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Constructed language

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Revision as of 08:21, 25 April 2011 by Luckas-bot (talk | changes) (r2.7.1) (robot Adding: lv:Mākslīgā valoda)

An artificial or constructed language (sometimes called a conlang) is a language that has been created by a person or small group, instead of being formed naturally as part of a culture. Some constructed languages are designed for use in human communication (like the well-known Esperanto). Others are created for use in fiction, linguistic experiments, secret codes, or simply because the maker likes to play language games.

Constructed languages can be split into a priori languages, which are made from scratch, and a posteriori languages, which borrow words and grammar from existing languages.

Constructed languages can also be split into groups. These groups are:

  • Engineered languages (engelangs), which are split into philosophical languages and logical languages (loglangs) - designed for experiments in logic or philosophy
  • Auxiliary languages (auxlangs) - designed for international communication (also called International Auxiliary Language, (IAL))
  • Artistic languages (artlangs) - designed to look or sound pretty.

Some constructed languages also have constructed scripts to write them.

Some examples of constructed languages

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