this post was submitted on 13 Apr 2024
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You know uhh, no comment on the shit flinging in the comments, but I've always liked latine over latinx, feels more natural to use a vowel there than like, an x. Shout out to latiny as being the highly underrated evolution, which unifies both the use of a vowel and something adjacent to the x, while also sounding really dumb and funny.
I dunno. Seems similar to the outcries and moral panic that people used to have against neopronouns, or pronouns in bio, to me, without realizing that they use neopronouns all the time whenever they call someone dude or bro. I feel like I've left this comment here before, but I do wonder whether or not neopronouns like dude or bro are more acceptable because they're kind of a more natural integration into language than most of the academic postulations on "oh, what if we made a gender-neutral singular pronoun", or if they're more acceptable precisely because they're kind of gendered. We're all dudes, hey, but at the same time, it would be kind of stupid to say that dude doesn't refer to or see use by mostly men, and is kind of gendered. I dunno, I'm sure "dude" and "bro" were pretty heavily hated when they were used, so maybe it's just that whenever anything novel with language is done, it's doomed to be shat on relentlessly by prescriptivist nonces.
I dunno maybe we all just need to speak like, ithkuli or something, so nobody ever talks to each other.
Oh god imagine putting the world through learning to be fluent in ithkuil XD
Maximum expressiveness, maximum migraines
I'd be thankful just to get a spelling reform but English has somehow descriptivized its way into having worse spelling than prescribed written languages.
Not a language I thought would be referenced in this topic but damn I'll take it. Maximum migraines indeed.
Beautiful tho, one of my favourite inspirations for writing.
Eh, personally I find the letters too similar to one another, it's like anti-shavian, where that was designed for every glyph to be distinct and to be a single stroke, ithkuil is complex and has a lot of glyphs that are hard to distinguish at a glance.
My ideal would be for a writing system where words are built from Hangul-like syllable blocks, every consonant is a single stroke glyph without any closed loops, and every vowel has to have at least one closed loop. I've also gotten really interested in the look of vertical writing systems so dat too :p
I think it works really well for the goals of the language (complexity and conciseness) although I still prefer V3. A Hangul like syllable block system is cool and has it's benefits but if you're clever then an abuguida is better since it makes more recognisable words in languages like English that are less analytic. Hangul is sick as hell tho and maybe I should make a version for English.