David J. Peterson
David Joshua Peterson (born January 20, 1981) is an American language creator, writer, and artist,[5] who has constructed languages for television and movies such as Thor: The Dark World and Doctor Strange and the Dothraki and Valyrian languages for the television series Game of Thrones.[6]
David J. Peterson | |
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Peterson in June 2019 | |
Born | [1] | January 20, 1981
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | |
Occupation | Writer, language creator |
Known for |
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Spouse(s) | Erin Peterson[3] |
Children | Meridian Peterson [4] |
Life
Studying at University of California, Berkeley (1999–2003), Peterson received BA degrees in English and in linguistics.[2] He received an MA in linguistics from University of California, San Diego (2003–2006).[2] According to an interview given to the publication Conlangs Monthly, he had his first contact with constructed languages while still at Berkeley, after attending an Esperanto class in 2000.[7] In 2007, he co-founded the Language Creation Society with nine other language creators[2] and served as its president (2011–2014).[8]
In 2009, the television network HBO needed a fictional language for the Game of Thrones television series and turned to the Language Creation Society for help. This resulted in a contest, which Peterson won.[9]
Peterson has created the Dothraki and Valyrian languages for the HBO series Game of Thrones and the Castithan, Irathient, Indogene and Omec languages for the Syfy show Defiance; he has been creating languages since 2000.[2][10] He also created the language used by the Dark Elves in the movie Thor: The Dark World.[11] Peterson's recent projects include the creation of the Inha and Munja'kin languages for the NBC series Emerald City.[12]
Peterson has worked to popularize the activity of language creation, or "conlanging". He produced a number of videos on YouTube, in a series called The Art of Language Invention,[13] and published a book of the same title in 2015. Peterson also worked as an executive producer on the 2017 documentary film, Conlanging: The Art of Crafting Tongues.[14]
Filmography
Television
Year | Title | Language(s) |
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2011–2019 | Game of Thrones | Dothraki, (Lekh Dothraki) a language spoken by the eponymous people. It lacks labial stops but has circumfixes, a distinction between alienable and inalienable possession and 5 grammatical cases, including a marked nominative for most inanimate nouns.
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2013–2015 | Defiance | Castithan (Kastíthanu), a language spoken by the eponymous species. It is extensively pro-drop despite lacking agreement, has a complex politeness system with many honorifics, vigesimal numbers and its own very deep abugida called Fajizwalino.
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2014 | Star-Crossed | Sondiv, a mostly object–verb–subject language spoken by Atrians. It has a nonconcatenative morphology, broken plurals, nominal TAM (pronouns and object-marking affixes change depending on the verb's aspect), nasal vowels and its own abjad called Kwandon. |
2014–2015 | Dominion | Lishepus, a polypersonal, verb–subject–object language spoken by angels. It is based on Proto-Indo-European and Proto-Afroasiatic roots and has pharyngeal consonants, inflected prepositions and a construct state. |
2015–2019 | The 100 | Trigedasleng ("language of the Tree People"), a descendant of an American English cryptolect spoken by Grounders. It has become an isolating language and developed clusivity. |
2015 | Penny Dreadful | Verbis Diablo, a language spoken by witches and demons. Due to its supernatural nature, its grammar is unstable and its words change meaning randomly. Though intentionally heavily distorted (sometimes through phonetic reversal), its vocabulary is based on Classical Arabic, Akkadian, Middle Egyptian, Attic Greek, Latin, Persian and Turkish. It has pharyngeal consonants and inflected prepositions. Its verbs agree with their objects but not their subjects. |
2016–2017 | The Shannara Chronicles | Noalath, a verb-subject-object language spoken by Druids. It has consonant mutation, reduplication, 5 noun classes, a singulative number for some nouns, circumfixes and vowel reduction. |
2017 | Emerald City | Inha ("we"), a language spoken by witches. It has four varieties (referencing the four countries of the Land of Oz), called Water (West), Fire (North), Wind (East) and Stone (South). Witches use Stone when speaking to each other and may use the other varieties for their own spells. Inha also has sound symbolism, triphthongs and 24 grammatical cases (22 in Fire and Water, which merge the adessive and the inessive, and the essive and the translative), including an exessive and an aversive.
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2018 | Into the Badlands | Azrán, a tonal, polypersonal descendant of Mexican Spanish spoken in Azra. |
2019 | Another Life | Achaian and Tala, two asemic syllabaries. |
2019 | The Witcher | Hen Linge (Elder Speech), a language spoken by elves and mages. It has 5 noun classes and its own runiform alphabet. |
2020 | Motherland: Fort Salem | Méníshè ("mother tongue"), a tonal language spoken by witches. It has ejective consonants, 6 noun classes and inflected postpositions.
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2020 | Shadow and Bone | Confirmed: Ravkan, Kerch, Fjerdan
(Likely: Suli, Zemeni, Shu, Kaelish) Peterson created these languages with Christian Thalmann. |
Films
Year | Title | Language(s) / Role |
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2013 | Thor: The Dark World | Shiväisith ("soft speech"), a language spoken by Dark Elves. It has a Finnish-inspired vowel harmony system as well as consonant harmony, 15 grammatical cases, a negative verb, a hodiernal tense and its own runiform alphabet called Todjydheenil. |
2016 | Warcraft: The Beginning | Orcish, a head-marking language spoken by orcs.
Draenei, a language spoken by the eponymous species. It was only used for one line. Common, an unused language that was meant to be spoken by humans. |
2016 | Doctor Strange | Nelvayu, a polypersonal language spoken by the Zealots for incantations. |
2017 | Conlanging: The Art of Crafting Tongues | Executive Producer[14] |
2017 | Bright | Övüsi (Övüsi Kieru, "Elvish tongue"), a language spoken by elves. It contrasts roundedness both in its front and back vowels and has 13 grammatical cases, including an aversive, as well as a potential mood and its own abugida. An older version of Övüsi was also used for one line.
Bodzvokhan (Bodzvokhan Dǝzhn, "farmer's language"), a polypersonal language spoken by orcs. It has a zero-dimensional vertical vowel system, Moro-inspired vowel harmony, pharyngeal consonants, applicative and antipassive voices, a potential mood, many Russian loanwords and its own abjad called Vukht as well as a Cyrillic alphabet. |
2018 | The Christmas Chronicles | Yulish, a language spoken by Santa Claus and Christmas elves. It has a nonpast tense, its nouns inflect for definiteness and its main stress is associated with a dip in intonation. |
2020 | Dune | TBA (most likely Chakobsa, the Arabic-derived language of the Fremen, spoken on the desert planet Arrakis.[15]) |
Video games
Year | Title | Language(s) |
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2018 | Arena of Valor | Veda, an isolating V2 language spoken by inhabitants of Veda. It has a zero-dimensional vertical vowel system, serial verb constructions, circumpositions and its own abjad called Welqor ("stack-mark").
Afata, a polypersonal descendant of Veda spoken by the eponymous people. It has consonant mutation, circumfixes, 3 noun classes, 18 grammatical cases including an apudessive, a superessive, a superlative, a delative, an initiative, a perlative and an aversive, and its own abugida called Thala ("vine"). Gandal ("impure language"), a descendant of Veda spoken by humans. It has a nonpast tense, 4 noun classes, animacy-based split ergativity, circumfixes, and its own alphabet called Shul ("pure"). G'vunna (Zudǝllǝ g’Vunnǝ, "language from the abyss"), a polypersonal descendant of Veda spoken by Lokheim. It has vowel harmony, 8 noun classes and its own alphabet called Oz ("blade"). |
Operas
Year | Title | Language(s) |
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2019 | Lampedusa (Eduardo Reck Miranda) | Vōv ("love"), a language spoken on Ariel's island. It has serial verb constructions and reduplication. |
Bibliography
- Johnston, Susan; Battis, Jes (2015). Mastering the Game of Thrones: Essays on George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-7864-9631-0.
- Peterson, David J. (2014). Dothraki. Living Language. ISBN 978-0-8041-6086-5.
- —— (2015). The Art of Language Invention. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-312646-1.
- Post, Nina; Peterson, David J. (2014). The Zaanics Deceit (Cate Lyr) (Volume 1). Nina Post, LLC. ISBN 978-1-4954-6134-7.
- Post, Nina; Peterson, David J. (2017). The Zaanics Pursuit (Cate Lyr) (Volume 2). Nina Post, LLC. ISBN 978-1-5376-4745-6.
References
- "David Joshua Peterson (born 1981)". California Birth Index.
- "About David J. Peterson". Dothraki.com. Retrieved April 27, 2013.
- David J. Peterson [@Dedalvs] (April 27, 2013). "David J. Peterson referring to his wife" (Tweet). Retrieved April 27, 2013 – via Twitter.
- "About". Art of Language Invention.
- "Dedalvs". Twitter.
- "Creator of 'Game of Thrones' languages coming to Iowa State in February - News Service - Iowa State University". www.news.iastate.edu. Retrieved October 16, 2018.
- "Interview with David J. Peterson". Conlangs Monthly. February 2015. Retrieved February 2, 2015.
- "Minutes for LCS Board Meeting (3/5/2011)". Language Creation Society. Retrieved April 14, 2016.
- "Expert Creates Language for New HBO Series Game of Thrones" (Press release). Dothraki.com. April 12, 2010. Retrieved May 14, 2017.
- Banks, Dave (August 25, 2010). "Interview: Creating Language for HBO's Game Of Thrones". Wired. Retrieved April 5, 2014.
- "Thor: The Dark World credits". The New York Times. Retrieved November 18, 2013.
- "Creating the languages of Tarsem's fantastical new 'Emerald City'". Screener. January 6, 2017. Retrieved January 30, 2017.
- David J. Peterson's channel on YouTube
- "Conlanging, The Film About". Retrieved August 28, 2017.
David J. Peterson EXECUTIVE PRODUCER David began work on his first language in 2000 and has been creating languages ever since. He's worked as a language creator on HBO's Game of Thrones, Syfy's Defiance and Dominion, the CW's Star-Crossed and The 100, plus Marvel's Thor: The Dark World. He’s also the author of two books: Living Language Dothraki (2014) and The Art of Language Invention (2015).
- Elderkin, Beth. "Game of Thrones Language Builder David Peterson Is Working on Denis Villeneuve's Dune". io9. Retrieved May 7, 2019.
External links
- Official website
Media related to David J. Peterson at Wikimedia Commons