I’d really like to see more of it though! It always seems really interesting when you talk about it.Rounin Ryuuji wrote: ↑Tue Jul 20, 2021 6:06 pmIt sort-of is. I had a thread, but the development of the language has evolved kind-of beyond it, and the document in which I'm working on articulating everything is very incomplete. I haven't updated the thread in a while, or said much of anything about the world, so I shouldn't think people would know much about it.Gryphonic wrote: ↑Tue Jul 20, 2021 3:42 pmI love seeing examples of colorful and poetic names! Is this conlang on this board at the moment? I apologize that I'm sometimes confused by which ones are part of connected settings for various members. I try to lurk and learn.I also have a sort-of accomplishment — I finished a redraught of an old work of fiction, that I think both improved it enormously, and brought it to better match how I now conceive the world. It's also quite surreal, and I wonder how well it really fits in overall, but I always doubt my own fiction. It's about 20,000 words, so I suppose it's a long short story or novelette, or a rather short novella. It also, incidentally, resulted in my creating a word for "hell" in the internal language (下死原 Shita Insis, literally "Lower Death Meadow"), though it isn't a fire-and-brimstone hell, or a place of tournament, the overall realm of the dead simply being 死原 Insis, which doesn't have any sort of negative connotation internally, and it's at least strongly implied that the inhabitants of the main part of the fictitious world (or at least most of them) aren't aware of its existence.
As is to be expected, it's flowery, and full of rather long and convoluted sentences.
For one of my conlangs, I had a similar problem — the reference grammar was extremely incomplete, but I wanted to share it. I found that translating a text AND including grammatical notes worked really well as a way of showing off the language. You might be interested in doing the same. (I got the idea originally from Short Stories in Risha Cuhbi on the old board, which I still think is one of the best conlang presentations I’ve ever seen.)