ScratchData LogoScratchData
Back to jsnpldng's profile

Sonurao, a ConLang

JSjsnpldng•Created December 16, 2017
Sonurao, a ConLang
2
2
126 views
View on Scratch

Instructions

Read notes and Credits, click Green Flag, and put in single words to get them translated into Sonurao Tell me in the comments whether the text stays for too long or too short of a time, and i'll make it go away faster or slower Update Log: 12/17/17; Added new words, and a new consonant: "ch"; So far, one word ends in a consonant: s'kurach, well, technically two but it's just a meme word. And you'll know what that meme word is if you look at the beginning of the notes and crditz lel (hint, itza sanic)

Description

Sonurao is a conlang i made up for the Conlanging Studio (while listening to music from Sanic Forces you to sing along) Warning: this next part about Sonurao is extremely long and technical There are many different consonants ans vowels so here they are: Consonants: k, t, ts (piZZa), v, j, l & r (no "ar" or "el" sounds), n, p, ch Vowels: (any consonants with an apostrophe afterwards) (a glottal stop, like how one would normally say "hot-dog" without pronouncing the "t"), a (bAck), e (effEct), i (flEA), u (glUE), and o (a little hard to explain, snOW but without the "u" sound at the end of it, so instead of "sn-o-u" it's just "sn-o") Word Structure: Word order is object-verb-subject, so for english speakers, instead of "i ate an apple" it would be something like "an apple was eaten by me". Instead of yes or no, Sonurao has true and false; saying false would be like saying "what you just said is false". If you want to say something like "It's not true that Scratch is bad" you would add false to the beginning of the sentence, and then proceed to say the sentence like so: "False: Scratch is bad"; same thing goes for past, present and future tense, just add it to the beginning, right after true or false, if you have those in your sentence (sentences are automatically assumed to be true, and present tense, like in most languages). Now onto the fun part: Words! Words in Sonurao are made up of these letters. You cannot have two consonants in a row, unless said consonants belong to different words; you can have up to two vowels next to eachother, more if they belong to different words. When saying words in Sonurao, it's like a song; the words all come in a tempo, with each consonant, vowel and space between words being a half-note. When two vowels are next to eachother, however, you say each vowel in quarter-notes, or as a single vowel in a half-note (remember the part about snOW? In Sonurao, saying the full OW part of snow as o + u would become a "new" vowel). The same thing happens with consonants followed by vowels, or consonants followed by apostrophes. When ending a sentence, either end it with a full-note or more of silence, or "kui" which is the Sonurao equivalent of a question mark. Words can end in consonants, but only a few words in Sonurao actually follow this rule. I will keep updating this everyday, probably multiple times a day, so this will soon be a pretty big dictionary for Sonurao, but so far i have 20 or 30 words people might often use

Project Details

Project ID194020797
CreatedDecember 16, 2017
Last ModifiedJanuary 1, 2018
SharedDecember 16, 2017
Visibilityvisible
CommentsAllowed