Questions tagged [vocabulary]

For questions about developing the vocabulary of a conlang

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Are there languages where traditional verb features exist on nouns, or noun features on verbs, etc.?

I am looking at the sidebar on Wikipedia. Are there languages which have "case" or "gender" or "number" or other "noun features" but instead of (or in addition ...
Lance's user avatar
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How is it not ambiguous that the parts don't add up to the whole when creating compound words?

This question was sparked off a recent question: Are Sanskrit words more than the sum of the parts? I am serious when I ask, because as an outsider to Sanskrit, I would think the parts would add up to ...
Lance's user avatar
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Is there a general strategy to build vocabulary for chemical elements?

I continued building vocabulary for my conlang, and now I'm trying to name chemical elements. Here's the concept: The major speakers of this conlang are angels, and some of them have lived for a long ...
Dannyu NDos's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
289 views

Is it natural that different quantities with the same physical dimension are distinguished by adverbs?

My conlang is very literal to human perception, and I continued building vocabularies for physical quantities. Though in a previous question, I brought an exotic trick to describe length (namely, give ...
Dannyu NDos's user avatar
1 vote
1 answer
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How do languages which have adjectives after the noun work with complex phrases?

Say I have a phrase like these: The seat of the great rock of the north. = The north('s) great rock's seat - 北方(的)巨石的基座/底盤. The man of the forest of the east. = The east('s) forest's man - 東方(的)叢林的男人....
Lance's user avatar
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Theoretical way to limit terms in a conlang while also allowing for distinguishing similar concepts/things?

I am working on a conlang (took a little break). I would like to limit the number of "terms" (single words, either 1 or 2 syllables) to less than or equal to 10,000. Given the word-formation ...
Lance's user avatar
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Do you make a word then give it meaning, or do you think of a meaning and assign a word to it?

I wonder which is more effective, creating a list of conwords then giving definitions or, creating a list of definitions then assigning conwords?
Ylahris's user avatar
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Do all words derive from one word form, or can one word form have many similar meanings in different parts of speech?

I am basically getting to the crux of my assumption in the conlang I am working on. That is, treating every word as a "base", which can be realized into either a verb, noun, or adjective, or ...
Lance's user avatar
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1 vote
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Ways of having the equivalent of -ed (past participle) or -ing (present participle/gerund) in conlang?

You can turn verbs/nouns into adjectives using participles like this: The big-eyed monkey. The jumping spider. The loved rabbit. However, I don't think these structures exist in Chinese, for example,...
Lance's user avatar
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The pros and cons of having the same word be a noun, verb, and/or adjective at the same time?

I have this burgeoning principle of "let all words be in a base form such that the base form means the abstraction behind a noun, verb, and adjective". Then you realize a word into one of ...
Lance's user avatar
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How to turn "with", "and", "together", and related words/constructs into verbs or nouns?

I am trying to have every word have a corresponding noun and verb, to see if it's possible. Currently I am focusing on prepositions, which need some massaging for the conlang I'm working on, as I don'...
Lance's user avatar
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Are there examples of languages where prepositions are treated as nouns/verbs/adjectives instead?

I am struggling figuring out how to consider "function" words (like particles or prepositions) in a conlang. Verbs, nouns, and adjectives have been relatively straightforward but not these ...
Lance's user avatar
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Technique to use lots of homonyms and not make things confusing in a conlang?

I just learned today really how prevalent homophones are in Chinese, some of which are listed here. I asked a similar question about how to say Chinese sentences using all the variations of meaning of ...
Lance's user avatar
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7 votes
3 answers
212 views

How do languages distinguish formal and casual noun phrases?

It turns out that it appears Chinese has about 100 "base" (1-character) words for various foundational animals, and then the rest of the animals are combinations of those bases (or other ...
Lance's user avatar
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5 votes
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How can my conlang say "hot/cold" without ambiguity?

I'm creating a conlang for worldbuilding, and I'm building vocabulary for basic physical adjectives such as "long/short", "heavy/light", and "hot/cold". The major ...
Dannyu NDos's user avatar
2 votes
2 answers
73 views

What is the difference between city, county, state, and nation (and others)?

This is kind of along the lines of my last question on why words for "say", "tell", and "talk", etc.. But it is more philosophical, not sure if it's better for the world-...
Lance's user avatar
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3 votes
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Why does English have the word "say", "talk", and "tell", on what to create words for in a conlang?

I am going through word lists in a few different languages and am noticing what they make into words. In Hebrew, for example, they have words both for to x and to be x-ed, like "to merge" ...
Lance's user avatar
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How to structure sentences to be able to distinguish between verbs, nouns, and adjectives etc.?

In my budding conlang called Tune, I have "base" words which start and end with a consonant, either 3, 4, 5, or 6 sounds, with 1 or 2 vowels. Examples: tun ("tune") tunan ("...
Lance's user avatar
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What parts of speech (nouns, adj., verbs, etc.) could be limited to make a language with fewer words?

Essentially, in the English language how many adjectives, nouns, adverbs, verbs, etc. could be combined to make the language possess a single word for a term. E.g. huge, giant, enormous, and big could ...
Blue Skin and Glowing Red Eyes's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
142 views

How to safely import loan words in a conlang?

Some examples of loan words: Human names like "Paul" or "Bhavya". Proper nouns like "White House" or "United States". Using any word at all from the other ...
Lance's user avatar
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4 votes
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What is the second most elaborate constructed language up to date after Esperanto?

What would be the most elaborate constructed language today in terms of size of vocabulary, complexity of grammar, number of exceptions to the rules of the language, etc.? If we exclude Esperanto, of ...
Maksim's user avatar
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How would a language of whistles work

The language consists of 3 different tones: high, medium, and low. There are trills (~), chords(=), neutral tones (-), rising tones (<), falling tones (>), and rising/falling tones (^). Would ...
Blue Skin and Glowing Red Eyes's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
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Evolution of irregular declensions and conjugations from reconstructed proto-languages

In designing an artificial dialect of the Greek Language, most words and inflections have predictable patterns with a well-guessed/documented evolution which show the origin of the word's roots and ...
Oron61's user avatar
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3 votes
3 answers
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I want to build a language that expresses the maximum amount of information with minimal words spoken

I'm trying to come up with a conlang for a setting where spoken word casts magic etc. In this case, a group of wizards, etc. Develop arcadian, which functions to give the most information with the ...
Mike Fleitz's user avatar
5 votes
2 answers
103 views

How do I change the word order of this complex sentence?

I have an English sentence that I need to switch the word order of so I can translate it into my conlang smoothly, but the sentence is pretty complex and I’m not sure how to go about it. The sentence ...
Foofoo9906's user avatar
4 votes
2 answers
218 views

How do conlangs/natlangs have prefixes suffixes and not get them jumbled up?

When thinking how to build a conlang system of prefixes/suffixes, I get stuck right at the beginning: how do you prevent clashes within the prefix/suffix/base system? By that I mean the following. Say ...
Lance's user avatar
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5 votes
3 answers
101 views

What is the variety of ways one can deal with absorbing words from different languages in a conlang?

The conlang I am working on has very strict rules on word formation: They must start and end with a consonant They can only have single vowels between consonants (which can be in consonant clusters). ...
Lance's user avatar
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10 votes
4 answers
299 views

How do swear words work in real languages?

How many swear words should you have in a conlang, and how are they designed? What is their purpose really? And should any other "regular" words be constructed out of them? Like if "bar&...
Lance's user avatar
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5 votes
2 answers
136 views

How long do words get in other languages, and how hard are long words to say or read?

So I have a list of basic words in my budding conlang. I would like to construct compound words now, like we do with Latin/Greek in English (e.g. "hyacinthoides"). One word I can create in ...
Lance's user avatar
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4 votes
2 answers
135 views

How to create words which will be unambiguously parsable in a conlang?

Right now I am working on this, a list of words to translate into the conlang. At first I started by manually deriving the words from Hebrew/Arabic/Sanskrit/Greek/Latin/English/Spanish, but then found ...
Lance's user avatar
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5 votes
2 answers
322 views

How to break out of the English mold when creating a conlang (specifically in regards to word modifiers)?

I am working on a conlang. I have to some degree (i.e. a little bit) studied the grammar of Chinese, Vietnamese, Japanese, Sanskrit, and Hebrew, and know Spanish relatively well in comparison from ...
Lance's user avatar
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2 votes
2 answers
104 views

How do you write a language without the word "to" preceding verbs?

I am working on a fantasy language and am perplexed by the true meaning of the word "to" in English, at least when it appears before a verb, as in these sentences. I want to go somewhere. I ...
Lance's user avatar
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2 votes
2 answers
88 views

What are some key languages which don't have distinctions between me, myself, and I?

I am working on a conlang and would like to treat "I" or "me" or "myself" as one thing, "me", as a noun I guess. Are there languages that do this, that don't ...
Lance's user avatar
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10 votes
2 answers
120 views

How to modernize a dead language vocabulary

This is an enthusiastic question: Currently I'm studying Akkadian for fun, but as it is a dead language, the vocabulary may have some missing words/concepts. For example, I didn`t found a word for &...
Mosconi's user avatar
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8 votes
2 answers
506 views

What is the minimum number of words needed for a conlang?

What would the minimum number of words needed for a conlang, while still being able to speak with about the same level of information passed as a natural language?
Gabriel Tellez's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
185 views

Syllabic restriction/word boundaries set by IPA? Or it is decided by language creator

When creating syllables we basically require an onset, nucleus, and a coda. Now, usually, all language have an onset, and the coda is fairly optional. Before creating a phonetic system, we first ...
Momobear's user avatar
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3 votes
0 answers
43 views

I am a writer, and am trying to write a language for my story, how should I start as a complete beginner of language? [duplicate]

As a writer, I am trying to write a language so that I can name places more originally, how can I start writing a bare bones language for my story?
Gabriel Burchfield's user avatar
8 votes
4 answers
147 views

How many different interjections like 'aha,' 'oh' would you make up for a conlang?

I wonder if other people have thoughts and experience on this topic from the conlanging perspective. Have people with lots of translation experience found the distinction between (for example) 'aha' ...
Vir's user avatar
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5 votes
3 answers
325 views

Is there any general rule for constructing a word? Example: "q" or "w" should not end a word, something like this

I am developing 4 conlangs (sparish, old sparish, elvian and barrish (need a new name)) for a story which is used by humans of Spar, Northern Sparian, Elves/Aspian, Barrians of south respectively. I ...
Momobear's user avatar
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5 votes
4 answers
191 views

Alternate direction systems for spatial reference

What are some alternative direction systems besides egocentric direction systems (left, right, &c)? Some natural languages use {north, south, east, west} like Guugu Yimithirr and Tzeltal (Maya) (...
Greg Nisbet's user avatar
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5 votes
3 answers
176 views

Words for numbers in a language with bijective numeration

Bijective base-k numeration (or k-adic numeration) is a system of writing numerals such that the digits are 1 through k. Thus counting in bijective base-12 (such as my conlang Atili has) works as ...
Andrew Ray's user avatar
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6 votes
1 answer
148 views

Naming language based on real language

I apologize if similar question has already been answered, I tried to look for it but didn't find anything. I'm trying to make a simple naming language that looks/sounds vaguely like nahuatl (if I ...
Zuzka Houšková's user avatar
3 votes
2 answers
2k views

Words for Mercy in Toki Pona?

I would like to translate Bismillah Ir-Rahmani Ir-Rahim into Toki Pona. The parts I'm struggling with are the Rahma part, and the Raheem part, as they encompass similar but subtly different meanings ...
AncientSwordRage's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
195 views

What to do when my conlang has a word that means something in one of my languages?

This is a bit subjective problem. As a Hungarian who knows English, I have the high ground when it comes to making up words, as I can mush the English and Hungarian words together with some outliers (...
Mephistopheles's user avatar
5 votes
3 answers
703 views

How can I name my days of the week?

In my conworld, months are divided into twelve-day weeks. That seems a bit too long (since I recall that people complained that the ten-day weeks of the French Republican calendar were too long), so I'...
Andrew Ray's user avatar
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8 votes
4 answers
267 views

Is there an open-source set of topics and vocabulary for making a language tutorial?

Does anyone provide a freely available or licensable template that conlangers can use to develop a lesson plan? Specifically, I'm thinking about how a lot of language books divide vocabulary and ...
Jetpack's user avatar
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8 votes
7 answers
2k views

How many words should I create in a conlang?

Question 1: How many words are minimal for a naturalistic conlang? (1000, 1500, 3000 or even more) Question 2: How many words do the conlangers usually create?
USERNAME GOES HERE's user avatar
2 votes
0 answers
69 views

What list of words do you use when creating a language? [duplicate]

What word list do you use when creating a language? Is there a conlang word list? P.S I know that this question is kinda subjective, but I think that it will be quite useful for conlangers.
USERNAME GOES HERE's user avatar
5 votes
5 answers
390 views

Good Real World Languages to Base Proto-Lang Vocabulary

I'm working on a conlang that requires a LOT of work, particularly in the sound changes from proto-lang to the current version. Instead of creating a whole set of words from nothing, I am ...
Aezyc's user avatar
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7 votes
1 answer
208 views

Has anyone analysed the invented languages in the Earthsea books?

Ursula K Le Guin's Earthsea stories contain vocabulary and utterances from three invented languages. The first step to fleshing these out into fully developed conlangs would be to list all the ...
Tommy Herbert's user avatar