Added: 2 years ago
From: jaeghon
Views: 1,838
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  • How was you able to make a song in indoeuropean? :b

  • Pretty sure this is proro-norse

  • @Eksynyt This is not proto norse, so much i can tell. But i cant jugde wheather it is good indoeuropean or not

  • Are you sure this is Indo-European, or just Old Norse?

  • Hello nowistheeleventhhour,

    Old norse is an indoeuropean language, a germanic one, my reconstructed language is not germanic: to give an example: one of the typical distinctive features of germanic languages is "lautverschiebung"

    here we have no dental lautverschiebung: let's compare my conlang with gothic (a germanic language centuries older than norse and anglosaxon and indoeuropean non germanic latin and greek)

  • nominative: Tue\Ty: goth.=Thu, ang.sax.=Thuu, lat.=Tuu, gre.= Sy(Tvy) genitive: Tvei(s): goth.=Theina, ang.sax.=Thin, lat.=Tvui\Tvi, gre.=Sou (Tvou) dative: Tvei: goth.=Thus, ang.sax. = The, lat. = Tibi, gre. = Soi (Tvoi) accusative:Tve: goth.=Thuk, ang.sax. = The, lat. = Te, gre. = Se (Tve) another example of no dental lautverschiebung: THym-as = obscure-smoke-spirit, english: Dim, latin: Fum-us, croatian: Dim, greek: THymos, THusc = english Dusk, latin Fusc-us.

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