Dothraki language

The Dothraki language is a constructed fictional language in George R. R. Martin's fantasy novel series A Song of Ice and Fire and its television adaptation Game of Thrones. It is spoken by the Dothraki, a nomadic people in the series's fictional world. The language was developed for the TV series by the language creator David J. Peterson,[1] working off the Dothraki words and phrases in Martin's novels.

Dothraki
Lekh Dothraki
Pronunciation[ˈdɤθɾaki]
Created byGeorge R. R. Martin, David J. Peterson
DateFrom 2009
Setting and usageA Song of Ice and Fire, 2011 series Game of Thrones
Purpose
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
GlottologNone

As of September 2011, the language comprised 3163 words,[2] not all of which have been made public. In 2012, 146 newborn girls in the United States were named "Khaleesi", the Dothraki term for the wife of a khal or ruler, and the title adopted in the series by Daenerys Targaryen.[3] Dothraki and Valyrian have been described as "the most convincing fictional tongues since Elvish".[4]

Development

David J. Peterson, creator of the Dothraki spoken language for Game of Thrones

The Dothraki vocabulary was created by David J. Peterson well in advance of the adaptation. HBO hired the Language Creation Society to create the language, and after an application process involving over 30 conlangers, Peterson was chosen to develop the Dothraki language. He delivered over 1700 words to HBO before the initial shooting. Peterson drew inspiration from George R. R. Martin's description of the language, as well as from such languages as Estonian, Inuktitut, Turkish, Russian, and Swahili.[5]

David J. Peterson and his development of the Dothraki language were featured on an April 8, 2012 episode of CNN's The Next List.[6] He went on to create the Valyrian languages for season 3 of Game of Thrones. Peterson and his development of Dothraki were also featured on the January 8, 2017 episode of To Tell the Truth.

Language constraints

The Dothraki language was developed under two significant constraints. First, the language had to match the uses already put down in the books. Secondly, it had to be easily pronounceable or learnable by the actors. These two constraints influenced the grammar and phonology of the language: for instance, as in English, there is no contrast between aspirated and unaspirated stops.

Phonology and romanization

David Peterson has said, "You know, most people probably don't really know what Arabic actually sounds like, so to an untrained ear, it might sound like Arabic. To someone who knows Arabic, it doesn't. I tend to think of the sound as a mix between Arabic (minus the distinctive pharyngeals) and Spanish, due to the dental consonants."[7]

Regarding the orthography, the Dothraki themselves do not have a writing systemnor do many of the surrounding peoples (e.g., the Lhazareen). If there were to be any written examples of Dothraki in the A Song of Ice and Fire universe, it would be in a writing system developed in the Free Cities and adapted to Dothraki, or in some place like Ghis or Qarth, which do have writing systems.[8]

Consonants

There are 23 consonant phonemes in the Dothraki language. Here the romanized form is given on the left, and the IPA in brackets.

Labial Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Velar Uvular Glottal
Plosive voiceless t [t] k [k] q [q]
voiced d [d] g [ɡ]
Affricate voiceless ch [tʃ]
voiced j [dʒ]
Fricative voiceless f [f] th [θ] s [s] sh [ʃ] kh [x] h [h]
voiced v [v] z [z] zh [ʒ]
Nasal m [m] n [n]
Trill r [r]
Tap r [ɾ]
Approximant central y [j] w [w]
lateral l [l]

The letters c and x do not appear in Dothraki, although c appears in the digraph ch.

p and b seem to appear only in names, as in Pono and Bharbo. These consonants were used in the past but have since developed into [f] and [v]. They can still be used as variants of /f/ and /v/.

Voiceless stops may be aspirated. This does not change word meaning.

The geminates of consonants marked with digraphs have a reduced orthography:

  • kkh represents /xː/ (not /kx/)
  • tth represents /θː/ (not /tθ/)
  • ssh represents /ʃː/ (not /sʃ/)
  • zzh represents /ʒː/ (not /zʒ/)
  • cch represents /t͡ʃː/ (not /kt͡ʃ/)[9][10]

Vowels

Dothraki has a four vowel system shown below:

Vowels
i /i/
e /e/
o /o/
a /a/

There are no diphthongs.[10][11]

In the A Song of Ice and Fire books, u never occurs as a vowel, appearing only after q, and only in names, as in Jhiqui and Quaro.

In sequence of multiple vowels, each such vowel represents a separate syllable. Examples: shierak [ʃi.eˈɾak] ('star'), rhaesh [ɾhaˈeʃ] ('country'), khaleesi [ˈxa.le.e.si] ('queen').

The vowels /i, e, o, a/ are realized as [e, ɛ, ɔ, ɑ] after /q/. /o/ turns into [ɤ] after dental consonants.[12][13] /o/ can be pronounced as [u] after /ɡ, k, x/.[12]

Grammar

Parts of speech

Though prepositions are also sometimes employed, the language is foremost inflectional. Prefixes, suffixes and circumfixes are all used. Verbs conjugate in infinitive, past, present, future, two imperatives and (archaic) participle; they also agree with person, number and polarity. Nouns divide into two classes, inanimate and animate. They decline in five cases, nominative, accusative, genitive, allative and ablative. Animate nouns also decline according to number.[14][15]

Word order

The basic word order is SVO (subject–verb–object). In a basic sentence, the order of these elements (when all three are present) is as in English: first comes the subject (S), followed by the verb (V), and then the object (O).

Khal ahhas arakh. The Khal (S) sharpened (V) the arakh (O).

When only a subject is present, the subject precedes the verb, as it does in English:

Arakh hasa.
The arakh (S) is sharp (V).

In noun phrases, there is a specific order as well. The order is as follows:

demonstrative  noun  adverb  adjective  genitive noun  prepositional phrase

Example:

jin ave sekke verven anni m'orvikoon
this father very violent of.mine with.a.whip
this very violent father of mine with a whip

In prepositional phrases, prepositions always precede their noun complements.

Further examples of demonstratives include:[16]

jin arakh this arakh (jin this, arakh arakh (type of blade))
rek hrakkares that lion (rek that, hrakkares lion)

Further examples of adjectives include:[17]

rakh haj strong boy (rakh boy, haj strong)
alegra ivezh wild duck (alegra duck, ivezh wild)

Adverbs normally are sentence final, but they can also immediately follow the verb. Modal particles precede the verb.[14]

In the episode "Andy's Ancestry" from the United States television show The Office, Dwight Schrute created the Dothraki phrase "throat rip" by putting "throat" in the accusative and placing it in front of the transitive verb. Compounds of this sort are a form of object incorporation. Peterson adopted this technique and called it the "Schrutean compound".[18][19]

Sample

Nevakhi vekha ha maan: Rekke, m'aresakea norethi fitte.
[ˈnevaxi ˈvexa ha maˈan ˈrekːe ˈmaɾesakea ˈnoɾeθi ˈfitːe]
seat.GEN exist.3SG.PRES for 3SG.ALL there.ACC with.coward.ALL.PL hair.GEN short
There is a place for him: There, with the short-haired cowards.[20]
gollark: I care about the soundness and sanity of the things I build, somewhat.
gollark: You have to have it do *an* extra network round trip in order to not have to statically include the stuff in the page and run into the issue the whole external navbar thing is meant to solve.
gollark: It is then harder to change.
gollark: With server rendering: client gets HTML page from server, draws it.With client rendering: client gets HTML page, partly draws it, notices JS in it, fetches JS, executes it, draws result.
gollark: There is an ADDITIONAL NETWORK ROUND TRIP!

References

  1. "Do you speak Dothraki?". The New York Times Upfront. January 30, 2012.
  2. "The Header Script". Dothraki.com. 21 September 2011. Retrieved 2011-10-03.
  3. Wattenberg, Laura (22 May 2013). "The Ultimate 'Game of Thrones' Baby Name". Huffington Post. Retrieved 22 May 2013.
  4. "The complex linguistic universe of "Game of Thrones"". The Economist. Retrieved 4 August 2017.
  5. "Official HBO Press Release". Dothraki.conlang.org. April 12, 2010.
  6. "'Game of Thrones' linguist: How to create a language from scratch". CNN What's Next. Archived from the original on 2013-09-11. Retrieved 2017-07-23.
  7. "Creating Dothraki - An Interview with David J Peterson and Sai Emrys". Tor.com. April 22, 2010.
  8. "Westeros.Ru interview". Westeros.ru. June 24, 2010.
  9. "» Long (or Doubled) Consonants Dothraki". Dothraki.com. Retrieved 2017-07-23.
  10. "Phonology - Dothraki". Wiki.dothraki.org. Retrieved 2017-07-23.
  11. "» Accents in Dothraki Dothraki". Dothraki.com. 2011-10-07. Retrieved 2017-07-23.
  12. "» Qute Noises Dothraki". Dothraki.com. Retrieved 2017-07-23.
  13. "The Art of Language Invention, Episode 7: Romanization Systems". YouTube. 2015-11-17. Retrieved 2017-07-23.
  14. "Dothraki 101 post on HBO's Making Game of Throne's blog". Makinggameofthrones.com. December 15, 2010.
  15. "Dothraki presentation at Language Creation Conference 4" (PDF). Conference.conlang.org. August 22, 2011.
  16. "Demonstratives". Dothraki.com. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  17. "Adjectives". Dothraki.org. 8 October 2012. Archived from the original on June 17, 2013. Retrieved 2013-06-16.
  18. Rahman, Ray (31 May – 7 June 2013). "My Weird TV Job: The Guy Who Makes Up Languages for Game of Thrones and Defiance". Entertainment Weekly (#1261/1262). Archived from the original on 2015-04-08.
  19. "Dothraki on The Office". Dothraki.com. 5 October 2012. Retrieved 2017-01-09.
  20. "Dothraki Presentation at WorldCon 2011" (PDF). Dedalvs.com. August 21, 2011. Retrieved 2017-07-23.
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