ysengrin: Yep, that's me. (Default)
ysengrin ([personal profile] ysengrin) wrote2009-12-30 07:45 pm

More Avatar links

The Language of Avatar with Paul R. Frommer (audio; seems to be streaming only). Another article on the language is here.

A World All Their Own by Nancy Lutkehaus, consulting anthropologist on Avatar

[identity profile] ysengrin.livejournal.com 2009-12-31 04:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Dr. Marc Okrand developed a Klingon language for one of the Star Trek movies, and it took off with the Klingon fanbase. I think there are more Klingon speakers than Esperanto speakers nowadays.

Star Wars, on the other paw, made liberal use of existing Earth languages mixed with gibberish.

The original Land of the Lost had two created languages.

It's jokingly said that Tolkien had created so many languages for fun that he finally felt the need to write a story or two to hang them off of.

Making languages is second only to world building in sci-fi (and there's just as much of a spread in how well it's done).

Having said all that, I'd like to point out that I don't expect to be picking up more than a word or two -- if that -- of Na'vi.

[identity profile] silvermane3.livejournal.com 2009-12-31 05:26 pm (UTC)(link)
I am not sure if this is true but I heard that Klingon is considered a real language because certain mental disorder patients speak it more fluentantly than English or their native language.

*nods* Oh I should hope not, if people start talking Na'vi I might go insane. LOL