someone, meeting
nauraa – to laugh Jp: warau – to laugh
nenä – nose Sw: näsa – nose; Jp: hana – nose
nimi – name Jp: namae; Sw: namn; Eng: name The -mae in namae means front, but the na morpheme means name.
pissa – pee Sw: piss – piss, kissa – to pee; Eng: piss
rikon – I break Jp: rikon suru – get divorced Just a joke!
runo – poem Sw: runa – rune, obituary
selkä – back (anat.) Jp: senaka – back (anat.)
sininen – blue Ru: siniy – (a shade of) blue
sisko, sisar – sister Sw: syster – sister; Eng: sister
tai – or Jp: tai – versus On'yomi.
todella – really Jp: totemo – very
torni – tower Sw: torn - tower; Jp: tō – tower Tō is on'yomi.
tovi – a short while Jp: toki – time
tuutti – (ice cream) cone Sw: tuta – horn (that you honk with)
tytär – daughter Sw: dotter – daughter; Eng: daughter
uni – dream, sleep Jp: yume – dream
vene – boat Jp: fune – ship, boat
vesi – water, veden – water's Ru: voda – water; Jp: mizu – water
örkki – orc, ogre Eng: orc, ogre



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terra_ObscuraEddy wrote:I can't figure out how to justify a whole new planet almost identical to Earth except in ways I find convenient or how its ecosystem could possibly work like our own without all sorts of crazy coincidences.









It is indeed a Japanese-style signature, though the last character is my own creation. It reads "Kitajima no Yuueru" Basically, Yiuel of the Northern Island (i.e. Melville, French "LeMelvillois"). The character for "Yiuel" is a combination of "sun", "large" and "movement", a reference to both Rigel (a massive star, also my favorite) and me (who moves a lot). As VS said, it's my signature when I draw something.Eddy wrote:Not a bad drawing, Yiuel, and it looks like you even signed your name in Japanese or something, which I find rather neat. What does the signature say?
LIEEddy wrote:This one, I think, looks less like a rip-off of Eurasia and more convincing as a large continent.
Catch me on YouTube.Pthug wrote:i can imagineViktor77 wrote:I grew up my entire life surrounded by a Special Ed educator.



It's true! We had Alfred Hitchcock, Jay Leno, Paul Potts, J.K. Rowling, Börje Bård, Haakon Aasen, Geirmundur Snorrason, Fredrik af Stierna, Magnus af Uggla, Simon Sorne, Lisa Lindén, Åsa Andersson, Ann-Katrin Larsson, Jorge Garcia Rodriguez, Jean-Luc Baptiste, Jarl Kulle, Magnús Scheving, Uwe Boll, Adrian Perr, Mikael Niemi, Niila Aaltonen, Stefán Karl Stefánsson, Tord Yvel, Hans Jensen, Vegard Urheim Ylvisåker, Jón Jósep Snæbjörnsson, Richard Gere, Seth Kaas van Kuijk, My Mueller and Tórstein Torkilsson.HelixWitch wrote:Only 30? Surely, you jest!



What do you mean by that? If you mean it looks like something spilled and spread out, then don't most maps look like that?Why do all of your maps look like splatters?

