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  1. #1
    Kyle Foster
    Guest

    Andurian Language

    Does anyone have any thoughts on what languge the Andu spoke and the
    Anurians speak now? Some of the names should welsh and celtic, but I
    can't pin it down. The reason I ask is I want to give magic items names
    and I hate saying something like "it's name means "Spirt of Fire"
    ancient Andurian, but I have no idea what that is." So any thoughts on
    the language or a real world on that others think would fit well with
    birthright would be most appreciated.

    Thanks,
    Kyle
    - --
    "What's so amazing about really deep thoughts?" - Tori Amos, "Silent
    All These Years"

  2. #2
    Tim Nutting
    Guest

    Andurian Language

    Depends what your take on Aduria is. Darkstar and I seem to be semi
    similar, but he's gon a lot farther and developed actual cultures for the
    continent, right now all my stuff is still in that brainchild phase.

    As far as what we have in Cerilia so far (I imagine that Aduria would not
    be the same as the others) we have:

    Anuire: English/Spannish(minute)/French
    Khinasi: Middle East/Near East
    Rjurik: Scandinavian/Scottish
    Vos: Slovak
    Brecht: German (Holy Roman Imperial eras)

    Possibilities, if being drawn from a real world are (to me): African,
    Eurasian, Asian, Indian, Native Americans and the South Americans

    For my own thoughts, I have the Masetians as a Greek people, so I guess the
    Adurians might be Roman or perhaps a great mixing of them all into a
    fantasy language people that have no real world ties.

    Good Gaming

    Tim Nutting/Zero

  3. #3
    Mark A Vandermeulen
    Guest

    Andurian Language

    On Thu, 9 Apr 1998, Kyle Foster wrote:

    > Does anyone have any thoughts on what languge the Andu spoke and the
    > Anurians speak now? Some of the names should welsh and celtic, but I
    > can't pin it down. The reason I ask is I want to give magic items names
    > and I hate saying something like "it's name means "Spirt of Fire"
    > ancient Andurian, but I have no idea what that is." So any thoughts on
    > the language or a real world on that others think would fit well with
    > birthright would be most appreciated.

    I typically use Welsh for Elvish names, but you're right, many of the
    Anuirean names seem celtic--I suspect the Anuireans "borrowed" a lot of
    place names from the elves and later "Anuireanized" them. Still, some of
    the Emperors' names sound pretty elvish as well (Alandalae and
    Caercuilllen come to mind), so perhaps it was "fashionable" to give
    children elvish names during the height of the Empire. Or perhaps the
    Anuirean language is more of a fusion of Old Andu and Elvish (Sheighlein?)
    than I'm giving it credit for. I tend to think that Anuirean culture
    looks and sounds rather like a combination of classical celtic culture and
    renaissance italian culture (which is perhaps why many people think
    "medieval french/german"). Although that might be a bias of having most of
    my Anuirean experience in the Southern Coast, which is a little more
    Italianate than the rest of Anuire.
    What it comes down to, as far as naming things in Anuirean, is that I
    come up with a name that "sounds" properly anuirean, figure out how to
    spell it with the goofy Anuirean dipthong system, and make up whatever
    meaning I want it to have. As long as you don't go around cataloging the
    meaning of names and things, this system should work pretty well.

    Mark VanderMeulen
    vander+@pitt.edu

  4. #4
    darkstar
    Guest

    Andurian Language

    Tim Nutting wrote:
    >
    > Depends what your take on Aduria is. Darkstar and I seem to be semi
    > similar, but he's gon a lot farther and developed actual cultures for the
    > continent, right now all my stuff is still in that brainchild phase.
    >
    > As far as what we have in Cerilia so far (I imagine that Aduria would not
    > be the same as the others) we have:
    >
    > Anuire: English/Spannish(minute)/French
    > Khinasi: Middle East/Near East
    > Rjurik: Scandinavian/Scottish
    > Vos: Slovak
    > Brecht: German (Holy Roman Imperial eras)
    >
    > Possibilities, if being drawn from a real world are (to me): African,
    > Eurasian, Asian, Indian, Native Americans and the South Americans

    I have a compination of cultures, and some I have made up my south. The
    South American culture feature strongly in the history as the first
    civilised race, but they have now since died out, although their
    decendants covered the south of the continent. They are the tribe that
    worships Basaia/Avani by the way.
    I have also thrown in some Mongolian, Egyptian cultures, as well as
    several others. Most of the info on my webpage at the moment only covers
    the actual kingdom and principalities and doesn't give any of the
    background, history or culture yet but I do have everything planned out
    and just have to type it up.


    > For my own thoughts, I have the Masetians as a Greek people, so I guess the
    > Adurians might be Roman or perhaps a great mixing of them all into a
    > fantasy language people that have no real world ties.

    I am using the Roman Empire as a template for the Adurian Empire,
    although it will be more advanced, but similar in many ways.

    - --
    Ian Hoskins

    e-Mail: hoss@box.net.au
    Homepage: http://darkstar.cyberserv.com
    ICQ: 2938300

  5. #5
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    Andurian Language

    >Possibilities, if being drawn from a real world are (to me): African,
    >Eurasian, Asian, Indian, Native Americans and the South Americans

    My idea for Djapar has Asians and Indians as the main races there.

    >For my own thoughts, I have the Masetians as a Greek people, so I guess the
    >Adurians might be Roman or perhaps a great mixing of them all into a
    >fantasy language people that have no real world ties.
    >
    >Good Gaming
    >
    >Tim Nutting/Zero
    >
    >
    >************************************************* **************************
    >>'unsubscribe birthright' as the body of the message.
    >

  6. #6
    Kyle Foster
    Guest

    Andurian Language

    D'oh. Speaking as a third generation Irish American I can only say
    that I was real tired when I wrote the original post and used the word
    celtic instead of gaelic. I was thinking culture. Anyway my thanks for
    the responses as it has given me a starting place and some concret ideas
    to work form.

    Thanks,
    Kyle
    - --
    "What's so amazing about really deep thoughts?" - Tori Amos, "Silent
    All These Years"

  7. #7
    Trizt
    Guest

    Andurian Language

    On 09-Apr-98, Tremiere (Tremiere@aol.com) wrote about Re: [BIRTHRIGHT] -
    Andurian Language:
    - ->In a message dated 98-04-09 06:05:23 EDT, you write:

    - -> Anurians speak now? Some of the names should welsh and celtic, but I
    - -> can't pin it down. >>
    - ->The language is Gaelic.
    I don't think that's not so importnat, for most there is nothign different
    between celtic and gaelic, we se other such missunderstandings like
    'scandinavian' (which really should have been 'north-germanic').

    - -> I found a humorous trnaslation in Abbatoir, not
    - ->Abbatuor.. which is up in the Gorgon's Crown.. which means the butcher's
    - ->floor...

    Found any other such names which are based of "strange" words?

    //Trizt of Ward^RITE

    -

  8. #8
    tiphareth
    Guest

    Andurian Language

    my first post to the list [gulp]. well, here goes:

    at 03:44 am 9.4.98 -0700, tim nutting wrote:

    >Possibilities, if being drawn from a real world are (to me): African,
    >Eurasian, Asian, Indian, Native Americans and the South Americans
    >
    >For my own thoughts, I have the Masetians as a Greek people, so I guess the
    >Adurians might be Roman or perhaps a great mixing of them all into a
    >fantasy language people that have no real world ties.

    our campaign has no masetian development, but the adurians are being
    modelled after north africa (ever see the movie stargate? like in that:) we
    have one adurian pc (no +/- to ability scores), and she has a *very* hebrew
    name.

    basically: if you were to place the human cultures on a map of the earth,
    our adurians would be to the west of the khinasi.

    my $0.02 ;)

    cheers,

    - -tiphareth

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