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Post by Duke Dylan I on Jun 5, 2016 10:34:00 GMT -6
Hishtørëu or Hështørëu are both acceptable by the way. This is the history of the Hodish conlang.
It started when I was about ten or so I think. I wanted to make a simplified version of English, tuu þu point vair it beegan tuu bee speld soort uv liik þis. It vuz stil proonounst upräximitlee þu saam, but Ii stärtid tuu käl it aa nuu laangvij. Ii didnt undrstand þat þis wuznt eneevair neer aa nuu laangvij þoo.
That stage was called Old Hodinian.
Nekst vuz nü Hoodinieen. It vuz ubout þu sām, but þairr vuz noo rreel vaa uv trrakheeng þu speleeng and evrreeþeeng. þis vuz aa dizastrr, soo Ii ubandnd it.
I resurrected the language on a 13-hour trip to Dothan, Alabama. I completely reformed it, and I made it so that the words didn't sound exactly English. Many of the rules were the same, such as double vowels for long vowels, and single vowels for short vowels. This was Old Hodish, or Ältu Hoodißh. Next came Mitl Hødish. After that, we have what you see now, Mødairn Hødin'léng. There was also Zln, a more lazy dialect of Middle/Modern Hodish that some people trying to learn this use, and Ånlæhån, a language off of Middle Hodish that a friend of my tried to create.
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