Constructed language Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
An artificial or constructed language (known colloquially as a conlang among aficionados), is a language whose vocabulary and grammar were specifically devised by an individual or small group, rather than having naturally evolved as part of a culture like a natural language. Some, like natural languages, are designed for use in human communication (usually to function as international auxiliary languages), but others are created for use in fiction, linguistic experimentation, secrecy (codes), or for the experience of doing so. Conlangers differ on whether linguistic creation of the latter kind is to be considered an art or a hobby. These languages are sometimes associated with conworlds.The term planned language is also used, when referring to international auxiliary languages, and by those who may object to the more common term "artificial". Speakers of Esperanto, for example, have argued that "Esperanto is an artificial language like an automobile is an artificial horse".
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2 Auxiliary languages 3 Artistic languages 4 Logical languages 5 Other conlang types 6 See also 7 References 8 External links |
Fictional and experimental languages can also be naturalistic, in the sense that they are meant to sound natural and, if derived a posteriori, they try to follow natural rules of phonological, lexical and grammatical change. Since these languages are not usually intended for easy learning or communication, a naturalistic fictional language tends to be more difficult and complex, not less (because it tries to mimic common behaviours of natural languages such as irregular verbs and nouns, complicated phonological rules, etc.).
In light of the above, most constructed languages can broadly be divided as follows:
Overview
Constructed languages are often divided into a priori languages, in which much of the grammar and vocabulary is created from scratch (using the author's imagination or automatic computational means), and a posteriori languages, where the grammar and vocabulary are derived from one or more natural languages. A posteriori planned languages can be further divided into naturalistic planned languages - which closely follow the natural languages from which they are patterned in order to minimize learning time - and schematic planned languages, whose features are deliberately simplified or synthesized from various sources.
A constructed language can have "native" speakers, if children learn it at an early age from parents who have learned the language. Esperanto has a considerable number of native speakers, variously estimated to be between 200 and 2000. A member of the Klingon Language Institute, d'Armond Speers, attempted to raise his son as a native Klingon speaker, but found that at that time the Klingon vocabulary was not quite large enough to express the large number of objects normally found in the home, such as "table" or "bottle".
Proponents of particular constructed languages often have many reasons for using them. Among these, the famous but disputed Sapir-Whorf hypothesis is often cited; this claims that the language one speaks essentially limits (or expands) the way in which one thinks. Thus, a "better" language should allow the speaker to reach some elevated level of intelligence, or to encompass more diverse points of view. Many question the validity of this claim.
This is an Article on Constructed language. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About Constructed language Auxiliary languages
Historic auxlangs
Languages published before 1952.
Recent auxlangs
Languages published from 1952 on; some of these were only published online.
Artistic languages
Artistic languages include languages of fictional worlds and peoples and for alternate histories, languages for micronations, languages created for humor and self-amusement and languages created for the pleasure of inventing a language.
Professional artlangs
Languages that were professionally published in books or multimedia.
;See also : Fictional language and List of fictional languages.Amateur artlangs
Languages published only on the Web:
Logical languages
Human-usable loglangs
Knowledge-representation loglangs
Other conlang types
Non-verbal languages
Language games
See also
References
External links
Communities
How to
Link collections
