Conlang Showcase: Agēre

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  • Опубліковано 26 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 111

  • @AgmaSchwa
    @AgmaSchwa 3 роки тому +260

    Quite *aesthetic*

  • @bluetannery1527
    @bluetannery1527 3 роки тому +228

    This is the most highly developed, convoluted, overgrown and swollen conlang I have ever seen.
    Please don't stop here, I fucking love it

    • @bluetannery1527
      @bluetannery1527 3 роки тому +9

      also let me have your discord or sometbing i'd love to ask u some questions abt conlangs

    • @narandil5481
      @narandil5481  3 роки тому +33

      @@bluetannery1527 Hi, thanks very much! Happy to be the creator of a "swollen" conlang! My email is on the About section on my page, feel free to drop me a couple questions and I'll get back to you when I can.

    • @portinari76
      @portinari76 3 роки тому +3

      Well, you haven't seen anything yet.

    • @tyunpeters3170
      @tyunpeters3170 Рік тому +1

      Try Ithkuil

    • @yipperson2974
      @yipperson2974 Рік тому

      @@tyunpeters3170Imagine ithkuil beinga an actual language that real life people fluently spoke

  • @cobyobrien9036
    @cobyobrien9036 3 роки тому +121

    at the start i thought this sounded a bit like old english with a bit of finnish, and I feel that carries through! Its very,,,, unplaceably european, which i really like, well apart from declining participles and the genitive absolute * flashbacks to greek class *

    • @amjan
      @amjan 3 роки тому +5

      If you told me it was Estonian, I would believe it. It's totally "placable".

    • @eagle0710
      @eagle0710 3 роки тому +1

      i heard it to be quite similar to an eastern european, and i also heard the finnish inspiration

    • @quoku7335
      @quoku7335 9 місяців тому

      Can you make a discord?

  • @MarcyYorsa
    @MarcyYorsa 3 роки тому +37

    A beautiful language! Taught me some new stuff as well~
    I couldn't help but notice how omnipresent /e/ is as a phoneme x3

  • @КлимКроль
    @КлимКроль 3 роки тому +50

    Dude. You just inspired my to get back to conlanging.
    Truly amazing!

  • @Hauskreisbenni
    @Hauskreisbenni 2 роки тому +16

    We really want to see more of this! ^^ Please tell us more about the history and language of Αgēre or give us a summory of the related tongues like Eagro and so on :)

  • @manuchi-nuchi
    @manuchi-nuchi День тому

    the most beautiful and cared s.a.e. conlang i’ve even seen! really love it ✨ thank you for sharing it!

  • @im3635
    @im3635 3 роки тому +12

    really love the language,looks like spicy IE + some uniqueness unknown vibes,anyway it sounds good and looks amazing!

  • @jan_Masewin
    @jan_Masewin 3 роки тому +5

    Beautiful aesthetic, beautiful depth, I love not being able to understand something but knowing there is such careful craft behind it.

  • @AprilLVideos
    @AprilLVideos 3 роки тому +18

    Oooooooooo I really like this! It kinda gives me Tolkien vibes

  • @Helmet_enthusiast
    @Helmet_enthusiast 8 місяців тому +2

    After getting through half the video, my brain has broken (in a good way if that makes sense) although I’m still relatively new to conlangs. Also, at the start of the video when you switched from Agēre to english, that was a surprise! Felt like two different people were speaking, awesome conlang

  • @dropletdraws8907
    @dropletdraws8907 3 роки тому +12

    I understood almost none of this, but I can tell that that’s just because I’m not good with languages, and this could be a real one at this point.

  • @majahadra7905
    @majahadra7905 3 роки тому +8

    This is very well put together, good job!

  •  3 роки тому +4

    Oooh great stuff! The grammar really gives it a great vibe, super well thought out!

  • @zarathustraf5950
    @zarathustraf5950 3 роки тому +3

    fantastic! one of the best showcases ive seen thus far!

  • @Lichenthefictioneer
    @Lichenthefictioneer 3 роки тому +7

    Very nice

  • @AdventureCJ
    @AdventureCJ 6 місяців тому +1

    man I love conlangs that get their own classes after a couple years

  • @watson-disambiguation
    @watson-disambiguation 3 роки тому +5

    Very neat and well done. Reminds me of IE languages, which makes sense, but also for some reason of biblaridion's conlangs in some ways. Very good stuff though.

  • @Moses_Caesar_Augustus
    @Moses_Caesar_Augustus 4 місяці тому

    I watched this video a while ago when I didn't have a clear understanding of grammar. Now I have realized how beautiful and well-made this language is, because now I have a better understanding of grammar. Grammatically, it reminds me of Latin which is one of my favorite languages. The phonology has Old English vibes. The prayer that you read at the beginning of the video sounded a lot like the Lord's Prayer in Old English.

  • @MatthewMcVeagh
    @MatthewMcVeagh 4 місяці тому

    Just watched this for the 2nd or 3rd time. It's undoubtedly one of the best artlangs out there. I'm familiar with the inflection patterns due to learning Latin, but for some viewers this must be fearsome.

  • @Hinderlengjes
    @Hinderlengjes 3 роки тому +5

    Very interesting - the sound is very Finnish/Quenya. Any songs on the way?

  • @thatprogramer
    @thatprogramer 6 місяців тому +1

    Very beautiful!

  • @scottelkington2245
    @scottelkington2245 3 роки тому +2

    Hi, great video ! just a heads up that adpositions (and determiners) are generally considered the heads of their phrases and so postpositions are a head final construction but your exceptions aren't

  • @horationorman5366
    @horationorman5366 3 роки тому +1

    This is really good work! I hope you keep making videos.

  • @conze3029
    @conze3029 6 місяців тому

    Conlangs are so cool to me, and this is such a pretty one. I actually made a kinda silly one myself:
    “Uns clojan, Lub glub bazzabi di foozma shablawa, clu tenzoj lub glub opjan kojasta… kojasta glub doo elamagrabaclubi. Lub glub infojoob leebi kojasta, u leebi apkoovaj glub shiktakzabi aji lub di plekbon di lubimoab fobac.
    Lub glub comjes di polkoovdil plekbon di moublubi, lub glub comjes di cobun abio joob leeb keejda bamoo lub di sooba di moab. Jos di glub kolja, lub glub hazelin lubishabablid. Heej… Lub glub rabtoos elamagrabaclubi glub feep-krabtoos aji lub, clu lub glub haphaj fabtoos… gloksee…”
    This is a short story in my conlang about a guy describing a time he was going to the shoe store, but his mom called him to return home, and he later realizes it was because he forgot his money. Your conlang is significantly better made than mine lol. Great video.

  • @LoganKearsley
    @LoganKearsley 3 роки тому +3

    If you accept the DP hypothesis, putting articles in front of nouns is not an exception to head-initial structure.

  • @טמוציןבורגיגין
    @טמוציןבורגיגין 3 роки тому +1

    Very beautiful! Thanks for sharing. I'll copy some of your ideas to my own conlang ;)

  • @Natasha-ig9hr
    @Natasha-ig9hr 3 роки тому +1

    Nice. Even as someone who personally dislikes the Greek/Latin aesthetic I quite like it. Almost feels like someone combined Welsh and Greek in terms of phonoaesthetics and idk why.

  • @johnargeles7019
    @johnargeles7019 3 роки тому +1

    I totally wanna learn this conlang now!

  • @kadenvanciel9335
    @kadenvanciel9335 Рік тому +1

    This video, now that I think about it, gives me the impression that the alveolar lateral of Ancient Thirēan evolved to the voiceless dental fricative upon the transition to Classical Thirēan.

    • @Moses_Caesar_Augustus
      @Moses_Caesar_Augustus 4 місяці тому

      This isn't a Thirēan language... It's not even made by Biblaridion...

    • @kadenvanciel9335
      @kadenvanciel9335 4 місяці тому

      @@Moses_Caesar_Augustus I know that. I’m just saying it’s giving me the idea. And I think the transition from lateral to dental fricatives occurred in Hebrew.

    • @Moses_Caesar_Augustus
      @Moses_Caesar_Augustus 3 місяці тому

      @@kadenvanciel9335 ok

  • @somewheninthemultiverse
    @somewheninthemultiverse Рік тому +3

    Kissammi! Would it be possible for you to make a video on how you make these videos😅, as I want to get into doing this kind of stuff. Kwolan!

    • @narandil5481
      @narandil5481  Рік тому +2

      Happy to by comment :) video from phone, audio from mic through garageband, background music from royalty free platforms, presentation in google slides, screen-record software, sync them up and edit together in GarageBand, voilà!

  • @sorayawaller2041
    @sorayawaller2041 2 роки тому +1

    Is there a reason the language has postpositions rather than prepositions? I was under the impression that the adposition usually acts as the head, and thus head-initial languages are slightly more likely to use prepositions, so I was curious if there was a particular reason your language has postpositions instead.

  • @choealley8105
    @choealley8105 3 роки тому +3

    It sound a surprising amount like Latin, cool use of the "quirky" subject though haha

  • @viperking6573
    @viperking6573 3 роки тому +1

    It sounds so natural

  • @bingolingo6555
    @bingolingo6555 3 роки тому +9

    Sounds like old English

  • @theoneandonlymr.d
    @theoneandonlymr.d 3 роки тому +1

    I am desperately trying to learn to conlang
    i've got a (pretty new) world i need languages for
    in total, i think i have about 19 languages (a lot, i know) planned, but i've just barely started on one, using Biblidarion's 8-video tutorial on how to make a language

  • @cleitondecarvalho431
    @cleitondecarvalho431 7 місяців тому

    it sounded so damn natural.

  • @diegosamir4603
    @diegosamir4603 2 роки тому +1

    Hola! muy bueno este conlang, como puedo conseguir su vocabulario y gramatica?

  • @TheKillerwolfi
    @TheKillerwolfi 3 роки тому +1

    you got a sub

  • @brillitheworldbuilder
    @brillitheworldbuilder 2 роки тому

    The sound of this gives me vibes of both Italian and Sámi somehow

  • @joelformica8344
    @joelformica8344 2 роки тому

    I didn’t understand the mora thing whatsoever. What do you mean with “third mora from the end of the word”? I thought morae were points each syllable got. How do you count points “from the end of a word”? What does that mean? I’m so confused

    • @cellularautomaton.
      @cellularautomaton. 2 роки тому

      i know this is half a year later, but...
      you're right that morae are the amount of points each syllable gets. we can imagine laying out all those points side by side, for example:
      .|..|...
      can represent a word with three syllables where the first has one mora, the second has two morae, and the third has three morae.
      here's the third mora raised up:
      .|..|·..
      so stress would go on the third syllable.
      another example:
      ..|.|..|.|.|.
      in this six-syllable word, stress falls on the fourth syllable, because it again contains the third from last mora. again, with the third-from-last mora highlighted:
      ..|.|..|·|.|.
      hope this helps!

  • @portinari76
    @portinari76 3 роки тому

    Great job, man.

  • @keylime6
    @keylime6 6 місяців тому +1

    Sounds like a mix between Greek and Finnish

  • @taube637
    @taube637 19 днів тому

    this conlang has insane proto-germanic vibes

  • @sortingoutmyclothes8131
    @sortingoutmyclothes8131 3 роки тому

    pretty neat
    very classical indoeuropean-escque

  • @RezonSV
    @RezonSV Рік тому

    The Finnish influences mske it sound like Quenya, I like it. 👍

  • @harikrishnabaral7206
    @harikrishnabaral7206 3 роки тому

    just a beginner here. Your language family is awesome. Appreciated. But try to make other conlangs more diverse. It eerily resembles french to me which is ok by seeing your inspirational languages but try to learn other language's grammar to get a feel of how diverse languages are. May you achieve this task.

  • @justaguy0082
    @justaguy0082 3 роки тому

    very cool

  • @Curvyfeets
    @Curvyfeets Рік тому +2

    I've rewatched this video many times

  • @yerdasellsavon9232
    @yerdasellsavon9232 2 роки тому

    This is class

  • @brillitheworldbuilder
    @brillitheworldbuilder 3 роки тому

    Cool!

  • @farlingvantokajfarmondanto9041

    I would like to study it

  • @tzshchsjsjxijyo
    @tzshchsjsjxijyo 2 роки тому

    This gives me very Old English and Norse vibes

  • @salumtheconlang2953
    @salumtheconlang2953 3 роки тому +3

    woow

    • @narandil5481
      @narandil5481  3 роки тому +1

      Thank you! Big fan of your work on Mondir!

  • @grumpyinbrooklyn6347
    @grumpyinbrooklyn6347 3 роки тому

    This is... a lot!

  • @cassandradawn780
    @cassandradawn780 Рік тому

    this feels like it could be a natlang

  • @carolinemasson7172
    @carolinemasson7172 3 роки тому +1

    Random, but are you a lowland Scot?

    • @narandil5481
      @narandil5481  3 роки тому +1

      Ah ha, knew the accent would give it away eventually! Originally from further north in Scotland but I live around the Lowlands now.

    • @carolinemasson7172
      @carolinemasson7172 3 роки тому

      @@narandil5481 ah okay, makes sense, from Edinburgh myself and I haven't heard an accent since I moved to America

  • @ymin1195
    @ymin1195 5 місяців тому

    That' a... Rather complicated language 😅 But impressive job mate 🤎

  • @celty5858
    @celty5858 Рік тому

    Are you Dutch or Scottish?

  • @shannonparkhill5557
    @shannonparkhill5557 3 роки тому +1

    I'm guessing you too quite like spanish :)

  • @Schockmetamorphose
    @Schockmetamorphose 5 місяців тому

    This sounds like Latin with dental fricatives

  • @ivandinsmore6217
    @ivandinsmore6217 9 місяців тому

    This sounds like the Pope.

  • @cassandradawn780
    @cassandradawn780 2 роки тому

    agere

  • @ems7623
    @ems7623 3 роки тому

    I see how conlangs can be entertaining and even useful in the entertainment industry. But i still wonder ... Given the difficulty of learning languages, why would anyone choose to develop or learn a conlang instead of a real-world language?
    Surely, the payoff of actually being able to use a language in the real world is greater than the private entertainment of a conlang.

    • @rubbedibubb5017
      @rubbedibubb5017 3 роки тому +4

      Not for everyone. However, people who make conlangs are generally into real languages as well, and conlang can be a really goodway of learning and experimenting with foreign linuistic concepts, at least for me.
      Edit: one more thing is that far from everyone actually learns their language.

    • @cellularautomaton.
      @cellularautomaton. 2 роки тому +2

      the point of making a conlang isn't usually to learn it, so that "instead" doesn't make sense. most conlangers develop conlangs AND learn real languages!

  • @LanguageBLOX1_Alt
    @LanguageBLOX1_Alt 3 роки тому

    the nasal. THE NASAL.

  • @whyismycumpink
    @whyismycumpink 6 місяців тому

    The complex grammar really adds the aesthetics of this conlang, and i love it man❤

  • @tlatolcalli682
    @tlatolcalli682 Рік тому

    This is how Latin sounds to non-native speakers

  • @Garfield_Minecraft
    @Garfield_Minecraft Рік тому +1

    Agere sounds so เกเร😏

  • @NeroDefogger
    @NeroDefogger Рік тому

    I hate natlangs, and this one is a specially bad one, before you even try to say "why do you watch then?" let me tell you that I just searched for "conlang" and the title doesn't say anything about natlang, only conlang, so I had no way to know, and is not like to many showed up so that answers why

    • @k1j1j1j
      @k1j1j1j 4 місяці тому

      what the fuck are you talking about bro

  • @junodoesworldbuilding2956
    @junodoesworldbuilding2956 3 роки тому +12

    Imma give you a shout out in my next video, this is pretty spicy 👌

    • @narandil5481
      @narandil5481  3 роки тому +7

      Wow thanks man! Much appreciated :D

    • @junodoesworldbuilding2956
      @junodoesworldbuilding2956 3 роки тому +6

      @@narandil5481 No problem! Trust me, this is the kind of conlanging content people are looking for 👀

  • @fyorr
    @fyorr 3 роки тому +4

    I was curious, how did /ku:/ become /o/? Great conlangery btw 👀

    • @narandil5481
      @narandil5481  3 роки тому +1

      I explain this at 7:20. /ku:/ > /ku/ > /ko/ then /k/ disappears, but only in the Genitive Singular.

    • @fyorr
      @fyorr 3 роки тому

      @@narandil5481 Ah, sorry, I didn't notice. Thanks! :)

  • @NormanTheDummy_YouTube
    @NormanTheDummy_YouTube 9 місяців тому

    5:35 it's funny to me because in my conlang (currently known ass Siþtoksk or Sithtokish) virø means man

  • @RafalRacegPolonusSum
    @RafalRacegPolonusSum 10 місяців тому

    This is Quenya level gorgeous

  • @DanielGenther
    @DanielGenther Рік тому

    This is such an impressive amount of thought and development!!! This is top tier shit and it's totally inspiring.

  • @kadenvanciel9335
    @kadenvanciel9335 Рік тому

    2:07-2:30 Can anyone tell the allophones? (Aside from the obvious.) I can't tell all of them. And the asterisks aren't helping. Are they there to symbolize that the phonemes they're next to are involved with certain allophones? The brackets are somewhat helping, and the footnotes as well. But still...