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  • Hello there , I am Jacob Alexander Roper

  • And I would like to read a poem I wrote for you

  • Your eyes are like sapphires, your hair is like cooked spaghetti

  • And your smile is like teeth hanging out of your mouth

  • That is called the language of Love

  • In this episode of DONG we're gonna talk all about language

  • not specifically of love, we just did that, but

  • of linguistic DONGs, things you can do online now guys.

  • Vulgarlang.com is a site that allows you to construct your own fantasy fiction language.

  • It makes use of the international phonetic alphabet which helps us correctly pronounce

  • words across languages.

  • In this language generator you can just simply clickgenerate new languageand it'll

  • output a list of words.

  • There's a translator but it can only be used if you type words from the list.

  • If you want to have a little more control you can decide which phonemes will exist in

  • your language and you have to make sure you select enough that one can even be generated.

  • Let's try one out.

  • Select some consonants, a couple vowels and generate it.

  • This site is cool because of how in depth it goes into phonemes and how sound is created

  • based on things like tongue placement.

  • for example a bilabial nasal sound is where both lips (bilabial) touch

  • and nasal means your voice comes out through your nose

  • so bilabial nasal is mmmmmmmmm

  • Alright let's create a language. This is my made up language. The language of kuchawian

  • if I say you are cháfowugo ogudzho, it means... well you can find out for yourself

  • because ever language you make comes with a seed that will recreate the language later

  • The seed for this language is down there in the description,

  • but if you want to try and copy it off the screen it's right here

  • lotta numbers

  • Not all languages are widely used and it might surprise you to know that there are estimated

  • to be over 7,000 today.

  • It seems like a lot but experts actually believe that linguistic diversity peaked around 8,000

  • BCE when there were close to 20,000.

  • So what happened?

  • Well, howwegettonext.com features an awesome interactive experience about endangered languages.

  • A language is in danger if it's at risk of no longer being used because either its

  • speakers die or they all shift languages.

  • The prior can occur because a natural disaster hits a region of a scarcely spoken language.

  • The latter could occur due to something like intermarriage where both parents speak a different

  • language and then only one is adopted by the child.

  • Now let's take a look at the levels of endangerment.

  • Each bubble corresponds with a different one.

  • There are four levels and teal represents the lowest.

  • Most children still speak it but it might only be spoken in certain places.

  • And this dark pink indicates the highest level of danger in which the youngest speakers are

  • grandparents or older.

  • The larger the size of the dot the more people there are speaking that language.

  • The size of the clumps don't indicate much about the diversity of languages but the color

  • of the dots that comprise it do.

  • So with that we can see Asia has the most endangered languages spoken.

  • And although Europe's clump is closest in size to Asia's it actually contains the

  • fewest endangered languages.

  • And here's what's crazy about all of this; these dying languages we're talking about

  • in the abstract may be much closer to you than you think.

  • If you allow the site access to your location you can see the one nearest to you.

  • Kawaiisu is the one nearest to me and it says here it's only spoken

  • by ten people.

  • Kawaiisu is also the name of the group of Native Americans living in Southern California

  • that speak it.

  • With such a low number of speakers, and given the old age of the speakers,

  • it's not a huge surprise that change is drastic in a short amount of time.

  • Since 2011, the year this site's data is from to 2018 Kawaiisu has become increasingly

  • endangered.

  • There are now only two fluent speakers.

  • And with different languages come different accents and what is more charming than an

  • accent?

  • Nothing.

  • And ya know what that means?

  • Everyone is charming because everyone has an accent.

  • How can that be Jake? Good question.

  • Well a group defines a standard pronunciation and any speaker who deviates from that is

  • said tospeak with an accent.”

  • So somewhere out there you will have an accent according to the native people.

  • And locallingual is a neat site to show just this.

  • The creator of this site was inspired by his trip to the Ukraine where he claims to have

  • butchered their simple greeting ofGood day.”

  • He was unable to find Ukrainian vocals online so he recorded some locals speaking the language

  • and this set in motion his plan for the whole site.

  • But accents aren't always the product of different languages.

  • These maps show how they can differ among English-speaking regions of the United States.

  • For example, how would you pronounce lawyer?

  • If you're one of the few who pronounce it LAW-er then there's a high chance you live

  • in this region right here.

  • It's interesting to go through the maps and see how other people pronounce every day

  • words.

  • This site also includes dialect maps.

  • While accent refers mainly to pronunciation, dialect includes which words and grammar are

  • used.

  • When talking to a group of people do you say you guys?

  • You?

  • Ya'll?

  • Or you all?

  • I'm never gonna tell you guys which one I use so let's move on to the dialect quiz.

  • This quiz is simple to follow.

  • Just answer each question as honestly as you can.

  • For some of them you may not even have a word and that's okay because there's an option

  • for that too.

  • When you finish the quiz it'll try to guess where you're from.

  • And once you have your answer you can see which regional dialects are the most similar

  • to yours and which are the least.

  • Now of course these words and phrases all had to be made up at some point but we don't

  • refer to languages like English as fictional.

  • Instead, we associate fictional language with movies or tv shows and they're created to

  • add a richness to the worlds within them.

  • Probably the most famous of them is Klingon from Star Trek.

  • It was developed into a full fledged language by linguist Marc Okrand and you can find full

  • adaptations of masterpieces in Klingon.

  • Hamlet, Greek Fables.

  • This website is full of them so go ahead and have a nice read if you're one of the few

  • who are fully conversational in Klingon.

  • To achieve this alien-sounding language Okrand chose sound combinations not usually found

  • in human languages.

  • There are also translators so let's go ahead and see how to say this: I am Jake and I love

  • Michael Stevens. Now watch me butcher Kilngon

  • Jih am Jake 'ej jih parmaq Michael Stevens. Ah that's really the language of love.

  • So go out there into the big scary world and make your own language.

  • And then just say it all the time.

  • People might think you're crazy, but you know what? I think you're crazy...

  • Beautiful.

  • Links to all the DONGs are in the description below. If you want a playlist of DONGs, they're right here.

  • I'm gonna go cry

  • And as always, thanks for watching

Hello there , I am Jacob Alexander Roper

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