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#51
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Technomancer ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Retired Admins Posts: 4,638 Joined: 2-October 02 From: Champaign, IL Member No.: 3,374 ![]() |
I third that motion :) So Celedyr likes languages, huh? That gives me a few ideas, too. Apparently I should read DotSW again ....
I like the Death Camps. If new game weren't set in Europe ....... hrm. Wonder if anyone in the New Republic of Poland might have a few prisoner's of war in need of a "final solution." |
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#52
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Moving Target ![]() ![]() Group: Members Posts: 276 Joined: 29-September 02 Member No.: 3,348 ![]() |
Interesting. What are the linguistic oddities and how did that give any hint of pronounciation? As to phonetic name translations, keep in mind the Persian name Kurush became Kyros in the Greek and Cyrus in English. Darayavahush became Dareios in the Greek and Darius in the English. Phonetic translations aren't neccessarily all that helpful, or even all that phonetic. |
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#53
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Illuminate of the New Dawn ![]() ![]() Group: Dumpshocked Posts: 317 Joined: 9-June 03 From: Seattle 'Plex, UCAS Member No.: 4,700 ![]() |
Translation of names can help somewhat - it can give a rough idea, but can be a bit dodgy in terms of reconstructing sounds, too. Another way to help reconstruct the sounds of language is poety (if it has some sort of rhyme scheme, anyway). That way you can tell what should sound like what to some extent. Also, sometimes another language was written using the language-in-question's character set - for example, Old Irish scribes wrote a bunch of Latin in with the Old Irish - so that can help give you an idea (granted you know how the other language was supposed to sound, which opens another bag of worms). Also, since spelling was often not standardized in many ancient languages, the range of spellings of any given word were phonetic and can help give people an idea of what it should have sounded like, approxamately anyway.
The long and short of it is that you'll never know really how something was acutally pronounced and it was probably pronounced ten different ways in ten different places, too, like many languages today. Think of how someone in California "car" then think of someone in Boston. Thus endeth the linguistic ramble. :wobble: |
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#54
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Target ![]() Group: Members Posts: 14 Joined: 8-February 05 Member No.: 7,069 ![]() |
In our campaign the troll adept just learned troll and is teaching it (quietly) to trolls, watch out elves i smell a reversal coming. I have always wanted to see those elves of the Tirs take one on the chin. (so to speak) ;)
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Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 11th March 2025 - 04:12 AM |
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