bro im barely neurodivergent enough to even understand what this mf is saying most of the time, my shit is firing on all cylinders trying to keep up. i might have to start watching his videos on half speed
Talk about A-Priori because here you reinvented pulmonic language from first principles with only a vague topological diagram of a vertebrate respiratory track and secondhand rumors of earthling languages. Degree of nasalization being a circle still hurts my head, but overall the four-dimensional possibility space for using arbitrary single phonemes to convey extra info about a noun is really cool! The very versatile use of tones is real fun too! ....And somehow, it still comes together to sound like a dialect of ULTRAFRENCH. Must be the nasals. Bonus points for the flex of holding a book that is very obviously not twilight when reading the English text. Huh, book on animal senses. I think I'll like that, thanks for the inadvertent rec.
Quick! Submit this to Agma Schwa's cursed conlang circus! Lol. But yeah, I just got to the fixed phonemes section and am still confused, but I like the feel of this. I look forward to your other conlangs in the future.
Oh now this is another level. What the FUCK is going on with the fixed phonemes, I could not parse that but I would absolutely love to understand. There are Platonic Solids in the Mouth Tube and I want to chew on them with my autism.
lovely, thank you Master Inkheart. when you said there would need to be 73 axes to define every aspect of meaning, was that a joke, or is there actually a list of 73 axes somewhere?
A problem with having voicing and breath force as independent axis is that at very low breath forces you have too little airflow to achieve high degrees of voicing on the vocal chords, like some of the free phonemes shown here demand. In other words, whoops your conlang somehow includes voiced ejectives!
actulactually, octopus is an english word so it should use the english plural inflection pattern -(e)s (both latin used the word polypus and ancient greek had no word for octopuses)
@@beegman27 I don't know, I feel like the Latin pattern -us > -i has been fully imported into English, independent of origin. There are so many examples of people trying to pluralize a word ending in s, and immediately defaulting to -i as a guess.
"If you're grammatically feminine, why don't you use Mistress instead of Master?" because a mistress is someone you cheat with. Dumb question
Every time I read Web Mistress on websites ran by women I always do a double-take.
The masculine version of Mistress is Mister, not Master
@@ansyyxux It's used for both.
10. female equivalent of master
11. female equivalent of mister
(From Wiktionary)
Did you submit to the ccc3
You didn't include the #ccc3
hi, i'm the guy who made the inkheart drawings! thanks so much for this opportunity - it was a ton of fun to work on! the video came out great!
I'm neurodivergent but not neurodivergent enough for this
bro im barely neurodivergent enough to even understand what this mf is saying most of the time, my shit is firing on all cylinders trying to keep up. i might have to start watching his videos on half speed
Evolve into a stronger form of neurodivergency
This is exactly my kind of neurodivergency. I thrive off conlangs, even if I can never speak them.
Adapt, evolve, overcome
@@wolfgang2453 First time I ever did that was another one of his 70% still to fast
Talk about A-Priori because here you reinvented pulmonic language from first principles with only a vague topological diagram of a vertebrate respiratory track and secondhand rumors of earthling languages. Degree of nasalization being a circle still hurts my head, but overall the four-dimensional possibility space for using arbitrary single phonemes to convey extra info about a noun is really cool! The very versatile use of tones is real fun too!
....And somehow, it still comes together to sound like a dialect of ULTRAFRENCH. Must be the nasals.
Bonus points for the flex of holding a book that is very obviously not twilight when reading the English text. Huh, book on animal senses. I think I'll like that, thanks for the inadvertent rec.
5:58 xnopyt jumpscare
Its impresive how you managed to create and speak such a cursed conlang. Respect
That definition of a language has sign language users up in arms
Someone visually representing how I spatially understand phonology.
I love you.
remember to put #ccc3 in the description silly
very awesome, very gender
Ah sweet manmade hortors beyonf my cimprehension
Quick! Submit this to Agma Schwa's cursed conlang circus! Lol.
But yeah, I just got to the fixed phonemes section and am still confused, but I like the feel of this.
I look forward to your other conlangs in the future.
The further into this video i go the more insane i feel
this might be one of my favourite youtube channels ever. keep up the great work! :3
Is "xtupyt" actually a Tom Scott reference, or is the Old God Madness already taking hold of me?
It's spelled xnopyt, and yes
@@zzineohp I thought it sounded familiar!
You've birthed something I can only refer to as 'esoteric quantum linguistics' here and it terrifies me. Well done, holy shit
Oh now this is another level. What the FUCK is going on with the fixed phonemes, I could not parse that but I would absolutely love to understand. There are Platonic Solids in the Mouth Tube and I want to chew on them with my autism.
Really interesting to mix language with math
5:32 "if you accept the definition of a word as some letters surrounded by a gap..." nice tom scott reference. you even got xnopyt in there!
so cool actually and you did all of the challenges of ccc3 fluidly and in a cool way :3 big fan
lovely, thank you Master Inkheart. when you said there would need to be 73 axes to define every aspect of meaning, was that a joke, or is there actually a list of 73 axes somewhere?
oh this one is fantastic. this one will appear in my nightmares and it will not leave. i welcome the horrors.
An insanely phonological theory that led to very on brand phonological praxis!
Wait, where's the "link to everywhere" mentioned at 10:50?
oh shit
Wonderous presentation, numerous jokes.
Appreciated.
Excellent.
why does it sound like french though
You're surprised? I'm not!
He finally put the ccc3
how on earth do y’all MAKE languages i can hardly learn a second one
A problem with having voicing and breath force as independent axis is that at very low breath forces you have too little airflow to achieve high degrees of voicing on the vocal chords, like some of the free phonemes shown here demand.
In other words, whoops your conlang somehow includes voiced ejectives!
I kinda almost understand it this time. Good job👍
I like the notion of using feminine pronouns because it's practical in a different language, very gender and very cool
i don't understand anything, good job
become one with the void.
tRuLy rEpElLaNt 👁️👄👁️
actulactually, octopus is an english word so it should use the english plural inflection pattern -(e)s
(both latin used the word polypus and ancient greek had no word for octopuses)
@@beegman27 I don't know, I feel like the Latin pattern -us > -i has been fully imported into English, independent of origin. There are so many examples of people trying to pluralize a word ending in s, and immediately defaulting to -i as a guess.
Shavourese two point zero
Is there a reason why the flag of Québec in particular was used at 6:04?
fernch better
Is this in the wigmaw universe or not? Plus, you’ve shown this before. Right?
it's a remaster. And yes.
@@zzineohp Ah, so Shavorese 2.0 nice
I HAVE THAT MAP !🤑🤑
pog
I hate conlang videos. I watch conlang videos.
I think you just wasted your time friend.