Other languages (part 1)
March 17, 2010
Constructed languages (conlangs) have always been a really interesting topics for me.
The first ones I met were, as a fan of Tolkien’s universe, Quenya and Sindarin (between many others he developed). The elvish languages are as beautiful as the elves themselves, as Tolkien wanted when he started developing this languages. Here you can hear a recording of Tolkien reciting the poem “Namárië“.
They have also a beautiful alphabet, called Tengwar, as you can see in this Quenya example:
The aim of this languages is purely artistic. They were used in literature, (fantasy, in this case), but there are many constructed languages in science fiction too. The most famous perhaps, is Klingon, of the Star Trek’s series. There is a really significant number of Klingon speakers, and you can also set your Google language to it. There were many others, like Na’vi (of James Cameron’s Avatar).
Other people created languages with other ends. Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis is the reason of many of the scientific ones (including lojban). I hope I’ll write a post about that hypothesis in the future.
Suzette Haden Elgin created Láadan (that’s the link to wikipedia, this is the official page), a language designed to be better in communicating and expresing ideas and views of woman. It has many words to be unambigous when refering to emotions about what someone is saying. It was also used in science-fiction series Native Tongue.
This is extracted from their official page:
I became aware [...] of the feminist hypothesis that existing human languages are inadequate to express the perceptions of women. This intrigued me because it had a built-in paradox: if it is true, the only mechanism available to women for discussing the problem is the very same language(s) alleged to be inadequate for the purpose.
In the next post, I’ll be commenting about other languages (artificial or not).
co’o lo tcidu
(I’m really busy to be studing lojban, but I didn’t stopped!)






March 17, 2010 at 17:59
I like neither Na’vi nor Klingon, as the future global language. Especially when you have to dress up for it
We also need a future international language. One which is easy to learn, as well !
And that’s not English! Esperanto? Let’s move forward
At least Bill Shatner speaks Esperanto. Have a look at http://eurotalk.com/en/store/learn/esperanto or http://www.lernu.net
March 23, 2010 at 14:21
The funny joke made me not to put this in spamLojban is easy to learn. That’s what I’m trying to get with this blog (given the fact I’m studying it practically with no spare time). However, it’s not its intention to be an international language. It’d be good at it, though.
I’d love to see some day a lojban communtity as large as esperanto’s. Perhaps in 30, 40 or 50 years…
March 23, 2010 at 13:43
Have you seen the tengwar orthology for Lojban?:
http://vodka-pomme.net/projects/tengwar-for-lojban/lojteng
Tengwar is beautiful to me as well, and I love the fact that it is a phonetic alphabet–one letter has one sound, exactly like Lojban’s use of the latin alphabet, though unlike English’s use of the same alphabet.
Great post!
March 23, 2010 at 14:31
Yeah! I love that alpahbet too
I’m planning to do a post with alternative alphabets in the future. This is one of the most beautiful, without any doubt.