Conlang. Conlanging is the art of creating languages. People create languages — conlangs — for all sorts of reasons: practical, theoretical, and artistic. This book will show you how. There are three parts, each aimed at a different level of experience; they are intended to be read in order, but more proficient readers may skip earlier sections. The Beginner level takes you through the steps of creating a conlang, without a lot of technical details or technical terms. With the help of this level, you can create an interesting conlang that doesn't accidentally copy the sound and feel of your native language.The Intermediate level takes you through the parts of a language, avoiding really esoteric technical details and terms, but providing a systematic working knowledge of the building blocks from which conlangs are made. Toki Pona. Toki Pona is a constructed language, first published online in mid-2001.
It was designed by translator and linguist Sonja Elen Kisa of Toronto.[2][3] Toki Pona is a minimal language. Like a pidgin, it focuses on simple concepts and elements that are relatively universal among cultures. The Language Construction Kit. This set of webpages (what’s a set of webpages?
A webchapter?) Is intended for anyone who wants to create artificial languages— for a fantasy or an alien world, as a hobby, as an interlanguage.