Teonaht

Teonaht /ˈt.nɑːθ/ is a constructed language that has been developed since 1962 by science fiction writer and University of Rochester English professor Sarah Higley, under the pseudonym of Sally Caves. It is spoken in the fantasy setting of the Teonim, a race of polydactyl humans who have a cultural history of worshiping catlike deities.

Teonaht
Created bySally Caves
Date1962
Setting and usageFantasy setting of the Teonim
Purpose
Sourcesdraws on Indo-European languages: Romance, Germanic and Celtic
Language codes
ISO 639-3None (mis)
GlottologNone

Teonaht uses the object–subject–verb (OSV) word order, which is rare in natural languages. An interesting feature of Teonaht is that the end of the sentence is the place of greatest emphasis, as what is mentioned last is uppermost in the mind. The language has a "Law of Detachment" whereby suffixes can be moved to the beginnings of words for emphasis and even attach onto other words such as pronouns.

Teonaht is often cited as an example of the genre in articles on the world of Internet-hosted amateur conlanging.[1][2][3][4]

In May of 2019, the Washington Post shared audio of Caves singing in Teonaht.[5]

Notes

gollark: I checked, and MacOS also only has it as an option.
gollark: Theoretically you can also use this via setting up your own secure boot keys, if you trust the (closed-source, probably never really audited) UEFI implementation.
gollark: Also verified boot.
gollark: Unfortunately, it is not the default on Windows.
gollark: Like a correct person, I just use full-disk encryption on Linux.

References

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