How to Speak Wenja : Ull’s Scenes
After a brief break and an annoying and lengthy bout of the flu, we return in our journey through the cinematic scenes of Far Cry Primal. In honor of my
Historical Linguistics, Language Creation, and Lots of PIE
After a brief break and an annoying and lengthy bout of the flu, we return in our journey through the cinematic scenes of Far Cry Primal. In honor of my
Wapa Saylam gwamamas. Let’s return to Sayla. Udam Provocation Sayla: Winja wantar pacha, Udam shanti hasa.Wenja hunter saw, Udam near be-heWenja hunter saw Udam nearby.(Literally, “Wenja hunter sees, an Udam
Meeting Sayla Takkar : Pshh pshh, pash. Tigri! Lo, lo, look! Tiger! Hey hey, look! Tiger! (Pash is a reduced form of pacha ‘see’, and psh is an even more
Smarkaka, salwa! Nearly a year ago Primal was released. To celebrate its birthday, I’ll be posting the dialogue to all of the cinematic scenes in Primal, with links to tricky
Smarkaka salwa! Cha swaki mansim nakway na hu-kraybam, num palhu Winja-kashyan war-warharsh, “U mash krayba!” Tu kraybam. Nawa watasim mash krayba walpim. Dwis, um graybman Twitter-ha santaya, ham ya walhatan
In our final post about the creation of the Wenja sound system, we’ll look at perhaps the simplest component : the vowels. It turns out that the vowels of Proto-Indo-European
We’ll continue discussing words important for the Wenja village. Our focus for today: how do you say “father”, “mother”, “friend”, etc.? Social Relationships shajan “leader, chieftan”, from PIE *h₂aǵ- ‘to lead’,
Continue readingWenja Language: Winja waychasu “In the Wenja village”, part 2
In today’s grammar post we’ll be looking at a verb that’s super common in Wenja, but one that behaves a bit unexpectedly. Depending on where the pronouns are added in
Today we begin a five-part series about life in the Wenja village, examining words that would be used in a Wenja’s daily life. This first post focuses on words related
Continue readingWenja Language: Winja waychasu “In the Wenja village”, Part 1
Having taken a wonderful vacation after the end of the semester, we can now return to the blog. It’s been a while since we discussed the derivation of Wenja from