nalgol: Difference between revisions
m (Text replace - "jbocre: ([L-Z])" to "$1") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[ | Nalgol is the language by Jim Carter aiming "to improve a minor point in [[Loglan]]" by totally redoing a mass of major design features. | ||
Nalgol | Nalgol was a prt of the following evolution: Loglan > Nalgol > Djimbraon > -gzn !gvr > [[gua\spi]]. | ||
Original idea of Nalgol was to use a special "vocative particle + [[selbri]]" construct later adopted in Lojban, which [[The Founders|the Founders]] sometimes called a "Carter vocative". | |||
Also Nalgol eliminated the difference between [[brivla]] and [[rafsi]] which entailed the elimination of the difference between non-metaphoric tanru and lujvo. | |||
==As a phenomenon in [[conlang]]s== | |||
Lojbanists didn't have occasion to mention this typical constructed language phenomenon in Lojban much since the base-lining (and before it was part of the process). However, recently there seems to have been a spate of ever more aggressive cases which now seem to call the word back into use in generic sense as a way to redo the sounding of most words in the lexicon. | |||
Revision as of 15:48, 10 May 2014
Nalgol is the language by Jim Carter aiming "to improve a minor point in Loglan" by totally redoing a mass of major design features.
Nalgol was a prt of the following evolution: Loglan > Nalgol > Djimbraon > -gzn !gvr > gua\spi.
Original idea of Nalgol was to use a special "vocative particle + selbri" construct later adopted in Lojban, which the Founders sometimes called a "Carter vocative".
Also Nalgol eliminated the difference between brivla and rafsi which entailed the elimination of the difference between non-metaphoric tanru and lujvo.
As a phenomenon in conlangs
Lojbanists didn't have occasion to mention this typical constructed language phenomenon in Lojban much since the base-lining (and before it was part of the process). However, recently there seems to have been a spate of ever more aggressive cases which now seem to call the word back into use in generic sense as a way to redo the sounding of most words in the lexicon.