The Torso of a Bodhisattva
Nrit is the Englisk* name of my conlangue** Nrittandidih, the language of the Dragonfly pinclans of Planet Pii .

Now, I started working on Nrit to flesh out a culture, but very quickly it developed more importance than the culture itself, which now exists only for the purpose of framing Nrit.  Piispirit intervention, I suppose.

Nrit's a fairly typical inflecting-agglutinating language with SOV structure and dull grammar, but it's got a phonology I can say I'm proud of.

  At any rate, other information appears on the subpages:  (Each page assumes you have read the previous)

 

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P honology:  A long discussion on Nrit's phonology, from its phoneme inventory to syllable structure and compounding rules.  Soon, I'll put up stress patterns as well.  This page is one of my favorites as of now (early May) and so it tends to be updated often.
N ouns:  Another long discussion, this time on the four cases, three numbers, inflection patterns, and various pronouns of Nrit.  This page is stable and doesn't need to be updated.
V erbs:  A discussion on the multitude of inflections of a Nrit verb - the five simple tenses, the weak and strong verb endings, the Five Patterns of weakness and strength, and the process behind root weakening.  Reasonably stable; information will be added at times, but what exists will not change.
A djectives:  Adjective morphology and complex verb tenses.  Stable, but in need of better examples.
L exicon:  An in-progress page that lists all the words in Nrit.  Occasionally updated as the lexicon gets longer.  Not nicely formatted.
C harts:  The page where I throw everything before bothering  to sit  down and format it ncely.  Updated constantly and sometimes  a good reference,  though often too opaque to be of any use.  Currently outdated in a good deal of places except lexicon.
T houghts:  This is another blog, where things get thrown while I'm at school or I don't want to pop open my files by hand.  It's often badly formatted, but contains my freshest Nrit ideas.  Joy.

Webpage graphics by the inestimable Jaguarwoman.

*: English with a k.  No reason other than that it looks sort of nifty.
**:This usage is nonstandard; I use -ue to mark noun forms of the root conlang.




 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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