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Draft:Goliushi

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Letme2929 (talk | contribs) at 12:05, 21 July 2024. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

  • Comment: Wikipedia is not a place for you to publish your own ideas KylieTastic (talk) 16:47, 14 January 2024 (UTC)

Hi, I am a conlang maker, who hopes to write about my creation, the Goliushi language, by making an encyclopedia article on it.

The Goliushi language is an artificial language, using letters from many different writing systems. The language is still work and progress. What makes Goliushi different from other languages is how there is no pronunciation or spelling rules, leaving it up to the speaker to choose how they want to pronounce it. Unlike all other Cyrillic or Cyrillic-ish languages, Goliushi doesn't have "soft", nor "hard" consonants. This is because Goliushi is not made to be a usual language, it's made to be special.

Alphabet (incomplete)

Д

A π Gz З И Й Iŋ Ψ K Л Лr Ω S T У Ue Ih Ug Uz Ks Ж Sh Г G Ш Jw Thw. Ect.

Phonology: Vowels: α æ ə

Consonants (too much, over 300 hundred, I can't do that much, sorry :( )

History: The Goliushi language was originally a Google Photos album, but the album got accidentally deleted, so it was remade by scratch, using Microsoft's Onedrive app. It takes inspiration from mostly the Greek and Cyrillic writing systems, and therefore, most letters are derived from a letter in one of the two writing systems. One of the notable changes is how the "ih" letter became nasal and the only nasal vowel in Goliushi, this was to make it so И and Ih weren't the exact same. A similar thing happened to the letter ks, which originally represented either k͡s or ɡ͡z, however the letter Gz already represented the second sound listed, so ks was made to only represent ks, to make them different, too. Every day the Goliushi language evolves. Its high amount of sounds makes it unique. Many words are consonant clusters.

==references==

{{Reflist}}

Cyrillic writing systems

Artificial language

References

pFad - Phonifier reborn

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