panyasan wrote:I think it's very creative when you can develop your own language: grammar, words, structure, but also an entire culture. I never tried it, I stick to "already developed languages". Once I get into a language and getting excited, my brain tunes into that language. I remember writing a Vulcan poem and having so much fun that before I feel asleep the Vulcan words were buzzing in my head. I wanted to write a whole story in the Vulcan language. Only problem: nobody can read it.

You should. If it's a short story you can write a translation of it. Either way, I'll read it!!
aadarshinah wrote:That and you'd have the same problem you'd have if you tried one of the LotR langages: they only ever developed enough of the language to satisfy the needs of the episode/poem/etc, which works if you want to write about starlight and hills and stuff, but go to use it for anything else and you find you're missing a lot of what makes up the bulk of real languages.
Not necessarily. From what I understand of the Lord of the Rings languages, they were limited because of the cultures he envisioned. Even in Natural languages, you will find limitations according to cultural influences (this is why Tolkien developed the cultures to go with his languages to have to deeper sense of the languages). The more enduring languages are those that can adapt to changes in culture easily.
The VLI seemed to have developed the Vulcan language from a simple naming language to a rich and complex system:
http://www.stogeek.com/wiki/Category:Vu ... _Instituteaadarshinah wrote:But it was fun... I went to a boarding school for high school and managed to get my own room for the majority of the time, and I remember sitting down one day at my computer with my latin book and going through and being like, "okay, I may only be using this for x, y, and z, but a real language needs verbs for things like this, and nouns like this, and so if I'm going to create this, I need to make it all uniform, so I'll create more than I need," and doing things like creating words for every fruit I could think of when I only needed a word for apple, and creating synoyms/antinyms for words so that they shared roots and showed signs of linkage. I think doing that took up like two months of my junior year. Absolutely insane, but some of the best fun I've ever had.
Perhaps you'll get a kick out of these links:
http://www.langmaker.com/ml0108.htm (unfortunately it's an abandoned site. It used to be THE source for language creation)
http://www.zompist.com/kit.html (I posted this a while ago, but you may find it interesting)