Conlang made from interleaved vowel-words and consonant-words
Posted: Wed Nov 19, 2025 12:14 pm
VAVNAC (verbs are vowels, nouns are consonants)
I'm making a new conlang.
Main idea and goals:
The main idea is that nouns are consonants, verbs are vowels. A simple sentence with one verb and one noun just puts the two together by alternating the phonemes, so that if 'mother' is m-m-t and 'sleep' is i-e-u then 'mother sleeps' is mimetu.
I'm content for this language to be a sort of a proof-of-principle rather than a well-fleshed out conlang. One aspect of that: the name of the conlang is just VAVNAC.
One example:
In VAVNAC (pronounced as in IPA)
Wefanə, nuhaʔo vyʔa takazə kəʔeʔo, tiqaʔi nohaʔiʔu viʔy fefubodəsəgə.
Separated into consonant-words and vowel-words, and then the gloss:
Translation: It was in this fashion that I began the long journey by which I have backed into the throne.
Notes on the example:
Each word is made by smooshing together a consonant-word and a vowel-word. I've separated them out so you can see the parts better, with a backslash in between. Backslash is not a terrible stretch from https://www.eva.mpg.de/lingua/resources ... -rules.php , rule 4D. That page is also where I'm getting the all-caps glosses when they're abbreviations; and v.t. means the gloss is using the transitive meaning of the English verb, v.i. for intransitive.
When there are more consonants than vowels, the sequence of vowels is padded with ə, which we can consider the neutral vowel - enough ə's are added to match the length of the sequence of consonants. Similarly, the consonants are padded with ʔ.
PREVIOUS.NOUN refers to the immediately previous noun. THAT.VERB refers to a nearby verb, generally the main verb; it fills a noun slot and can be thought of as meaning the action, process, state, or fact of the relevant verb. Probably there's a better name for such a thing? Or a reason organizing it like this isn't a good idea?
More details:
Verbs are vowels, as are adjectives, adverbs, adpositions and things like ACC, and some miscellaneous particles. Nouns are consonants, as are pronouns and some miscellaneous particles.
My idea is inspired a little bit by triconsonantal roots but mainly by a wish to have two streams of information that are somehow separate.
I'm obviously not looking to make something naturalistic, but I don't want it to be vastly more non-naturalistic than is required by the main idea. Or rather, I'm totally fine with it being too regular, I'm resigned to it being too English-like, but I don't want it to be bizarre in ways that no human languages are — except for what follows from the premise. And more positively, I want things to fit well with that premise.
I have more worked out, but I thought maybe I should start with posting just a little.
Questions, feedback sought, etc:
Does the main idea already exist, in a natlang or conlang?
Are there things about this conlang - apart from the main premise, and necessary consequences - that are non-naturalistic in the sense of being implausibly different from what's attested in natlangs?
Do you have aesthetic suggestions? Is the main idea sufficiently different from triconsonantal roots to be interesting?
Does it seem likely it's possible to make a whole language this way, or likely that it will break somewhere?
I'm generally interested in any constructive criticism.
I'm making a new conlang.
Main idea and goals:
The main idea is that nouns are consonants, verbs are vowels. A simple sentence with one verb and one noun just puts the two together by alternating the phonemes, so that if 'mother' is m-m-t and 'sleep' is i-e-u then 'mother sleeps' is mimetu.
I'm content for this language to be a sort of a proof-of-principle rather than a well-fleshed out conlang. One aspect of that: the name of the conlang is just VAVNAC.
One example:
In VAVNAC (pronounced as in IPA)
Wefanə, nuhaʔo vyʔa takazə kəʔeʔo, tiqaʔi nohaʔiʔu viʔy fefubodəsəgə.
Separated into consonant-words and vowel-words, and then the gloss:
- wfn\ea, nh\ua-o v\ya tkz\aa k\əeo, tq\iai nh\oa-iu v\iy ffb-dsg\euo.
- that.way\INS, I\begin(v.i.)-CAUSATIVE THAT.VERB\PST journey\ACC PREVIOUS.NOUN\long, REL\along I\move-backwards THAT.VERB\PRF chair-king\into.
Translation: It was in this fashion that I began the long journey by which I have backed into the throne.
Notes on the example:
Each word is made by smooshing together a consonant-word and a vowel-word. I've separated them out so you can see the parts better, with a backslash in between. Backslash is not a terrible stretch from https://www.eva.mpg.de/lingua/resources ... -rules.php , rule 4D. That page is also where I'm getting the all-caps glosses when they're abbreviations; and v.t. means the gloss is using the transitive meaning of the English verb, v.i. for intransitive.
When there are more consonants than vowels, the sequence of vowels is padded with ə, which we can consider the neutral vowel - enough ə's are added to match the length of the sequence of consonants. Similarly, the consonants are padded with ʔ.
PREVIOUS.NOUN refers to the immediately previous noun. THAT.VERB refers to a nearby verb, generally the main verb; it fills a noun slot and can be thought of as meaning the action, process, state, or fact of the relevant verb. Probably there's a better name for such a thing? Or a reason organizing it like this isn't a good idea?
More details:
Verbs are vowels, as are adjectives, adverbs, adpositions and things like ACC, and some miscellaneous particles. Nouns are consonants, as are pronouns and some miscellaneous particles.
My idea is inspired a little bit by triconsonantal roots but mainly by a wish to have two streams of information that are somehow separate.
I'm obviously not looking to make something naturalistic, but I don't want it to be vastly more non-naturalistic than is required by the main idea. Or rather, I'm totally fine with it being too regular, I'm resigned to it being too English-like, but I don't want it to be bizarre in ways that no human languages are — except for what follows from the premise. And more positively, I want things to fit well with that premise.
I have more worked out, but I thought maybe I should start with posting just a little.
Questions, feedback sought, etc:
Does the main idea already exist, in a natlang or conlang?
Are there things about this conlang - apart from the main premise, and necessary consequences - that are non-naturalistic in the sense of being implausibly different from what's attested in natlangs?
Do you have aesthetic suggestions? Is the main idea sufficiently different from triconsonantal roots to be interesting?
Does it seem likely it's possible to make a whole language this way, or likely that it will break somewhere?
I'm generally interested in any constructive criticism.