So, this is more of a "Throw ideas at this thread, and let's see what sticks" than any true attempt as of yet to "create" a language. I was just wondering what others thought/felt, what people think it would sound "like".
I cannot shake the feeling that most of the Matari people, in some form or another (At least Vherokior, Nefantar, Starkmanir, and though more distanced over time, the Sebiestor and Brutor did originate in that same area) are very culturally similar to the various peoples of the Eurasian steppe, or even into the Siberian taiga (sebbies, possibly Krusual). Of course, a language spoken tens of thousands of years from now will of course be nothing like those spoken now, or is very unlikely to be, but it gives us a framework our brains can recognize.
While we all RP, and PF states, that they have varied individual languages, what is the new standard language like? Most speak Amarrian, of course, but MSM is hinted at as being pushed in schools and the like, especially with a guy like Shakor at the helm. So what does it sound like? The Minmatar had a global government and community before the Amarr arrived, so they must almost certainly have had some form of interlingua even then.
I imagine, myself, for MSM to not be terribly unlike certain Turkic languages, which are today spoken across much of eastern and central aisa, and northeastern Siberia; perfect fit, as I assume the various Matari languages are of the same language "family". They tend to be agglutinative languages, with numerous cases for nouns; plenty of chances to use the glottal stop phoneme that has been so widely used in both PF and player fiction! They also tend to employ vowel harmony, which gives them a very distinct sound pattern.
The typical word order is: subject adverb – object – verb; possessor – possessed; noun – adjective. "
I quickly to him gave his textbook math"
Keep in mind, I have only a fleeting, passing knowledge of these 2 languages, so any mistakes made, forgive me!
Here is a brief outline of a few words from 2 Turkic languages, Sakha (Siberia) and Uzbek (central and south Asia) to show the similarity between 2 very dispersed languages.
Sakha, question words: tuox "what", kim "who", xaydax "how", xas "how much", xanna "where", and xannık "which".
Uzbek, question words: nima "what", kim "who", quanday "how", quancha "how much", "quani" where, and quaysi "which".
Personal pronouns in Sakha, which distinguish person and number: 1PS min 1PP bihigi; 2PS en 2PP ehigi 3PS human, kini, nonhuman (it) ol, 3PP human kiniler, 3PP nonhuman ollor.
Personal pronouns in Uzbek; 1PS men, 1PP biz, 2PS sez, 2PP siz, 3PS (human and non) u, 3PP (human and non) ullar.
So a sample sentence, using the above as a bit of a baseline: Kini xannik enk dalat knejul?
Which book did he give you? (( for this, kini = "he" and xannik "which" were used as they came. ))
The similarities are fun - at least for a dork like me who loves languages and linguistics. Anyway, it "sounds" right for me, as a baseline for a unified Matari language, the glottal stop phoneme is actually used in several Turkic languages.. what do you guys think?
Feedback? Ideas? This isnt an attempt (yet, and likely wont be) to "create" a Minny language, as much as its just a fun mental exercise.
And for fun, a song by Faun in the Uyghur language.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FwmkR7H0UNs which I could imagine being similar to something one might hear in a Minmatar market, or restaurant, on the radio, etc.