Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

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Esneirra973
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2018 11:18 am

Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Esneirra973 »

Biskainish is spoken in the Kingdom of Baskain, which is located in southern Florida. This is a conlang for a future timeline based on a post-apocalyptic America that has regressed to feudal levels of technology. Biskainish is currently spoken in the early 4th millenium, and is a descendant of American English.

Phonology

Nasals: /m n ɲ ŋ/ - <m n ñ ng>
Plosives: /p b t d k g/ - <p b t d k g>
Affricates: /t͡ʃ d͡ʒ/ - <ch dj>
Fricatives: /f v s z ʃ ʒ x h ɦ/ - <f v s z sh j h ḥ>
Rhotics: /r/ - <r>
Approximants: /l ʎ j w/ - <l ly y w>
Vowels: /i ɨ u e o ɛ ɐ ɔ a/ - <i ụ u e o ẹ ȧ ọ a>
Diphthongs: /uɪ eɪ oɪ aɪ iʊ eʊ oʊ aʊ/ - <ui ei oi ai iu eu ou au>

Allophones
  • The phonemes /b d g/ are pronounced as [β ð ɣ] between vowels. An example is tagyẹdaḥ "together", which is pronounced [tə.ɡjɛ.ðəː].
  • Combinations of /bN̩ dN̩ gN̩/ become /m̩ n̩ ŋ̩/. An example is the verb argeibn "I'd given", which is pronounced [aɾ.gej.m̩].
  • The vowel /a/ is pronounced as [ə] when unstressed. An example is plata "silver", which is pronounced [pla.tə].
  • The vowels /i ɨ u e o ɛ ɔ/ are pronounced as [i ɨ ʊ ɨ ʊ ɨ ʊ] when unstressed. An example is ẹhlavọ "slave", which is pronounced [ɨ.hla.vʊ].
  • Sequences of /Vɦ/ become [Vː] when in coda position or before consonants. An example is tagyẹdaḥ "together", which is pronounced [tə.ɡjɛ.ðəː].
  • Sequences of /rs/ become /t͡s/ in coda position. An example is the plural of keir "kid", which is pronounced [keɪt͡s], and the plural of mẹyar "mayor", which is pronounced [mɛ.jat͡s].
Sound Changes

1950 CE to 2020 CE
More: show
Note: This list of sound changes does not include the cot-caught merger, which is very commonplace in South Florida.

Development of Stressed Vowels
/V Vɪ Vʊ/ > /Vː Vːɪ Vːʊ/ | only when occurring in the same syllable/before the consonants /m n ŋ b d g d͡ʒ v ð z ʒ/
/Vː Vːɪ Vːʊ/ > /V Vɪ Vʊ/ | unstressed
/V Vɪ Vʊ/ > /Vː Vːɪ Vːʊ/ | in stressed, open syllables
/aj aw/ > /ɑj æw/

Development of Unstressed Vowels
/ə/ > /ə̆/ | unstressed
/ɚː/ > /ɚ/ | after vowels
/ɚ ɚː/ > /ɹ̩/
/əm ən əl əɹ/ > /m̩ n̩ ɫ̩ ɹ̩/ | not before vowels
/VɪN̩ VʊN̩ VɪR̩ VʊR̩/ > /VjN̩ VwN̩ VjR̩ VwR̩/
/əː/ > /ʌː/

Development of Plosives
/Vt/ > /Vt̚/ | _#
/t d/ > /ɾ/ | V_V
/nd ld/ > /n l/ | _#
/ɹd/ > /ɹɾ/
/dɹ/ > /ɾɹ/ | unstressed
/d/ > /ɾ/ | _#

Development of Velarized /l/
/l/ > /ɫ/ | after central vowels, back vowels, and the vowel /ɪ(ː)/
2020 CE to 2400 CE
More: show
Development of Unstressed Vowels
/ə̆/ > /Ø/ | unstressed intertonic syllables
/ʌ/ > /ɜ/
/ə̆/ > /ə/
/ɪ/ > /ə/ | unstressed
/aʊ/ > /ɑw~ɑ/ | unstressed

Development of Syllabic Consonants and Other Approximants
/ld ɫd/ > /l ɫ/ | _#
/ɫ̩/ > /o/
/əl əɫ/ > /o/

Development of Coda Consonants
/t̚/ > /ʔ/ > /h/ | unstressed
/t̚/ > /t/
/nd/ > /n/ | _#

Other Vowel Changes
/Vː/ > /V/
/æ/ > /eə/ | before nasals
/aʊ/ > /æʊ/
/eɪ/ > /ɛɪ/
/ɪ ʊ/ > /e ɨ/
/ɑ/ > /a/
2400 CE to 2950 CE
More: show
Development of Nasals and Approximants
/nl/ > /nɾ/

Development of Plosives
/p t k/ > /pʰ tʰ kʰ/ | stressed
/pʰ tʰ kʰ/ > /pp tt kk/ | V_V
/b d g/ > /β ð ɣ/ > /v ð ɦ/ | V_V
/pʰ tʰ kʰ/ never became phonemic, only remaining as allophones in Biskainish
/ŋ/ > /g/ | unstressed
/v/ > /b/ | _#

Development of Fricatives and Other Consonants
/θ ð/ > /t d/ (this applies to instances of /θ ð/ that were inherited from Modern English)
/ɹ/ > /r/ | in consonant clusters
/ɾ/ > /r/
/ɹ/ > /ɦ/

Development of Long Vowels
/V/ > /Vː/ | _G# (G = voiced nasal, plosive, or fricative)
/æː/ > /eə/
/æːʊ/ > /ɛːʊ/ > /jɛʊ/
/iː ɨː uː/ > /iɪ ɨɵ ʉɵ/
/eː əː oː/ > /eɛ ə oɔ/
/ɛː ɜː ɔː/ > /jɛ ɜa wɔ/
/aː/ > /aə/
/oːɪ aːɪ/ > /o.ɛ a.ɛ/
/ɛːɪ oːʊ/ > /iɪ uʊ/
/ɨɵ ʉɵ/ > /ɨ.a ʉɵ/
/aə/ > /aa/ | stressed
/aə/ > /a/
/ea/ > /ja/

Development of Vowels
/æʊ/ > /ɛʊ/
/æ/ > /jæ/ | stressed
/æ/ > /a/
/iɪ ɛɪ uʊ ɛʊ/ > /əɪ eɪ əʊ eʊ/
/ʉɵ/ > /ʉw/ > /ɨʊ/
/ɜ/ > /ɐ/
/ɜa aa/ > /ɐa/ > /ɐɦa/
/oɪ aɪ/ > /uɪ oɪ/
/əɪ əʊ/ > /aɪ aʊ/
/ɨʊ/ > /iʊ/

Development of Unstressed/Syllabic Vowels and Velarized /l/
/ɫ/ > /o/ | V_
/ɫ/ > /w/
/m̩ n̩ ɹ̩/ > /əm ən əɹ/
/ə/ > /a/

Development of Former Velarized /l/
/eɛo oɔo/ > /eɦɛo oɦɔo/ > /eɦo oɦo/
/eɛ oɔ/ > /eɪ oʊ/
/ɨʊo/ > /ɨwo/
/ɨʊw/ > /ɨww/ | _V
/io ɨo uo eo oo ɛo ɐo ɔo ao/ > /iɦo ɨɦo uɦo eɦo oʊ ɛɦo ɐɦo oʊ aɦo/ | stressed
/io ɨo uo eo oo ɛo ɐo ɔo ao/ > /iʊ iʊ u.o eʊ oʊ ɛ.o a.o oʊ a.o/
/uɪo eɪo oɪo aɪo iʊo eʊo oʊo aʊo/ > /ujo ejo ojo ajo iwo ewo owo awo/
/iw ɨw uw ew ow ɛw ɐw ɔw aw/ > /iʊ iʊ u eʊ oʊ eʊ aʊ oʊ aʊ/ | _[C#]
/uɪw eɪw oɪw aɪw iʊw eʊw oʊw aʊw/ > /uju eju oju aju iʊ eʊ oʊ aʊ/ | _[C#]
/iʊw eʊw oʊw aʊw/ > /iww eww oww aww/ | _V

Development of Palatal Consonants
/mj nj/ > /ɲ/
/lj/ > /ʎ/
/CVɦC/ > /CɦVC~CVCɦ/ | _V
/CVɦC/ > /CɦVC/
/ɦCV/ > /CɦV/
/mp mb nt nd nk~ŋk ng~ŋg/ > /mb m nd n ŋ ŋ/ | _#
/mp mb nt nd nk~ŋk ng~ŋg/ > /mb mm nd nn ŋg ŋg~gg/
/nr mr/ > /ndr mbr/
Here is an example sentence inspired by JBR's Futurese:

Wi keirs wiḥbeiginyu, ticha, dah efyuotichas tụtok krek, bikaz wiḥbin eignaḥan yan wiḥtokin kaḥap...
/wi ˈkeɪrs wiɦ.ˈbeɪ.gin.ju ˈti.t͡ʃa dah ef.ˈju.o.ti.t͡ʃas tɨ.ˈtok krek bi.ˈkaz wiɦ.bin ˈeɪg.na.ɦan jan wiɦ.ˈto.kin ka.ˈɦap/
[wi ˈkeɪt͡s wiː.ˈbeɪ.gin.jʊ ˈti.t͡ʃa dah ef.ˈju.o.ti.t͡ʃas tɨ.ˈtok kɾek bi.ˈkaz wiː.bin ˈeɪg.na.ɦan jan wiː.ˈto.kin ka.ˈɦap]
1P.NOM child-PLU 1P.PRES.PROG-beg-PRES.PROG-2S.OBL, teacher, REL COND-2S.FUT.PROG-teach-1P.OBL INF-speak correct, because be.1P.PRES.PROG ignorant and 1P.PRES.PROG-speak-PRES.PROG corrupt
We children beg you, teacher, that you should teach us to speak correctly, because we are ignorant and we speak corruptly…

Tomorrow, I will write an explanation of the grammar when I get the chance.
Last edited by Esneirra973 on Sat Dec 14, 2019 5:44 pm, edited 4 times in total.
Llazmacnazion intenna delment mijo tán wanimma.
DEF.FP-machination inner-FEM of-DEF.MS-mind 1S.POSS-MASC be.PRES.IND.PLU INDEF.FS-enigma
Llaz-macnazion intenna de-llo-ment mijo tán wa-enimma
Knit Tie
Posts: 179
Joined: Fri Aug 10, 2018 12:55 pm

Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Knit Tie »

As a Future English guy myself, I'm loving you lang!

Perhaps we could compare notes?

I can see that the grammar hasn't changed much, which is actually quite a nice idea.
Esneirra973
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2018 11:18 am

Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Esneirra973 »

Knit Tie wrote: Fri Dec 13, 2019 9:52 pm As a Future English guy myself, I'm loving you lang!

Perhaps we could compare notes?

I can see that the grammar hasn't changed much, which is actually quite a nice idea.
We could. I'll try to get the grammar up sometime today.
Llazmacnazion intenna delment mijo tán wanimma.
DEF.FP-machination inner-FEM of-DEF.MS-mind 1S.POSS-MASC be.PRES.IND.PLU INDEF.FS-enigma
Llaz-macnazion intenna de-llo-ment mijo tán wa-enimma
Esneirra973
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2018 11:18 am

Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Esneirra973 »

Grammar

Personal Pronouns
Nom. Obl. Obl. Suffix Poss. Adj. Gen. Loc. Abl. Instr. Refl.
1S ai mi -mi mai frȧmmi emmi dẹmi wemmi maiseu
2S yu yu -yu yoḥ frȧyyu eñu dẹyu weyyu yoḥseu
3AS dei dẹm -dim ez frȧddẹm endẹm dẹdẹm weddẹm dẹḥseu
3IS et et -it ets frȧmet enet dẹyet wetet etseu
IMP ya ya -ya yaḥ frȧyya eña dẹya weyya yaḥseu
1P wi ȧs -ȧs aḥ frȧmȧs enȧs dẹyȧs wetȧs aḥseu
2P yuga fọyyuga -yuga yuga frȧyyuga eñuga dẹyuga weyyuga yugaseu
3P dẹmọ dẹmọ -dimu dẹmọ frȧddẹmọ endẹmọ dẹdẹmọ weddẹmọ dẹḥseu


Nouns

Noun Cases
More: show
Prefix
Nominative 0-
Oblique fọḥ-
Genitive frȧ(m)-
Locative en-
Ablative dẹ-
Instrumental wet-
Definiteness
More: show
Prefix
Indefinite 0-
Definite d(a)-
Number
More: show
Prefix
Singular -0
Plural -s
I'll put the verbs in the next post. By the way, would anyone happen to know how to make a chart here? It would be much easier for me to show verb conjugations with a chart.

Edit: I figured out how to make tables.
Last edited by Esneirra973 on Fri Jul 10, 2020 10:29 am, edited 7 times in total.
Llazmacnazion intenna delment mijo tán wanimma.
DEF.FP-machination inner-FEM of-DEF.MS-mind 1S.POSS-MASC be.PRES.IND.PLU INDEF.FS-enigma
Llaz-macnazion intenna de-llo-ment mijo tán wa-enimma
Esneirra973
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2018 11:18 am

Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Esneirra973 »

Grammar (cont.)

Verbs

Verbs in Biskainish are much more agglutinative than modern English verbs, and conjugate for tense, aspect, mood, and voice. Biskainish uses an SVO word order much like English, but uses a VSO word order in interrogative constructions.

Mood
Prefix
Indicative 0-
Subjunctive dat-
Imperative new-
Conditional ef-

Tense and Aspect
Pres. Prog. Pres. Perf. Past Prog. Past Perf. Fut. Prog. Fut. Perf. Habitual
1SG am-...-in av-...-n awas-...-er ar-...-n ayo- alav-...-n ai-
2SG yoḥ-...-in yuv-...-n yuwaḥ-...-er yur-...-n yuo- yulav-...-n yu-
3SG iz-...-in iyaz-...-n iwas-...-er ir-...-n deyo- ilav-...-n i-
1PL wiḥ-...-in wiv-...-n wiwaḥ-...-er wir-...-n wiwo- wilav-...-n wi-
2PL yugzaḥ-...-in yugzav-...-n yugzawaḥ-...-er yugzar-...-n yugzo- yugalav-...-n yugaz-
3PL dẹḥ-...-in deyọv-...-n dewaḥ-...-er deir-...-n demyo- (*demwo-) delav-...-n dẹmọ-
Infinitive: tụ-

Voice
Suffix
Active -0
Passive -ba

To Be (Irregular Verb)
Pres. Prog. Pres. Perf. Past Prog. Past Perf. Fut. Prog. Fut. Perf. Habitual
1SG ambin avben awasbin arben ayobi alavbin ayam
2SG yoḥbin yuvben yuwaḥbin yurben yuobi yulavbin yuwaḥ
3SG izbin iyazben iwasbin irben deyobi ilavbin iyez
1PL wiḥbin wivben wiwaḥbin wirben wiwobi wilavbin wiḥ
2PL yugzaḥbin yugzavben yugzawaḥbin yugzarben yugzobi yugalavbin yugzaḥ
3PL dẹḥbin deyọvben dewaḥbin deirben demwobi delavbin dẹmalaḥ
Infinitive: tụbi
Llazmacnazion intenna delment mijo tán wanimma.
DEF.FP-machination inner-FEM of-DEF.MS-mind 1S.POSS-MASC be.PRES.IND.PLU INDEF.FS-enigma
Llaz-macnazion intenna de-llo-ment mijo tán wa-enimma
Esneirra973
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2018 11:18 am

Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Esneirra973 »

Grammar (cont.)

Interrogative Pronouns

Here is a chart of the various interrogative pronouns in Biskainish:

dah "that" wah "which, what" ao "all, every" no "no"
man "person" daman waman? aoman noman
luḥá "place" dalḥá walḥá? aolḥá nolḥá
toim "time" datoim watoim? awatoim notoim
teing "thing" dateing wateing? aoting nating
wei "way, means" dawei wawei? awwei nowei

And here is a chart depicting their meanings:

dah "that" wah "which, what" ao "all, every" no "no"
man "person" that person who? everyone nobody
luḥá "place" there where? everywhere nowhere
toim "time" then when? always never
teing "thing" that thing what thing? everything nothing
wei "way, means" that way how? every way no way
Note: The word luḥá is a loanword from Old Cuvao lugal "place". Cuvao is the language of the Kingdom of Cuva, making it a descendant of Cuban Spanish.


Possessive Adjectives

Possessive Adjectives
1SG mai
2SG yoḥ
3SG (Animate) ez
3SG (Inanimate) ets
Impersonal yaḥ
1PL aḥ
2PL yuga
3PL dẹmọ
Possessive adjectives go before the nouns that they possess. In many urban areas, possessive adjectives are dying out, and being replaced with genitive pronouns that go after the nouns they possess, especially among younger people. Here is a comparison of how an urban Biscaynian would speak versus a rural elderly Biscaynian. Biscaynian is the English term for an inhabitant of the Kingdom of Baskain based on the origin of the word of Baskain in Modern English, Biscayne Bay. This name stems from the fact that Cutler Bay, known as the City of Baskain nowadays, is the capital of the Kingdom of Baskain.

English Sentence: Hwan paid me 50 pieces of silver as a dowry for the marriage between his son and my daughter.

Urban
Hwan irpeinmi weppis 50 frȧsseuvaḥ yaz braggef bikaz fọḥdamẹḥȧj frȧssȧn frȧddẹm yan frȧddarȧḥ frȧmmi.
Hwan 3S.PST.PERF-pay-PST.PERF-1S.OBL INSTR-piece-PLU fifty GEN-silver as INDEF-dowry because OBL-DEF-marriage GEN-son 3S.ANIM.GEN and GEN-daughter 1S.GEN

Rural
Hwan irpeinmi wet 50 fọḥpisas frȧsseuvaḥ yaz braggef bikaz fọḥdamẹḥȧj bitwain ez sȧn yan mai darȧḥ.
Hwan 3S.PST.PERF-pay-PST.PERF-1S.OBL with fifty OBL-piece-PLU GEN-silver as INDEF-dowry because OBL-DEF-marriage between 3S.ANIM.POSS son and 1S.POSS daughter
Llazmacnazion intenna delment mijo tán wanimma.
DEF.FP-machination inner-FEM of-DEF.MS-mind 1S.POSS-MASC be.PRES.IND.PLU INDEF.FS-enigma
Llaz-macnazion intenna de-llo-ment mijo tán wa-enimma
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Bob
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Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Bob »

gokupwned5 wrote: Sat Dec 14, 2019 4:59 pm ...
Wow, good job on this one. I even made a "future English" conlang once or a few times in the past few years.
Esneirra973
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2018 11:18 am

Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Esneirra973 »

Bob wrote: Tue Jun 30, 2020 11:30 pm
Esneirra973 wrote: Sat Dec 14, 2019 4:59 pm ...
Wow, good job on this one. I even made a "future English" conlang once or a few times in the past few years.
Thanks! I’m also working on a future Spanish conlang that’s spoken in Cuba.
Last edited by Esneirra973 on Thu Apr 01, 2021 6:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Llazmacnazion intenna delment mijo tán wanimma.
DEF.FP-machination inner-FEM of-DEF.MS-mind 1S.POSS-MASC be.PRES.IND.PLU INDEF.FS-enigma
Llaz-macnazion intenna de-llo-ment mijo tán wa-enimma
sasasha
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Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by sasasha »

gokupwned5 wrote: Wed Jul 01, 2020 6:56 am
Bob wrote: Tue Jun 30, 2020 11:30 pm
gokupwned5 wrote: Sat Dec 14, 2019 4:59 pm ...
Wow, good job on this one. I even made a "future English" conlang once or a few times in the past few years.
Thanks! I’m also working on a future Spanish conlang that’s spoken in Cuba.
Which is in your signature?

I like Biskainish very much, particularly the differences between urban and rural speech, and the borrowing from Old Cuvao. Out of interest, how would the Biskainish reflex differ if taken from 'lugar'?
Esneirra973
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2018 11:18 am

Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Esneirra973 »

sasasha wrote: Wed Jul 01, 2020 8:52 am
Esneirra973 wrote: Wed Jul 01, 2020 6:56 am
Bob wrote: Tue Jun 30, 2020 11:30 pm

Wow, good job on this one. I even made a "future English" conlang once or a few times in the past few years.
Thanks! I’m also working on a future Spanish conlang that’s spoken in Cuba.
Which is in your signature?

I like Biskainish very much, particularly the differences between urban and rural speech, and the borrowing from Old Cuvao. Out of interest, how would the Biskainish reflex differ if taken from 'lugar'?
Yeah. The future Spanish conlang is actually called Cuvao, which comes from the Spanish word cubano. If the Biskainish word in question was borrowed from lugar instead, then its reflex would be *liugar, because it would have been borrowed into 21st century English as /luːgaɾ/.
Last edited by Esneirra973 on Thu Apr 01, 2021 6:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Llazmacnazion intenna delment mijo tán wanimma.
DEF.FP-machination inner-FEM of-DEF.MS-mind 1S.POSS-MASC be.PRES.IND.PLU INDEF.FS-enigma
Llaz-macnazion intenna de-llo-ment mijo tán wa-enimma
sasasha
Posts: 468
Joined: Mon Aug 06, 2018 11:41 am

Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by sasasha »

gokupwned5 wrote: Wed Jul 01, 2020 8:59 am
Yeah. The future Spanish conlang is actually called Cuvao, which comes from the Spanish word cubano.


Yeah, I registered that - very cool. You're obviously doing some rich world-building here too.
If the Biskainish word in question was borrowed from lugar instead, then its reflex would be *liugar, because it would have been borrowed into 21st century English as /luːgaɾ/.
Ok, interesting.
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Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Bob »

gokupwned5 wrote: Wed Jul 01, 2020 6:56 am
Thanks! I’m also working on a future Spanish conlang that’s spoken in Cuba.
Post about it here if you can. You should make websites for your conlangs, if you haven't already. I don't remember.

You know what would be cool? Future versions of languages like English or Spanish that develop huge tone systems like what Cantonese have. I was just reading about tonogenesis on Wikipedia and it's interesting. Someone took the effort in c 2015 to 2020 to improve the Wikipedia article despite all the drama of Wikipedia. That always amazes me. Anyway, just a thought. They say now that English has a topic marker in the youth slang word "like". That always struck me as Asian. Maybe I'm thinking of Blade Runner and The Fifth Element too much here. Have you seen Water World? It's very very good, despite the negative impression I always had of it. Things are like that in life.
Esneirra973
Posts: 56
Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2018 11:18 am

Re: Biskainish - A Post-Apocalyptic Language

Post by Esneirra973 »

Bob wrote: Thu Jul 09, 2020 2:44 pm
gokupwned5 wrote: Wed Jul 01, 2020 6:56 am
Thanks! I’m also working on a future Spanish conlang that’s spoken in Cuba.
Post about it here if you can. You should make websites for your conlangs, if you haven't already. I don't remember.

You know what would be cool? Future versions of languages like English or Spanish that develop huge tone systems like what Cantonese have. I was just reading about tonogenesis on Wikipedia and it's interesting. Someone took the effort in c 2015 to 2020 to improve the Wikipedia article despite all the drama of Wikipedia. That always amazes me. Anyway, just a thought. They say now that English has a topic marker in the youth slang word "like". That always struck me as Asian. Maybe I'm thinking of Blade Runner and The Fifth Element too much here. Have you seen Water World? It's very very good, despite the negative impression I always had of it. Things are like that in life.
That would be pretty interesting! As for making a website, I might do that in the future, maybe once I flesh out the world that Biskainish and Cuvao exist in a little more.
Llazmacnazion intenna delment mijo tán wanimma.
DEF.FP-machination inner-FEM of-DEF.MS-mind 1S.POSS-MASC be.PRES.IND.PLU INDEF.FS-enigma
Llaz-macnazion intenna de-llo-ment mijo tán wa-enimma
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