So I've been working on this thing for the past three days, and yes! I'm proud of myself :3
Edit: I honestly thought [ï] was pronounced eye, but no, that's [î]. So replace all the [ï] with [î]
seen from Türkiye
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seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
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seen from China
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seen from United States
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seen from Russia
seen from China
seen from Türkiye
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Indonesia
seen from United States
seen from Brazil
So I've been working on this thing for the past three days, and yes! I'm proud of myself :3
Edit: I honestly thought [ï] was pronounced eye, but no, that's [î]. So replace all the [ï] with [î]
Viiiiiiiiiiic
Tell me about how you started making conlang! 💜
oh gosh it started, like many things do for me, with lord of the rings. by the time i was nine or so i was copying down the elvish and dwarvish script along the top and bottom of the front pages of our copies of the trilogy, and poring over the maps in the back for hours. at some point i found a website that taught the tengwar alphabet and then boy oh boy i was so very normal about it 😂 i wrote my school notes in tengwar, i wrote little stories in notebooks in tengwar, i took a sharpie to my bunkbed and transcribed portions of the Lay of Lethian on my bedframe.
when i was 12-13ish i started creating an alphabet for one of my own stories. i might even have some of it somewhere still, even though i've long since moved on from that story. i drifted away from writing systems and into mapmaking through late highschool and college, and i didn't really start working on a conlang proper until i started iesin and talvos' story here on tumblr.
for iesin's language, i've loved thinking about how the fae would think about things and how it would shape their language. for instance, they have two words for death: edhaer, the death that is a return to the stars, and crych, stardeath, which is also their word for iron and for the concept of the final utter end of something. another concept they tie together is mountain and bridge through the syllable eul: catheul, mountain (literally, earth-bridge, from cathyr/earth and eul/bridge), and llyeul, a rope bridge, are two words that make use of it.
i also like thinking about the sound of their language and how their anatomy shapes it. they use a lot of vowels and soft/gliding consonants such as l, y, th, s, and r for the world around them. hard consonants such as c, ch, and d are more often seen in words associated with death, pain, loss, lack, grief, etc.
idk i just think it's fascinating!!! language shapes our perception of the world just as much as we shape it to fit what we perceive, and i could ponder that forever.
what does Ni Bau mean? :0
ni bau means "it's dark" !
in his fevery confusion, iesin was conflating his ability to perceive the mysteries with light; he couldn't see starsong the way he remembered being able to, and it left the world a darker place.
how did you come up with the fae language?
when I was looking into fae lore, I ended up looking mostly at Irish mythologies and folklore, and as i've come to each instance of needing fae names and words I've kept coming back to the Irish language. Iesin is a slight exception, as it comes from part of a Welsh name meaning shining. I'm... not entirely comfortable just picking a language and pointing to it and saying "this is the language my made-up creatures speak!" but the first time I wanted one word for starlight, there was a phrase that caught my eye in Irish that I distilled realtsolais from, and it's kind of snowballed from there. I'd love to have the time to create a real structure and dictionary for the fae language that stands on its own without being just direct lifting of words from another language though!
In that vein, the linguistic structure and grammar I've been thinking about and using to craft Iesin's speech patterns are entirely made up. For instance, he doesn't use pronouns often, or appends them to the end of sentences. In fae, pronouns are a speech part that doesn't get a word of its own, but exist as suffixes which are usually attached to the last word of any sentence that requires them.