Easy to remember doesn't have to mean familiar - Aragorn or Bilbo weren't exactly English household names when Tolkien coined them, even if they now have become familiar due to his books. It's enough that names are short and easily pronounceable. What throws a lot of people off with Russian names is both insecurity on how to pronounce them and the unfamiliar conventions on name use - last names vs. first name plus patronymic vs. hypocoristic forms, so if you don't want to drive away the average reader, probably better avoid naming conventions where people are addressed with different names and titles depending on situation and relationship, and long names with intimidating orthography. If your conculture has that, better keep it in the background. (OTOH, it may be actually good for immersion and for giving your concultures their own feel to go into a bit of aliennes here; if your writing is good and your story is compelling, readers will go along, as the continuing appeal of the great Russian novels shows.)Ares Land wrote: ↑Sun Jun 04, 2023 4:52 am Readers can be put off by difficult names. Fred and George are I think a little easier than Hunahpu or Ixbalanque. Maybe my concern is a bit outdated and people are more used to it. But I don't know. People have trouble with Russian names in Dostoevsky which suggests the tolerance level isn't too high.
Conworld random thread
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Re: Conworld random thread
The real success of a novel is determined if people use its character names to name their children
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Re: Conworld random thread
It sounds like you both agree: names should be easy to pronounce. When reading a text, I think the "difficulty" Ares refers to is exactly the ambiguity you mention. "Ixbalanque" is disconcerting because you don't know how it's supposed to be parsed. And you will hand that ambiguity on to the next person when you repeat it in a fan fiction or online book club or whatever.hwhatting wrote: ↑Sun Jun 04, 2023 8:50 amEasy to remember doesn't have to mean familiar - Aragorn or Bilbo weren't exactly English household names when Tolkien coined them, even if they now have become familiar due to his books. It's enough that names are short and easily pronounceable. What throws a lot of people off with Russian names is both insecurity on how to pronounce them and the unfamiliar conventions on name use - last names vs. first name plus patronymic vs. hypocoristic forms, so if you don't want to drive away the average reader, probably better avoid naming conventions where people are addressed with different names and titles depending on situation and relationship, and long names with intimidating orthography. If your conculture has that, better keep it in the background. (OTOH, it may be actually good for immersion and for giving your concultures their own feel to go into a bit of aliennes here; if your writing is good and your story is compelling, readers will go along, as the continuing appeal of the great Russian novels shows.)Ares Land wrote: ↑Sun Jun 04, 2023 4:52 am Readers can be put off by difficult names. Fred and George are I think a little easier than Hunahpu or Ixbalanque. Maybe my concern is a bit outdated and people are more used to it. But I don't know. People have trouble with Russian names in Dostoevsky which suggests the tolerance level isn't too high.
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Re: Conworld random thread
He did, however, coin them like that exactly because he wanted to avoid difficult to pronounce names, as "Aragorn" and "Bilbo" (and all the other hobbit and human names, many place names, names of inns etc.) were translations, more or less, of common speech names. Which is a good solution if you don't want to bother your readers with Xctqlbs.
JAL
Re: Conworld random thread
Yes, that's why I wrotejal wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 4:49 am He did, however, coin them like that exactly because he wanted to avoid difficult to pronounce names, as "Aragorn" and "Bilbo" (and all the other hobbit and human names, many place names, names of inns etc.) were translations, more or less, of common speech names. Which is a good solution if you don't want to bother your readers with Xctqlbs.
so if you don't want to drive away the average reader, probably better avoid naming conventions where people are addressed with different names and titles depending on situation and relationship, and long names with intimidating orthography.
Re: Conworld random thread
I agree this is best, but what I meant is you could, like Tolkien, use "regular" names, and have actual names for readers who would be interested.hwhatting wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 5:56 amYes, that's why I wroteso if you don't want to drive away the average reader, probably better avoid naming conventions where people are addressed with different names and titles depending on situation and relationship, and long names with intimidating orthography.
JAL
Re: Conworld random thread
In fact, note that Bilbo and Frodo are English names, in that Tolkien composed them of English roots: according to Wikipedia, the Icelandic cognate Fróði is still in current use (and even Latinised as Frodo). Tolkien even stated that so-called ‘Frodo Baggins’ was actually named Maura Labingi in his native Westron — a distinctly less familiar name.jal wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 4:49 amHe did, however, coin them like that exactly because he wanted to avoid difficult to pronounce names, as "Aragorn" and "Bilbo" (and all the other hobbit and human names, many place names, names of inns etc.) were translations, more or less, of common speech names. Which is a good solution if you don't want to bother your readers with Xctqlbs.
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Re: Conworld random thread
Yes. And "actual" Westron is an utterly different language than English!bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 7:25 amIn fact, note that Bilbo and Frodo are English names, in that Tolkien composed them of English roots: according to Wikipedia, the Icelandic cognate Fróði is still in current use (and even Latinised as Frodo). Tolkien even stated that so-called ‘Frodo Baggins’ was actually named Maura Labingi in his native Westron — a distinctly less familiar name.jal wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 4:49 amHe did, however, coin them like that exactly because he wanted to avoid difficult to pronounce names, as "Aragorn" and "Bilbo" (and all the other hobbit and human names, many place names, names of inns etc.) were translations, more or less, of common speech names. Which is a good solution if you don't want to bother your readers with Xctqlbs.
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Re: Conworld random thread
Why give them whole new names that are neither native to the world itself nor familiar to readers?bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 7:25 amIn fact, note that Bilbo and Frodo are English names, in that Tolkien composed them of English roots: according to Wikipedia, the Icelandic cognate Fróði is still in current use (and even Latinised as Frodo). Tolkien even stated that so-called ‘Frodo Baggins’ was actually named Maura Labingi in his native Westron — a distinctly less familiar name.
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Re: Conworld random thread
Perhaps tolkien was planning on the readership only being composed of people familiar with old english
Re: Conworld random thread
Tolkien had very strong views on phonaesthetics (indeed, he invented the term). If I remember correctly, his thesis was that names made up of English roots would have a certain resonance with readers which non-English names wouldn’t. Similarly, Rohirric names were calqued as Old English ones, and the dwarves got Old Norse names. (Wikipedia has a longer overview; see also Tolkien’s speech on English and Welsh.)malloc wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 7:29 pmWhy give them whole new names that are neither native to the world itself nor familiar to readers?bradrn wrote: ↑Mon Jun 05, 2023 7:25 amIn fact, note that Bilbo and Frodo are English names, in that Tolkien composed them of English roots: according to Wikipedia, the Icelandic cognate Fróði is still in current use (and even Latinised as Frodo). Tolkien even stated that so-called ‘Frodo Baggins’ was actually named Maura Labingi in his native Westron — a distinctly less familiar name.
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- alynnidalar
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Re: Conworld random thread
Come now, the man was a conlanger. He probably started speculating about it for fun and decided to go with it. If one of us did this, I wouldn't blink twice. It's just the sort of thing we do.
Beyond that, there's a metanarrative about his legendarium, that it was sort of the forgotten myths of Europe. Lord of the Rings is framed as being translated from a real language, so the names also being translated fits with that conceit.
Beyond that, there's a metanarrative about his legendarium, that it was sort of the forgotten myths of Europe. Lord of the Rings is framed as being translated from a real language, so the names also being translated fits with that conceit.
Re: Conworld random thread
Point taken, easier phonotactics may work just as well and feel less, mm, overdone.
As for Tolkien, I think it was partly to fit English sounding or just Old Norse names alongside the Elvish ones; partly for a chance to do some Anglo-Saxon conlanging. You get the idea he had quite a bit of fun with michel, mathom and smial.
As for Tolkien, I think it was partly to fit English sounding or just Old Norse names alongside the Elvish ones; partly for a chance to do some Anglo-Saxon conlanging. You get the idea he had quite a bit of fun with michel, mathom and smial.
Re: Conworld random thread
didn't tolks use actual earth languages for the vibes like all the time? I get the details mixed up but for example rohan was painted, so to speak, using the colors of... was it mercian old english? to make it sound more heroic and viking or something like that... eorlingas! (the sons of eorls) rohirrim! (the riders of rohan) of the riddermark! (the mark, a way to talk about frontiers, of the riders.. and rohan was indeed a frontier, at least by vibes) my guess is that, for a similar reason, he used this sort of bucolic, country-feeling english for the names of the hobbits and their environs: brandywine from dutch, a "sturdy" saxon word like bag, a very familiar biblical name like sam (samuel was himself not a hero, but annointed king david himself, and this is a biblical reference which shouldn't surprise us from the very christian tolkien), or the breton meriadeg for meriadoc (in reference probably to conan meriadeg, supposedly some big, strong celtic king, and meriadoc is indeed stronger and more dependable than his friend peregrin).
peregrin is latinate, but also quite familiar, and perhaps was employed to convey the restless character that made the character so problematic at one or two points in the story... you know? peregrin? wonderer? I think he wanted the names of things in the book to reflect the etymologies and underlying vibes he had given them in the in-universe languages, too.. I was like 30 when I learned, for example, that Rivendel was riven dell, a dale which is riven, riven meaning cleft and dell meaning groove or valley. this would have been somewhat more obvious to well read native english speakers of the time, and the in world native word for it, imladris in some variety of elvish or other, meant precisely something like cut valley, cut in the sense of deep or full of verticality. It's possible the original westron voice karningul has the same etymology, but if he wanted to express that <and he did want to> he would have to have had even more footnotes, afterwords and blablabla. so, easier to just use is extensive knowledge of english to do so. often english philologers <and argentinian philologers of english, ehem borges> say not without reason that a word is "a solid, salt-of-the-earth word" if it's saxon, or that it's "posh and haughty" if it's norman... that kind of thing is working here too.
peregrin is latinate, but also quite familiar, and perhaps was employed to convey the restless character that made the character so problematic at one or two points in the story... you know? peregrin? wonderer? I think he wanted the names of things in the book to reflect the etymologies and underlying vibes he had given them in the in-universe languages, too.. I was like 30 when I learned, for example, that Rivendel was riven dell, a dale which is riven, riven meaning cleft and dell meaning groove or valley. this would have been somewhat more obvious to well read native english speakers of the time, and the in world native word for it, imladris in some variety of elvish or other, meant precisely something like cut valley, cut in the sense of deep or full of verticality. It's possible the original westron voice karningul has the same etymology, but if he wanted to express that <and he did want to> he would have to have had even more footnotes, afterwords and blablabla. so, easier to just use is extensive knowledge of english to do so. often english philologers <and argentinian philologers of english, ehem borges> say not without reason that a word is "a solid, salt-of-the-earth word" if it's saxon, or that it's "posh and haughty" if it's norman... that kind of thing is working here too.
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Re: Conworld random thread
Yes, Tolkien rendered Westron as English, and languages related to it as other Germanic languages, such that the names sounded less alien to the reader than the Elvish ones. For instance, Rivendell could be a place name in England. The actual Westron name is Karningul, which sounds just as foreign to the average English reader as the Sindarin name Imladris. He explained this in the LotR appendices.
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Re: Conworld random thread
As you probably know, days on Earth are getting very gradually longer as the Earth's rotation slows down. It turns out, this is a problem for seconds. Since the 60s, the General Conference has definied seconds empirically and not as a fraction of anything else. This was done because the rotation of the Earth is not uniform enough for very precise calculations. But this means that as sidereal days get longer, the number of seconds in them will become irregular. Eventually we will need to add leap seconds, which is a very inelegant and imprecise solution when you consider that seconds were originally made to be set fractions of a sidereal day.
So we started using a tiny fraction of a day, then found that it was such a useful measure of small units of time we wanted to standardize it independant of day length, which then destroyed its ability to fit with the rest of our time-keeping system including days. This is the sort of rake science is constantly stepping on, and I find it hilarious. I would love to encounter a conworld with this level of awkwardness.
So we started using a tiny fraction of a day, then found that it was such a useful measure of small units of time we wanted to standardize it independant of day length, which then destroyed its ability to fit with the rest of our time-keeping system including days. This is the sort of rake science is constantly stepping on, and I find it hilarious. I would love to encounter a conworld with this level of awkwardness.
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Re: Conworld random thread
But surely this is the case with all of the SI units? (And probably other units too.) The metre was originally 1/40000th of the length of the Earth’s circumference measured through Paris (now there’s Francocentrism for you!), a distance which is now 40,007.863 m; the kilogram was originally the weight of 1 L of water, which now measures 0.999975 kg; and so on.Moose-tache wrote: ↑Thu Jul 13, 2023 3:31 am So we started using a tiny fraction of a day, then found that it was such a useful measure of small units of time we wanted to standardize it independant of day length, which then destroyed its ability to fit with the rest of our time-keeping system including days.
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Re: Conworld random thread
We already do have leap seconds.
Re: Conworld random thread
I strongly suspect Moose-tache is already aware of this. (At least, I hope they’re aware of this, and their post was just poorly worded.)
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Re: Conworld random thread
And the Dousman Chronological Authority would nonetheless object, starting a Friends of the Second club.bradrn wrote: ↑Thu Jul 13, 2023 4:05 amI strongly suspect Moose-tache is already aware of this. (At least, I hope they’re aware of this, and their post was just poorly worded.)