One thing I heard about Dothraki is that they actually have a whole bunch of words for "horse", because obviously they would. If they're dealing with horses so much, the distinction between a workhorse or a warhorse or a breeding horse is actually really useful. Unfortunately, no one knew which horses they were gonna get on screen until they started filming, so DJP couldn't put specific words in the script, like "take this mare back to the stables" only for the horse actor to end up being a stallion.
@@Pingwnhmm, I mean when people who don't know what Arabic sounds like think of arabic, they think it's a "harsh" language, and ð is associated with spanish, which isn't seen as a very "harsh" language
@@sundalongpatpat The reference was to the books. Famously, The Office's writers had to innovate on the language (because it wasn't fully functional in the books) in order to make that joke. It was later made canon by Peterson, who named the thing Dwight did the "Schrutean Compound". As a side-note: being smug and rude isn't a prerequisite to posting on youtube, we could all do with less of it.
The professionalism in this is great, but I have to admit that I kinda miss your jabs and jokes. Maybe this was just an episode where you reviewed a conlang you actually respected so you didn't have as much to joke about, but I think that relaxed atmosphere added a lot of personality to your videos. I hope you can find a way to be more informal without being unstudied in your future videos
I did have more jokes in this originally which had to be cut for time (eg. I originally was going to do a whole goof about how the word for fast is "dik")
Tbh I’m Arab and Dothraki sounds a lot like Arabic “ana” means me in both Dothraki and Arabic also my love in Dothraki is moon of my life, in Arabic we say “gamar hayati” = moon of my life.
I remember once in a episode were Jason momoa said "ana khal drogo" I laughed because in Arabic it means "i am the uncle of drogo" Also one time daenerys said "fenel holaki" when she was asking where are the healers it sounded similar to "feen el holaki" Meaning in Arabic ( where are the "holaki" )
I had to read your comment 3 times to figure out where one thought started or stopped. It made no sense to me until I realized you needed a some kind of punctuation before 'also'.
the word תשומת־לב (/tesumat lev/ or /tăɬumɛθ lev/ in Tiberian Hebrew) means, approximately, "putting in the heart", as the word תשומה is used for gerund form of the verb putting.
David J. Peterson has an incredible talent for doing really cool and interesting conlangs that are attached to things I have no interest in watching. Trigedasleng is one of my top five conlangs of all time but I couldn't get through two episodes of the 100.
Actually the first two episodes are by far the worst in the entire series. I would recommend giving it another shot, or just skip a bunch of episodes/the first season. Second season onward the tone is completely different and anyone who's watched the 100 will agree.
@@colinfrey4440 Furthermore, it was only decided that the show should have a conlang AFTER season one happened. So Trigedasleng doesn't show up until the second season. DJP really wished that he had been brought in from the beginning, but oh well.
I have only watched the Dothraki parts of Game of Thrones and have very little interest in watching the series itself. Khal Drogo's speech about taking back the Iron Throne for Rhaego is so wonderful. Jason Momoa is incredible.
@@falpsdsqglthnsac The internet is your friend. (Apparently it's a conlang by the Zese and Votgil person, having elements from a bunch of their former conlangs.)
Abigail Sarah I am not disappointed. I didn’t look it up earlier because it can be hard to find online resources for many conlangs, but it seems this one was pretty easy.
@@Sovairu I don't know much about Esperanto or Ido but the whole male default thing that Ido fixed just seems dumb to me. It sucks that we have this in many languages where it's hard to fix. Why would you repeat the same mistake in a language when you have the chance to start from scratch?
There's nothing wrong with SVO, it's a very common word order, almost on par with SOV. It would be much weirder to have to make your conlang look exotic in every way (especially if it's spoken by humans, in a universe similar to ours).
Those jabs at GoT tho lmao. I have loved the show since the beginning, and although it SERIOUSLY fell from grace which is a damn shame, all the seasons where you'd hear Dothraki spoken for more than just a few words (which is pretty much s1-4) are some of the best tv that exists in my opinion. Awesome video btw, channels like yours are such an inspiration when I'm either bored out of my mind or overwhelmed with linguistics homework and need motivation to do that morphosyntax analysis that I've been procrastinating for longer than I'd care to admit. So thank you. Apart from the great editing and obvious enthusiasm for the topic, your expertly done communication of knowledge and conscise wording are extremely helpful. So thanks for doing what you do.
A cogent analysis, and I heartily agree. Also, I stopped watching the show after season 4 due to circumstances, but I had initially intended to pick up season 5; luckily, pretty much everyone agreed that the quality took a huge dip, so I never got around to it, and I couldn't be happier pretending that the series was only 4 seasons long. A great show, cut short before it could fall from grace.
I love Peterson's work, each language he's made has always had depth that Klingon (still one of my favorites because Star Trek) lacks. I like Dothraki's phonotactics and Nahuatl-esque vowel inventory a lot, although, I noticed in your sample, just like in Japanese, a tendency towards pseudo-diphthongs (use of a diphthong despite it not being part of the blackletter phonology), which I think is more organic than explicitly separating the sounds for rigid phonological agreement.
This channel is making me realize how truly terrible my conlang I built in high school was lmao. I'm truly glad you like base 6, cause at that point that's like the only positive I can really say about it.
@@tuluppampam I do, lol. That video also made me realize how bad it was. 1:1 English alphabet to weird kooky alien letters, obtuse grammar that no human would ever naturally come up with... I could go on forever.
RedGeoBlaze this is actually a mistake that DJP points out in his book. He says he probably ought to have just changed the romanization to “khalisi” because that’s how fans and the like pronounce it
I came here specifically to comment this!! It's "Dreams of Our Generation" by Tsunku, in Rhythm Heaven Fever btw If anyone can find that piano cover, I'd love to hear the full thing!!
Please cover NeoKhuzdul(Dwarrow Scholar has the most updated and developed information regarding it) & Nadsat(from Clockwork Orange)!!! Super excited to see you cover the Dothraki language!!!
(4:25) Well, if you're used to English romanisation, it make sense. But there are other ways to do it, like the Slavic way: c /ts/, č /tʃ/, š /ʃ/ ž /ʒ/, j /j/ (which I personally prefer) And then there's the Swedish way: ts /ts/, tsj /tʃ/, sj /ʃ/, zj /ʒ/, j /j/ And many other systems too.
it genuinely blows my mind how believable this language is. you could show me any chart saying it's from say, some random language in papua new guinea, and i wouldn't be the wiser. very refreshing contrast against the languages you analyzed from star trek or skyrim or avatar.
After doing some reading, apparently David J Peterson also created a language for one of my favorite series: The 100. Trigedasleng (a language I'd suggest for a review btw) is based on English, and in the canon it was created as a coded form of American English (during nuclear war) that evolved rapidly as a native language over three generations after society fell apart. For that purpose, David did a damn good job.
Him: Sees 2 days, 20 hours, 15 minutes. "Omg, that's way to long." Me: Sees 2 days, 20 hours, 15 minutes. "Hey, that's not really that long, I've watched that much TV plenty of times before. Maybe I should watch Game of Thrones."
Yeah, I'm not sure what Jan has against GoT, but he's missing out, and would do well to reconsider. The original novel just might be the finest work of fantasy of its generation, with a deeply imagined setting, compelling characters, and a plot that leads to places people don't see coming. It works as a standalone, too; things happened before the novel, and things will happen after, but the novel has a distinct and sensible beginning and end. It is is famous for good reason.
Militarily, the Dothraki are light cavalry with the macho ethos of charging into infantry formations. They ought to be extinct and now they pretty much are.
@@popito8366 It´s hard to tell. I also prefer Latin and Japanese over languages like German, Russian etc. The sounds and rythm certainly play a role. BTW: that doesn´t mean that I don´t like any German or Russian songs, far from it, but I do think that German sucks for singing, and only few are making good songs despite that.
Just as a note... German has the same translations for "to kill" - umbringen (done by person), töten (generally, by a thing, animal or person) and schlachten (slaughter an animal or like a animal, which also can be "abschlachten"). Also the fact that it has cases like that might be an indicator it's inspired by German or Russian in its structure, but I actually don't know any more languages that use cases for nouns..
This is the first video about fictional language i see and I am amazed 😱 how can this be a thing? How can someone create an entire new language? Is too cool i cannot comprehend.
8:54 I just noticed that in italian too there are 3 distinct ways to say "to kill", which are more or less synonims to each other "ammazzare" (a bit informal), "uccidere" (classic to kill) and "massacrare" (to massacre)
10:45 That makes sense in a way. A horse in this culture is not usually something that is entitled to make its own decisions. Any horse you encounter day-to-day would be domesticated, and would usually be seen more as an instrument of a rider's will. Wild horses are simply a natural resource that has yet to be harnessed. A river on the other hand does what it pleases, you don't harness it's power because nobody does that, and if it floods you had best get out of the way. Maybe "mastery" would be a more appropriate term for this concept?
Ooooh, spoken segment. That really ties the video together... we learn about the language, then hear it afterwards for some practical application! Can't wait for more of those!
I love it. I'm curious whether it would be worth it to make a totally-not-ranking list of languages sorted by their ratings, just to keep track of the languages covered and the broad strokes of their relations.
'The Dothraki have no word for 'Thank you'.' 9:35 - 'General Expressions: Haja! = Cheers!' Hmm, seems as if they *do* have a way to say 'thanks' after all.
This makes me want to make a script for this. They could cite it in the show to some ancient, little-known character who only recently gained attention.
Is there a way you will do a video about the Barsoomian language from John Carter of Mars books? I’m not even sure if there’s enough info on it or if it’s fleshed out enough for that to be possible but if it is, I’d like to see a video on that
I just realized that a lot of times when I'm not trying to muffle a laugh, but my mouth does a weird thing anyway, I make the velar fricative sound, or at least something close to it. Hmm.
Even if you have a ten based system you could still have a remnants of another system. Especially scores/vignidecimal like in Danish and French. Or count by dusins and gros like most traders did in Europe dispite ten-based being more official.
Firstly, no one says that the circumstances of one’s birth are irrelevant. Well, No one with a brain does. Secondly I can tell by your video clip of Dothraki being spoken, that your royalties budget was spent elsewhere. Finally, great episode as always. Keep up the entertaining work and please do some episodes or another series on number and base systems! Thumbs yp
9:05 Ido: wooden, fake. Hahahahaha! The artificial language Ido was copied from Esperanto and was the project of the head of the French Esperantists who wanted to propose Ido to the International Association of Academies AFTER he promised the author of Esperanto he would promote Esperanto to that association. Can't be more fake than that!
Odd little note that I didn't see anyone else say (tho I didn't go through every comment since last year when this was posted): Vash the Stampede is a character in the anime classic Trigun. So it was interesting to notice that stampede in Dothraki is vash. I wonder if the word for typhoon (if the Dothraki have one) also involves vash, since the character's other name was The Human Typhoon. This is assuming the word comes from the character at all and isn't a complete coincidence.
Good point!! I was actually just thinking of Modern Italian as a joke or and only added Hebrew as an afterthought when I realised that was a also a semi-constructed language, if you count simplified/modernised languages.
"on a TV budget" and "on an HBO TV budget" can be widely different animals, heh
the first season was pretty low budget I think
One thing I heard about Dothraki is that they actually have a whole bunch of words for "horse", because obviously they would. If they're dealing with horses so much, the distinction between a workhorse or a warhorse or a breeding horse is actually really useful.
Unfortunately, no one knew which horses they were gonna get on screen until they started filming, so DJP couldn't put specific words in the script, like "take this mare back to the stables" only for the horse actor to end up being a stallion.
2:25
CC: "It sounds alot like arabic or russian to people who don't speak arabic or russian."
Me, a native arabic speaker: *spits out arabic coffee*
You mean Qahwa
Lack of p and presence of q, x, ħ and θ, the recipe to make a language sound like fake Arabic
Without dˤ or ðˤ it isn't a good fake Arabic
Honestly to me it sounds like rough Spanish
@@Pingwnhmm, I mean when people who don't know what Arabic sounds like think of arabic, they think it's a "harsh" language, and ð is associated with spanish, which isn't seen as a very "harsh" language
Good lord, I forgot The Office was on the air long enough to reference GoT.
The books are from the 90s, my man.
@@thewanderingmistnull2451 The books didn't have a fully functional Dothraki language, my man.
@@sundalongpatpat The reference was to the books. Famously, The Office's writers had to innovate on the language (because it wasn't fully functional in the books) in order to make that joke. It was later made canon by Peterson, who named the thing Dwight did the "Schrutean Compound".
As a side-note: being smug and rude isn't a prerequisite to posting on youtube, we could all do with less of it.
DJP making his wife's name translate into Good Duck in Dothraki is very wholesome.
alegra erin 🎉🎉
So you're starting the season with Dothraki and ending it with Quenya?
Quite, poetic
The professionalism in this is great, but I have to admit that I kinda miss your jabs and jokes. Maybe this was just an episode where you reviewed a conlang you actually respected so you didn't have as much to joke about, but I think that relaxed atmosphere added a lot of personality to your videos. I hope you can find a way to be more informal without being unstudied in your future videos
I did have more jokes in this originally which had to be cut for time (eg. I originally was going to do a whole goof about how the word for fast is "dik")
Conlang Critic He He... dik
@@HBMmaster I don't miss your jokes and jabs. I prefer this.
Dappernaut 12:12
I second Dappernuat's opinion.
Tbh I’m Arab and Dothraki sounds a lot like Arabic “ana” means me in both Dothraki and Arabic also my love in Dothraki is moon of my life, in Arabic we say “gamar hayati” = moon of my life.
I remember once in a episode were Jason momoa said "ana khal drogo" I laughed because in Arabic it means "i am the uncle of drogo"
Also one time daenerys said "fenel holaki" when she was asking where are the healers it sounded similar to "feen el holaki" Meaning in Arabic ( where are the "holaki" )
I had to read your comment 3 times to figure out where one thought started or stopped. It made no sense to me until I realized you needed a some kind of punctuation before 'also'.
M
Haha gamer
hayat means life in turkish so my immediate thought was "haha gamer life"
In Hebrew, the expression for notice/pay attention translates literally to "Put in your heart", similar to care in Dothraki.
נכון. "לשים לב".
it is more: "Put (your/a) heart" not in...
"תשים לב"/"לשים לב"
the word תשומת־לב (/tesumat lev/ or /tăɬumɛθ lev/ in Tiberian Hebrew) means, approximately, "putting in the heart", as the word תשומה is used for gerund form of the verb putting.
To put heart.
my imediate thought was like hey isnt that savri maranan?
ah yes intuletcual thoghts
9:08 Wait, "vash" means "stampede" in Dothraki? Haha, yes! That moment when you sneak a subtle Trigun reference into your fictional language.
Apparently, DJP put lots of fun, little jokes and references into Dothraki, but I wasn't aware of this one.
David J. Peterson has an incredible talent for doing really cool and interesting conlangs that are attached to things I have no interest in watching. Trigedasleng is one of my top five conlangs of all time but I couldn't get through two episodes of the 100.
Actually the first two episodes are by far the worst in the entire series. I would recommend giving it another shot, or just skip a bunch of episodes/the first season. Second season onward the tone is completely different and anyone who's watched the 100 will agree.
@@MrZyroid Huh, maybe I'll try skipping to season 2 sometime to see if I get more into it.
@@colinfrey4440 Furthermore, it was only decided that the show should have a conlang AFTER season one happened. So Trigedasleng doesn't show up until the second season. DJP really wished that he had been brought in from the beginning, but oh well.
Teen garbage.
I have only watched the Dothraki parts of Game of Thrones and have very little interest in watching the series itself. Khal Drogo's speech about taking back the Iron Throne for Rhaego is so wonderful. Jason Momoa is incredible.
This feels like a student trying to grade his teacher.
J.K Rowling announced that you, the viewer, were David Petersen all along
Breadspeak
BREADSPEAK
PLEASE FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, ADD BREADSPEAK TO THE BIG LIST, I DONT CARE HOW LONG IT TAKES JUST PLEASE DO IT
I have no idea what Breadspeak is, nor have I ever wanted to know something more.
@@falpsdsqglthnsac The internet is your friend. (Apparently it's a conlang by the Zese and Votgil person, having elements from a bunch of their former conlangs.)
Abigail Sarah I am not disappointed. I didn’t look it up earlier because it can be hard to find online resources for many conlangs, but it seems this one was pretty easy.
Nobody going to mention the (accidental) jab by using "ido" for fake/wooden?
Not accidental, another easter egg.
Yeah, DJP is kind of an Esperantist, so I'm sure that it was purposeful. He also put a LOT of in jokes, easter eggs, references, and such in Dothraki.
@@Sovairu I don't know much about Esperanto or Ido but the whole male default thing that Ido fixed just seems dumb to me. It sucks that we have this in many languages where it's hard to fix. Why would you repeat the same mistake in a language when you have the chance to start from scratch?
@@unvergebeneid What are you talking about? Grammatical gender?
@@Sovairu
Yes, they are angry about grammatical gender.
this new format is glorious
There's nothing wrong with SVO, it's a very common word order, almost on par with SOV. It would be much weirder to have to make your conlang look exotic in every way (especially if it's spoken by humans, in a universe similar to ours).
Those jabs at GoT tho lmao. I have loved the show since the beginning, and although it SERIOUSLY fell from grace which is a damn shame, all the seasons where you'd hear Dothraki spoken for more than just a few words (which is pretty much s1-4) are some of the best tv that exists in my opinion.
Awesome video btw, channels like yours are such an inspiration when I'm either bored out of my mind or overwhelmed with linguistics homework and need motivation to do that morphosyntax analysis that I've been procrastinating for longer than I'd care to admit. So thank you. Apart from the great editing and obvious enthusiasm for the topic, your expertly done communication of knowledge and conscise wording are extremely helpful. So thanks for doing what you do.
I couldn’t have said it better myself.
A cogent analysis, and I heartily agree. Also, I stopped watching the show after season 4 due to circumstances, but I had initially intended to pick up season 5; luckily, pretty much everyone agreed that the quality took a huge dip, so I never got around to it, and I couldn't be happier pretending that the series was only 4 seasons long. A great show, cut short before it could fall from grace.
Yes. I'm really excited for the rest of the season now. This is a really good start.
Valyrian when
I love Peterson's work, each language he's made has always had depth that Klingon (still one of my favorites because Star Trek) lacks. I like Dothraki's phonotactics and Nahuatl-esque vowel inventory a lot, although, I noticed in your sample, just like in Japanese, a tendency towards pseudo-diphthongs (use of a diphthong despite it not being part of the blackletter phonology), which I think is more organic than explicitly separating the sounds for rigid phonological agreement.
This channel is making me realize how truly terrible my conlang I built in high school was lmao. I'm truly glad you like base 6, cause at that point that's like the only positive I can really say about it.
If you don't know about thandian you should find it and realise that any language you could ever make won't be worse than thandian
@@tuluppampam I do, lol. That video also made me realize how bad it was. 1:1 English alphabet to weird kooky alien letters, obtuse grammar that no human would ever naturally come up with... I could go on forever.
The actors in the show (At least early on) go all over in pronunciation. Most pronounce Khaleesi as Kalisi
RedGeoBlaze this is actually a mistake that DJP points out in his book. He says he probably ought to have just changed the romanization to “khalisi” because that’s how fans and the like pronounce it
People who don't speak Dothraki mispronouncing Dothraki words? That would never happen in real life.
Louis Francisco @georgerrmartin “doʊθækaɪ”
Watching conlang critic while conlanging
Ye this is what I do
a thing i do often
Awesome episode! I also recently found my brother’s copy of that Doþraki guide. I can’t wait for Sindarin and Quenya!
I looooove your use of the letter thorn!
YO I LOVED THE RHYTHM HEAVEN MUSIC AT THE END THANK YOU
I came here specifically to comment this!!
It's "Dreams of Our Generation" by Tsunku, in Rhythm Heaven Fever btw
If anyone can find that piano cover, I'd love to hear the full thing!!
I made it myself for this video! full cover coming, well, we'll see.
F for Dothraki, went extinct in 1 Cavalry Charge
OOF
Definitely a huge step up in quality! Looking forward to seeing more!
Please cover NeoKhuzdul(Dwarrow Scholar has the most updated and developed information regarding it) & Nadsat(from Clockwork Orange)!!!
Super excited to see you cover the Dothraki language!!!
Nadsat is the best
Oh damn you would be doing Quenya last. It's the language that got me into conlangs, so I'll eagerly wait for it.
I'm not even that big into conlangs but I love your channel because of how well you explain them.
Next language: Quenya. I started studying it and it's beautiful
It’s on the list
By the name of the gods, he has returned.
Hangonaminit... Vash hrazefmen... Stampede horse-empty... Vash... the Stampede!!! :O :O
tttttooooookkkkii !!!
"con this lang" is a great phrase, I'm taking it
iT sOuNdS a LoT lIkE aRaBiC aNd RuSsIaN aMoNg PeOpLe WhO dOnT kNoW wHaT aRaBiC aNd RuSsIaN sOuNd LiKe
this man is the master of sass
It's about time you uploaded a real video I almost forgot about you
(4:25) Well, if you're used to English romanisation, it make sense.
But there are other ways to do it, like the Slavic way: c /ts/, č /tʃ/, š /ʃ/ ž /ʒ/, j /j/ (which I personally prefer)
And then there's the Swedish way: ts /ts/, tsj /tʃ/, sj /ʃ/, zj /ʒ/, j /j/
And many other systems too.
it genuinely blows my mind how believable this language is. you could show me any chart saying it's from say, some random language in papua new guinea, and i wouldn't be the wiser. very refreshing contrast against the languages you analyzed from star trek or skyrim or avatar.
Much more in-depth episode
Loving the new season
After doing some reading, apparently David J Peterson also created a language for one of my favorite series: The 100. Trigedasleng (a language I'd suggest for a review btw) is based on English, and in the canon it was created as a coded form of American English (during nuclear war) that evolved rapidly as a native language over three generations after society fell apart. For that purpose, David did a damn good job.
I have been waiting for this, Janette.
Him: Sees 2 days, 20 hours, 15 minutes.
"Omg, that's way to long."
Me: Sees 2 days, 20 hours, 15 minutes.
"Hey, that's not really that long, I've watched that much TV plenty of times before. Maybe I should watch Game of Thrones."
Yeah, I'm not sure what Jan has against GoT, but he's missing out, and would do well to reconsider. The original novel just might be the finest work of fantasy of its generation, with a deeply imagined setting, compelling characters, and a plot that leads to places people don't see coming. It works as a standalone, too; things happened before the novel, and things will happen after, but the novel has a distinct and sensible beginning and end. It is is famous for good reason.
"Vash", part of a phrase that translates to stampede. :D Does anyone know if D.J.P.'s a fan of Trigun?
Militarily, the Dothraki are light cavalry with the macho ethos of charging into infantry formations. They ought to be extinct and now they pretty much are.
I loved this episode. Can you do one about high valyrian
It's next to sindarin my favorite conlang.
@@edi9892 what exactly do you like about High Valyrian?
@@popito8366 It´s hard to tell. I also prefer Latin and Japanese over languages like German, Russian etc. The sounds and rythm certainly play a role.
BTW: that doesn´t mean that I don´t like any German or Russian songs, far from it, but I do think that German sucks for singing, and only few are making good songs despite that.
:)
Just as a note... German has the same translations for "to kill" - umbringen (done by person), töten (generally, by a thing, animal or person) and schlachten (slaughter an animal or like a animal, which also can be "abschlachten"). Also the fact that it has cases like that might be an indicator it's inspired by German or Russian in its structure, but I actually don't know any more languages that use cases for nouns..
This is the first video about fictional language i see and I am amazed 😱 how can this be a thing? How can someone create an entire new language? Is too cool i cannot comprehend.
8:54 I just noticed that in italian too there are 3 distinct ways to say "to kill", which are more or less synonims to each other "ammazzare" (a bit informal), "uccidere" (classic to kill) and "massacrare" (to massacre)
to kill, to eliminate, to Execute, to Erase, To Deleat, To Murder, To Unalive (More Moder )
- Angry English
10:45 That makes sense in a way. A horse in this culture is not usually something that is entitled to make its own decisions. Any horse you encounter day-to-day would be domesticated, and would usually be seen more as an instrument of a rider's will. Wild horses are simply a natural resource that has yet to be harnessed. A river on the other hand does what it pleases, you don't harness it's power because nobody does that, and if it floods you had best get out of the way. Maybe "mastery" would be a more appropriate term for this concept?
Ooooh, spoken segment. That really ties the video together... we learn about the language, then hear it afterwards for some practical application! Can't wait for more of those!
great video! hope you're proud of it, i know you worked hard on it
I love the rhythm heaven stuff you use! Every time I hear it, it makes me smile
I love it. I'm curious whether it would be worth it to make a totally-not-ranking list of languages sorted by their ratings, just to keep track of the languages covered and the broad strokes of their relations.
'The Dothraki have no word for 'Thank you'.'
9:35 - 'General Expressions: Haja! = Cheers!'
Hmm, seems as if they *do* have a way to say 'thanks' after all.
This series has inspired me to create an artlang based on frogs and things frogs care about
You should rate High Valyrian. I have tried to learn it but never really gotten past the noun cases or noun plurals.
Great video and even better conlang! If only we saw this kind of CLC more than once a year
Appreciating the high effort content here
Fantastic episode! I want more of this. :-D
I mean... Latin also has three words for kill (necare, occidere, interficere among others).
I mean even English has kill, slaughter, and murder.
this is super great, glad to see the improvement in video quality! :^D
I'm certain that snippet at the end, Khal Drogo's declaration, is the scene that made Jason Momoa a star.
Lord Misali has done it again!
Keep it up. We need this
Can you do High Valyrian next?
I missed you!!
@jan Misali, what's the chances you might put out a general, "Don't do this with your conlang" compendium?
9:32 that poster is in my school
This makes me want to make a script for this. They could cite it in the show to some ancient, little-known character who only recently gained attention.
Methinks "Zero Copula" (seen 'round the 6:30 pt. of this video) would make a great conlang-themed band-name!!
Finally it's here! whoo!
Thank you, slow button. I finally can listen to what he said.
Please bring back the rankings. It would honestly my favorite part of these. 😅
Great, proper long episodes now!!!
Thank you
Please could you redo Ithkuil as a long episode?? Please??
"me" is also 1pl in Finnish, so looking how they handled the two locative cases it could very well be inspired by Finnish too
Please do Breadspeak! It is a new conlang from the Vötgil guy, and he watched your video!!
some arabic influence can be seen in this language. 10:58 anha means "I": the arabic word for "I" is "أنَا" (which is rougly pronounced anaa)
he gets facts about your favorite language wrong.
@@winkydinky1436 fair
Did you say "animate sounds" at 5:22? XD
OMG I AM A HUGE FAN JAN MISELI I LOVE YOU
Hello! Have you seen the movie arrival and, if so, have you considered making a video about it?
How about Oqolaawak (by Biblaridion)? Or Oa (by Artefixian)?
There isn`t enough material to work with right now.
Is there a way you will do a video about the Barsoomian language from John Carter of Mars books? I’m not even sure if there’s enough info on it or if it’s fleshed out enough for that to be possible but if it is, I’d like to see a video on that
YAAAY CONLANG CRITIC IS BACK
i hope no one finds this account yooo Norge whazzup
I just realized that a lot of times when I'm not trying to muffle a laugh, but my mouth does a weird thing anyway, I make the velar fricative sound, or at least something close to it. Hmm.
Even if you have a ten based system you could still have a remnants of another system. Especially scores/vignidecimal like in Danish and French. Or count by dusins and gros like most traders did in Europe dispite ten-based being more official.
13:38 I don't know hardly any dothraki, but isn't Seven Kingdoms (without a definite article at least) a pretty bad translation of Rhaeshis Andahli?
Firstly, no one says that the circumstances of one’s birth are irrelevant. Well, No one with a brain does. Secondly I can tell by your video clip of Dothraki being spoken, that your royalties budget was spent elsewhere.
Finally, great episode as always. Keep up the entertaining work and please do some episodes or another series on number and base systems!
Thumbs yp
Three years later I'm noticing that the Dothraki word for stampede is "vash".
Why do I find it so funny, the way you go through pronouncing all the consonants? Are you intentionally being silly? I genuinely can't tell. 😂
Nice rhythm heaven music at the end!
oh yeah, and DJP had to make two kinds of Valyrian for the show while he was making Dothraki.
Good video. Can I submit a request for any of Tolkien's languages, like Sindarin or Quenya
There's a list of upcoming episodes shown at the end of the video. They're both in there.
vash means stampede... David must be a Trigun fan!
9:05 Ido: wooden, fake. Hahahahaha! The artificial language Ido was copied from Esperanto and was the project of the head of the French Esperantists who wanted to propose Ido to the International Association of Academies AFTER he promised the author of Esperanto he would promote Esperanto to that association. Can't be more fake than that!
So now, what we need to see is a biker gang or fight-club that uses Dothraki as their code language during street brawls.
IT'S HERE
Don't think I'm gonna miss that Mewtwo Strikes Back reference
very cool! Nice analysis.
Odd little note that I didn't see anyone else say (tho I didn't go through every comment since last year when this was posted): Vash the Stampede is a character in the anime classic Trigun. So it was interesting to notice that stampede in Dothraki is vash. I wonder if the word for typhoon (if the Dothraki have one) also involves vash, since the character's other name was The Human Typhoon. This is assuming the word comes from the character at all and isn't a complete coincidence.
Btw. for new con-langs to study, what about trying some of the BIG ones... Like Standard Italian and Modern Hebrew? ;)
why the heck would I want to make a video criticizing modern hebrew why would that be a good idea
Good point!! I was actually just thinking of Modern Italian as a joke or and only added Hebrew as an afterthought when I realised that was a also a semi-constructed language, if you count simplified/modernised languages.