Islhontish

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File:Flag-Isllen.png
Isllentaillian
Isλįtæλa
Pronounced: /is.ɬɛ̃.tɑɪ̯.ɬɑ/
Timeline and Universe: Alternate Earth
Species: Human
Spoken: Unknown
Writing system: Syllabary
Typology
Morphological type: Undecided
Morphosyntactic alignment: Undecided
Basic word order: Undecided
Credits
Creator: D. Matthew Mikalowsky
Created: July 2014

Background

This language came as the result of a thought experiment in which I pondered what it would be like to remake the Cherokee Syllabary (which I will hereafter refer to as Tsalagi) into one in which the character shapes are based on lowercase Latin letters, and not the uppercase versions. From there, everything sort of snowballed.

I began work on a direct port of the syllabary, and became inspired by some of the letterforms of Georgian's script. Thus, there was some integration there as well. Eventually, I figured that this may end up shaping into a language all its own and not just a rehash of Tsalagi. So, I began altering the phonology of Tsalagi, adding things here, removing them there, and in the end, simplifying the syllabary quite a bit. One of the first things on my agenda, was in making sure that none of the very similar letterforms used in Tsalagi made their way into my own language. After the syllabary was finished... well, I had no idea what to do with it. Hence my next source of inspiration.

I had never worked on an a posteriori conlang before... and I had never felt like making a Romlang either. Both were things I didn't fully appreciate at the time. Some folks over at the CBB were posting their inventories, and their words and phrases, and it always seemed like Spanish/Portuguese/Italian 2.0. I eventually came to realize that there was a TON more work involved and me writing them off like that was because I hadn't looked into the process before. Well, I still didn't want to make a straight-up Romlang... so I thought "what if I morphed the phonology to agree with what I made for Tsalagi 2.0?" So, this is the strange bastard love-child of Vulgar Latin's lexicon, an approximation of Tsalagi's sound inventory, Georgian-inspired glyph shapes, and the Cherokee Syllabary!

Sound Changes

See: Isλįtæλa/Sound Changes