NorthSide
My sister, J, and I have started NorthSide productions to produce a video, surprisingly enough.
Where the video will premiere is strictly confidential, but I'll keep you posted.
On a not-related-whatsoever note, I have my own language.
I haven’t figured out a name for it as of yet, but I'm working on it.
Some interesting notes about it...
It does not have the verb "to be."
This means no is, am, are, were, was, be, being, or been.
Also, it has verb forms kind of like Spanish, as such.
The verb kAthU, or to create.
It is conjugated like O.kAthUkO, or I create, Ll.kAthUkOl, you create, and so on.
Also, because there are no forms of "to be," to say "I was creating," one would say "O.kAthUkOshtOo.shO" literally translated as, "I did create in the past"
This uses the past indicative "shO" and the action indicative "shtOo."
There is a future indicative too, "Tht"
As a sort of side note, the alphabet for this language is "P, p, L, l, v, T, t, Th, th, H, h, sh, k, A, a, U, u, O, o"
Capital P, L, T, or Th are pronounced like "Poo, Loo, Too, Thoo."
These capital consonants are called consonant-vowels, because they are a combination of consonant and vowel.
Capital H is like the Hebrew "ch."
Capital vowels say their name, lower case a as in apple, u as in up, o as in ostrich.
My language has an alphabet, I'll try to get it on later.
All verbs must end in either a vowel or consonant/vowel.
Also, the word order is different in most cases.
In English, we say "I threw the ball."
In my language, we say "ball(the) I threw" or "HolAv.T.tutAt"
As in Spanish, because of the way we conjugate the verb we don’t need to say “I threw” because the conjugation indicates first-person singular.
More later.
Austin

2 Comments:
whoa....that could get really confusing, Austin!
Well, it could get confusing, but Spanish is the same way.
English really is a hodge-podge of languages, so in effect it is the more confuzzling!
Austin
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