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List of constructed languages: Difference between revisions

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* [[Human (Warcraft)|Common]], [[Night Elf (Warcraft)|Darnassian]], [[Draenei|Draenei language]], [[Dwarves (Warcraft)|Dwarvish]], [[Gnome (Warcraft)|Gnomish]], [[Forsaken (Warcraft)|Gutterspeak]], [[Orc (Warcraft)|Orcish]], [[Tauren (Warcraft)|Taurahe]], [[Blood Elf|Thalassian]], and [[Trolls (Warcraft)|Troll language]], all from the [[Warcraft Universe]]
* [[Human (Warcraft)|Common]], [[Night Elf (Warcraft)|Darnassian]], [[Draenei|Draenei language]], [[Dwarves (Warcraft)|Dwarvish]], [[Gnome (Warcraft)|Gnomish]], [[Forsaken (Warcraft)|Gutterspeak]], [[Orc (Warcraft)|Orcish]], [[Tauren (Warcraft)|Taurahe]], [[Blood Elf|Thalassian]], and [[Trolls (Warcraft)|Troll language]], all from the [[Warcraft Universe]]
* [[D'ni language|D'ni]], the language spoken by the subterranean [[D'ni]] people in [[Cyan Worlds]]' [[Myst]] series of computer games and novels
* [[D'ni language|D'ni]], the language spoken by the subterranean [[D'ni]] people in [[Cyan Worlds]]' [[Myst]] series of computer games and novels
* [[Dino (language)|Dino]], the language made by the [[List of Star Fox planets and locations|Dinosaur Planet]] in [[Star Fox Adventures]]
* [[Furbish]], the language of the [[Furby]] plush toy ([http://www.langmaker.com/furbish.htm Furbish at Langmaker.com])
* [[Furbish]], the language of the [[Furby]] plush toy ([http://www.langmaker.com/furbish.htm Furbish at Langmaker.com])
* [[Gargish]], used in the [[Ultima]] computer game series, by the gargoyle race
* [[Gargish]], used in the [[Ultima]] computer game series, by the gargoyle race

Revision as of 02:37, 9 March 2007

This list of constructed languages is in alphabetical order, and divided into auxiliary, engineered, and artistic languages, and their respective subgenres.

Auxiliary languages

Spoken (major)

Language Name Year of
first
publication
Creator's Name Comments Activity on MediaWiki sites
Esperanto 1887 L. L. Zamenhof Fluent speakers: est. 100,000 to 2 million eo.wikipedia.org has 67.420 articles
eo.wikibooks.org has 270 books
Glosa 1943 Lancelot Hogben, et al. Originally called Interglossa
Idiom Neutral 1902 Waldemar Rosenberger Based on Volapük, abandoned in 1908
Ido 1907 A group of reformist Esperanto speakers est. 2000–5000 speakers io.wikipedia.org has 14.605 articles
Interlingua 1951 International Auxiliary Language Association ia.wikipedia.org has 3.454 articles
ia.wikibooks.org has 40 books
Latino sine flexione 1903 Giuseppe Peano Replaced Idiom Neutral in 1908
Lingua Franca Nova 1965 C. George Boeree
Novial 1928 Otto Jespersen nov.wikipedia.org has 1.878 articles
Occidental 1922 Edgar de Wahl (Interlingue) ie.wikipedia.org has 298 articles
ie.wikibooks.org has 27 books
Volapük 1879-1880 Johann Martin Schleyer vo.wikipedia.org has 1.709 articles
vo.wikibooks.org has 2 books

Spoken (minor)

Controlled languages

Visual languages

Engineered languages

Human-usable

Knowledge representation

Artistic languages

Fictional languages

Literary fictional languages

Fictional languages in comic books

Fictional languages in movies and television series

Unnamed languages
  • Caveman, a 1981 movie set in prehistoric times, featured all dialogue in a language invented for the film.
  • In Modern Times, a 1936 movie by Charles Chaplin, Chaplin sings a comic song in a nonsense language.
  • Quest for Fire, a 1981 film set in prehistoric times, featured all dialogue in a language invented for the film by Anthony Burgess.
  • The War of the Worlds TV series, in its first season, features the aliens from Mor-Tax speaking a distinctive African-esque type of language (simply referred to as "alienspeak" in the scripts).
  • When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth, a 1970 movie set in prehistoric times, featured all dialogue in a language invented for the film.
  • In the animated movie Titan A.E., the queen of the energy-composed alien race known as the Drej uses an unnamed alien language. All her quotes feature English subtitles.
  • In the Janissaries series of science-fiction novels by Jerry Pournelle, the human natives of the planet Tran speak a language apparently derived from Mycenaean. A form of Latin is also spoken in an empire resembling ancient Rome's, but only by scholars.
  • In the movie adaption of Clan of the Cave Bear, a language consisting of guttural sounds and pantomiming is spoken.
  • Riddley Walker, a 1980 novel by Russell Hoban, set in a post-apocalyptic future, is written entirely in a "devolved" form of English.

Fictional languages used in a musical context

Fictional languages used in games

Internet-based fictional languages

Alternative languages

Micronational languages

Personal languages

See also