futureconstructedlanguage
futureconstructedlanguage
Constructed Languages
2 posts
Erave hatory om kapitam ra. Yajo oy ce deraspa pe epataxefa. O yaveja'tu ya lahara pe vemdy xehishar. Syo rakapu!
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futureconstructedlanguage · 6 years ago
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Has’elala’o - Haselango - Haseyo
Has’elala’o, haselango & haseyo all translates to hello. This is the transition of the first language that I had constructed from the age of 12. This language is called Dalakin. 
Dalakin was created simply by codes during my elementary school years. Where “A” equals “a”, “B” equals “bang”, “C” equals “ceng”, so on and so forth. That’s where “H”=“Has”, “E”=“E”, “L”=“La” and “O”=“O” creating the word “hello”. The apostrophe were to separate the vowels such as “a,e,i,o,u” and also used as a glottal stop symbol. The language phonetics and grammar is similar to Korean and Japanese. 
How did you go from “has’elala’o to haselango”? The phonetics of has’elala’o didn’t seem to have any relations to an Asian tone. So I had to adjusted the codes again. I got rid of the glottal stop symbol and changed the “L” to “lang” which then converted to “haselanglango”. I didn’t like the repeat of the “Lang” so I cut it down to just “haselango”. 
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How did you go from “haselango to haseyo”? I wanted the language to have a formal and an informal language. Haselango would be the formal and haseyo would be the informal. How I got haseyo was that I began to give it more meaning than just “hello”. Let me break it down for you.
Ha = Breath Se = Share Lang = Kind O = Word The actual meaning for it would be “the breath you share comes with kind words”. In English this would be a very humble form of saying “hello”.
Ha = Breath Se = Share Yo = (it causes the sentence or word to sound more emphatic) The actual meaning for this one would be “Sharing breath”. In English it would be your standard way of saying “hey”.
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As time evolved I started learning Japanese and Korean. My constructed language barely became original. I started borrowing words from the Korean, Japanese and Chinese language, entwining them into my original language. 
Example of loanwords... Oshie [教え] - Loanword from Japanese meaning “to teach, to instruct” Taibu [逮捕] (Daibu) - Loanword from Mandarin meaning “to arrest” Samang [사망] - Loanword from Korean meaning “dying, decease”
This language however is still being created. 
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futureconstructedlanguage · 6 years ago
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Many Tongues of Xefa
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Xefa, meaning sphere, is a new world collaborated with many of the constructed languages that I’ve created for nearly two decades. Xefa is similar to our world though the timeline in Xefa stands within the era of the middles ages (500-1500). So far 18 countries has been created with their own language, leaders, culture and traditions. Xefa is still growing till this present day. 
How many constructed languages have I created so far? 18 main core languages and 47 dialects. All together, 65. The more languages I create, the more Xefa begins to blossom. 
I will be introducing the languages separately from post to post with given details of how each of them were born.
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