simsanta123
Club Cricketer
Pretty pleased to get my first badge. (though it is for shortest life-span
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Check out the brand-new Nayrbja Factbook! Any comments?
I call your attention in particular to the reference to cricket in (where else?) the 'Religion' section (under People & Population).
Is the language Narybjan based on any real language, or are you just spouting out jibberish?![]()
Ah, we're purging nations out. Secretly.
Bet you wouldn't say that to a Klingon!Real languages don't exist, and kind of lack scope for imagination anyway.
The Nayrbjan language developed long before we had any contact with planet Earth, so naturally it is unrelated to Terran languages. Although, if you look carefully, some of the words appear to be related to the Indo-Aryan superfamily of Eurasian languages. For example, "z'talk'" for starry is quite similar to the Latin "stella" for star. Pure coincidence... Or is it???
Indimerica and Lonestaristan have ceased to exist (CTEd), although they can always be revived of course. Wagalamas is headed the same way within 24 hours, and Sylvanian Freedonians not long after that. And if that happens, we'll be one of those founderless regions you've heard so many horror stories about...![]()
Lol, how are "z'talk" and "stella" similar?![]()
Firstly, it's "z'talk'" not "z'talk"!"'" is a vowel in Nayrbjan, so "television" would be spelt "tel'vij'n", and "Metallica" would be "M'talik'"! "Z'talk'" is pronounced "zuh-TAL-kuh"... Nayrbjan spelling is phonetic.
'Z' and 's' are fairly interchangeable. Where Spanish (an Indo-Aryan language) uses 'z', Portuguese (closely related) uses 's' (eg. Rodriguez/Rodrigues).
So you have the 'same' three consonants - s/z, t, l - in the same order. Latin has a '-ica' suffix, although it doesn't have a word 'stellica'. Maybe Romanian, having both Romance (Latin) and Slavonic elements, does. Maybe Greek does - or Sanskrit (all related...). Anyway it is conceivable that this sequence of consonants could form a word for 'starry' in a language of the Indo-Aryan family. Vowels don't hugely matter to whether words are related.
Really glad you asked, btw (could you tell?).![]()
You seem to have a lot of knowledge about languages. Have you studied Latin and Greek by any chance?