Below is a list of the constructed languages in the LINGUIST List database,
accompanied by a brief description and the proposed language code.
Language codes are used in electronic searching for language resources. Since no codes
for ancient or constructed languages formerly existed, LINGUIST has augmented the Ethnologue codes
for modern languages with codes for constructed languages and ancient languages. These
codes are being proposed as a standard to the
Open Language Archives Community.
| Code |
Old Code |
Name |
FamilyID |
Description |
bzt |
BZT |
Brithenig |
AE |
An attempt to create the Romance language that might have evolved if Latin speakers had been a sufficient number to displace Celtic as the spoken language of the people in Great Britain. |
bzt |
CBRT |
Brithenig |
AE |
An attempt to create the Romance language that might have evolved if Latin speakers had been a sufficient number to displace Celtic as the spoken language of the people in Great Britain. |
dws |
DWS |
Dutton World Speedwords |
AE |
Dutton World Speedwords is intended to be an international auxiliary language that can also be used as a universal shorthand system. |
dws |
CDUT |
Dutton World Speedwords |
AE |
Dutton World Speedwords is intended to be an international auxiliary language that can also be used as a universal shorthand system. |
ido |
IDO |
Ido |
AE |
A simplified form of Esperanto, with modifications provided by
another artificial language, Idiom Neutral. It was produced by a committee which
included the Danish linguist Professor Otto Jespersen and the French mathematician
and philosopher Professor Louis Couturat. |
ido |
CIDO |
Ido |
AE |
A simplified form of Esperanto, with modifications provided by
another artificial language, Idiom Neutral. It was produced by a committee which
included the Danish linguist Professor Otto Jespersen and the French mathematician
and philosopher Professor Louis Couturat. |
igs |
IGS |
Interglossa |
AE |
Interglossa was the work of Prof. Lancelot Hogben of Great Britain, who devised a language whose vocabulary consists entirely of roots from Greek yet whose grammar was borrowed from Chinese. Moribund by the 1960's, it was revived in 1972 by Ronald Clark and Wendy Ashby, who built the new language Glosa upon it.
|
igs |
CING |
Interglossa |
AE |
Interglossa was the work of Prof. Lancelot Hogben of Great Britain, who devised a language whose vocabulary consists entirely of roots from Greek yet whose grammar was borrowed from Chinese. Moribund by the 1960's, it was revived in 1972 by Ronald Clark and Wendy Ashby, who built the new language Glosa upon it.
|
tlh |
CKLI |
Klingon |
AE |
The Klingon Language was invented by linguist Marc Okrand for Paramount Pictures Star Trek III: The Search for Spock, and has been used in subsequent movies and television shows. |
jbo |
LJB |
Lojban |
AE |
A constructed language. It was originally called Loglan by project founder Dr. James Cooke Brown, who started the language development in 1955. Designed to be culturally neutral, and based on the principles of logic. |
ldn |
CLAA |
Láadan |
AE |
Suzette Haden Elgin's women's language from her novels. It is now used in other contexts. |
ldn |
LDN |
Láadan |
AE |
Suzette Haden Elgin's women's language from her novels. It is now used in other contexts. |
nov |
CNOV |
Novial |
AE |
Invented by the famous linguist Otto Jespersen, Novial was conceived in the 1930's as a midground between completely regular constructed languages such as Esperanto and the more unpredictable qualities of a natural language. |
nov |
NOV |
Novial |
AE |
Invented by the famous linguist Otto Jespersen, Novial was conceived in the 1930's as a midground between completely regular constructed languages such as Esperanto and the more unpredictable qualities of a natural language. |
occ |
OCC |
Occidental |
AE |
Occidental was invented in the 1920's by an Estonian, Edgar von Wahl/de Wahl who was dissatisfied with the Esperanto movement, feeling that the language was not Western enough. Occidental diverges from its predecessors in that it is based essentially on Romance grammatical patterns, and is not entirely regular, in that -- as in natural languages -- more than one suffix can serve the same role. |
occ |
COCC |
Occidental |
AE |
Occidental was invented in the 1920's by an Estonian, Edgar von Wahl/de Wahl who was dissatisfied with the Esperanto movement, feeling that the language was not Western enough. Occidental diverges from its predecessors in that it is based essentially on Romance grammatical patterns, and is not entirely regular, in that -- as in natural languages -- more than one suffix can serve the same role. |
qya |
CQUE |
Quenya |
AE |
"The Ancient Tongue". Also called "High-Elven". One
of the Elvish languages invented by J. R. Tolkien, and which were
ultimately used in his Lord of the Rings cycle. Based loosely on
the "feel" of Finnish, though in the mythos it is related to Sindarin,
which is based on the "feel" of Welsh. |
qya |
QYA |
Quenya |
AE |
"The Ancient Tongue". Also called "High-Elven". One
of the Elvish languages invented by J. R. Tolkien, and which were
ultimately used in his Lord of the Rings cycle. Based loosely on
the "feel" of Finnish, though in the mythos it is related to Sindarin,
which is based on the "feel" of Welsh. |
rmv |
RMV |
Romanova |
AE |
An artificial language based on the four major Romance languages: Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese. Designed to make it easy for Romance speakers to communicate. |
rmv |
CROM |
Romanova |
AE |
An artificial language based on the four major Romance languages: Spanish, French, Italian, and Portuguese. Designed to make it easy for Romance speakers to communicate. |
sjn |
CSIN |
Sindarin |
AE |
"The Noble Tongue". Also called "Grey-Elven". One of the
Elvish languages invented by J. R. Tolkien, and which were ultimately used in
his Lord of the Rings cycle. Based loosely on the "feel" of Welsh, though in
the mythos it is related to Quenya, which is based on the "feel" of Finnish.
Originally called Golgodrin or "Gnomish". Its later, heavily revised, form
was called Noldorin. |
vol |
VLO |
Volapük |
AE |
Invented by Johann Martin Schleyer, a Catholic priest in Baden, Volapük was the first constructed language to achieve some success. Its aim was to provide a neutral medium for international exchange. A description of the language was published in 1880, and hundreds of Volapük societies soon grew up. The language, though completely agglutinative and regular, was very complex, with a nominal case system and verbs which marked person, gender, number, tense, mood and voice. Perhaps because of this complexity, it ultimately failed, though it provided a foundation for the Esperanto movement that shortly followed. |