To set the scene: I am constructing a language, and I started by creating some names which gave me some ideas for the phonology.
Now, this evening I wanted to start deciding on some roots and basic nouns, and looked at my names and wondered whether the endings
(this conlang shall do word modification, like derivations and inflections and such, on the right of the word) of those names would be more or
less restrictive than for normal nouns.
Meaning, the names have vowel endings like -a, -i, -o, -e. Maybe other nouns only allow -a and -e? Maybe they allow -æ, too?
There are of course some things to consider:
- In newspaper articles and other texts from the last century and before it was okay and even expected to translate some names. I vividly remember an article which translated the German names Friedrich and Wilhelm to Frederick and William for the anglophone readers. And to this day it's common to encounter the kings Ludwig XIV and XVI in German history classes, instead of Louis XIV and XVI.
- Nowadays, at least in the media I consume, it's quite common not to translate names, and, if necessary, just pronounce it badly. For example, people like British King Charles or Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez stay those and don't get translated to "Karl" or "Peter" or something.
- Well, place names. As far as I'm aware, they can become quite unique, retain uncommon structures or approximation of sounds of languages, which those names "originally" stem from.
- I think I read something that said that latinisation of names got quite wild, sometimes just adding "-us", sometimes making names indeclinable, sometimes translating literally.
- Do natlangs tend to give names more leeway in regards to phonology and their syllable structures than other nouns? Or maybe less ("only endings 1 and 2 are used for names, everything else is a normal noun")?
- Are there trends or regional clusters or something which influence the above?
- If natlangs are more free with names, are there some common ways how they deal with these now complex names grammatically, if necessary, like with inflection?
Best regards, airetara