Qwynegold wrote: ↑Wed Aug 19, 2020 11:49 am
Ah. I have time, but lack motivation, interest, and above all, energy.
Just in case it may help anyone, here are a few tricks. Honestly, I don't claim any special knowledge or expertise, it's just stuff that works for me.
- Switch to conworlding. The more you know about your speakers, the better.
- Research is an excellent, guilt-free activity.
- Up the alienness ratio. This relates to the conworlding point above. Figuring out how to say 'Claudius is in the garden' is tedious. 'The criminal is in a sack with a dog, a cock, a viper, and an ape', not so much.
- Write up a difficult text and try to translate it. It doesn't matter if you haven't covered the required grammar, try to come up with something on the fly.
- Just go through vocabulary list and try and expand the lexicon.
- Did I mention the lexicon? Seriously, work on the lexicon!
It took me years to figure that one out: never neglect the lexicon. I guarantee you'll never abandon a language with a sizeable lexicon. Plus, you can work on it at any time. You don't need to have syntactic trees or huge paradigm tables to expand vocabulary.
Also: work out geographical terms. A huge list of river, mountain ranges, and so on. You'll need them. Figure out how names work, you'll need that too.
Also, it's a very good way to avoid the ever present temptation to tweak the language some more.
I guarantee, when you have a dozen town names and river names, and maps labelled with these (or genealogies, or stories, whatever floats your boat), you'll want to keep these. Which means if you work on the language, you'll move on to the good bits of grammar, and won't be tempted to redo the grammar ever again.
Again, that sounds very didactic, but I don't mean any of this in a patronizing way. I'm just sharing what worked for me.