Lost Conlangs
This Lost Conlangs page is dedicated to conlangs which have passed out of available memory. These are conlangs from which no words or grammatical mentions can be found on the web any longer. What little is known about them is presented here in homage, and in the hopes that someone who knows something more about these languages will one day stop by and tell us more about them.
This page is part of the Conlang Rescue Project.
A
Acian
Acian was created in 2002 by a person named Ace. Acian had a LangMaker page. It had its own unique script (according to LangMaker), but no trace of it survives in the Web.
- Acian at LangMaker (archived page)
Adam-Man Tongue
Adam-man Tongue was developed by Edmund Shaftesbury (a pseudonym of Webster Edgerly) in 1903. The language used a 33-letter alphabet. It was apparently associated with Ralstonism (yet another creation of this language's author), and adherents of Ralstonism were supposed to use this language to speak to one another. Adam-Man Tongue had a LangMaker page, and was also briefly mentioned on the Esperanto-language wikipedia. Some of its words have been preserved on the web in a snapshot of the book in which it was published.
- Adam-Man Tongue at LangMaker (archived page)
- Adam-Man Tongue mentioned on the Esperanto-language Wikipedia (live web)
Alevain
Alevain was created by S.M. Willoughby. It had an alphabet, some vocabulary, and a bit of grammar. It had a LangMaker page, but no other information on it is available.
- Alevain at LangMaker (archived page)
'Allinémua
'Allinémua once had a LangMaker page, but nothing else is known about it. The LangMaker page did not make it into the Internet Archive.
Alrusomanz
Alrusomanz was an artlang which was begun by Elliot Jackson in 2005. It had a LangMaker page, but the one link on its page did not successfully make it into the Internet Archive. Nothing else about this language is known.
- Alrusomanz at LangMaker (archived)
Anas
Anas was a conlang created by Christopher Husch beginning in 2002. No texts have been found in it, and what little information was available (that it was agglutinating, that it had many words in its lexicon) was not enough to provide even a single example sentence.
- Anas at LangMaker (archived)
External Links
For the LangMaker pages associated with each of the languages mentioned here, please check the heading where that language is mentioned. Thank you.
This article is part of the Conlang Rescue Project. This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.5 ( Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported License ). |