Amabil amico, Con grand satisfaction mi ha lect tei letter de le mundolingue. Arika Okrent, author of the new book
In The Land of Invented Languages, lists
500 constructed languages, from the well-known (Esperanto, Volapuk, Loglan) to the utterly obscure (Neulatein, Rosentalographia, Mundolingue.) MetaFilter's own languagehat
reviews the book. Okrent
writes about Klingonophones in Slate. Alternatively, you might choose to
learn not to speak Esperanto. Previously on MetaFilter,
all you wanted to know about Loglan/Lojban but were too syntactically ambiguous to ask.
posted by escabeche
on Jul 7, 2009 -
30 comments
.i la lojban mo Lojban is in many ways like any other language. There's an
English-Lojban dictionary. There's a Lojban
grammar. You can even get your news at
Nuzban, a Lojban-only news site.
Lojban, however, is a
completely constructed language.
Why Lojban? Well, Lojban came from
Loglan, an invented language from the 1950's (Loglan was created as an experiment to study the
Sapir-Whorf hypothesis: succinctly, the idea that language and culture are hopelessly intertwined) Today, there are
hundreds of invented languages and a thriving language construction
community. Alongside well-known constructs such as Tolkien's
elven languages and
Klingon, there's also
d'ni - the language of Myst, a
language of flowers,
opus-2 - a language that shuns word order and
Teonat - a language of the imaginary inhabitants of Teon.
With the help of online language construction kits, you too can
create your
own language.
posted by vacapinta
on Sep 12, 2002 -
34 comments