XaiJu
mcahogarth
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Conlang Book List

A handful of you asked after my books on constructing artificial languages, little realizing what monster you would release by asking! This is my excited face. 😬I used to get all these books as paper references; recently I’ve moved to e-book, which makes photographing the full stack hard. Here’s a list, then!

Language Overviews

These have been useful because they give you a sense of how other languages do things, and they teach you useful things about what languages need to work. Also note: I find it useful to have access to a basic textbook on linguistics. Mine is a relic from my college days, which isn’t sold anymore. There are probably better ones out there; pick one up!

Useful Books About Real Languages

Any book that makes you think about how languages develop is helpful. In addition to meta-analysis of languages, like the ones I’ve mentioned here, I also collect “Learn to Speak X” books whenever I can…. I have eleven or twelve of those? Cherokee, Hebrew, Thai, Irish, a book on Inuit naming customs, my Latin and Spanish textbooks from school, Mandarin, several on Japanese (one specifically on writing systems), one on Egyptian hieroglyphics, etc. And I want more. >.> Here are some more overview-like texts:

Conlang Books

These are either specifically about how to make languages, or about other invented languages.

Misc Resources

Note that I use neither of those programs for my lexicon. I'm using a spreadsheet.

That's all I can think of for now! If I remember anything I've forgotten, I'll add it. Feel free to make suggestions, too! I'm always hunting for new resources!💖

Conlang Book List

Comments

Anyone doing any serious conlanging should pick up Describing Morphosyntax by Thomas Payne. It's targeted at field linguists who are trying to describe languages they are studying, but it really is invaluable for talking about various parts of language and what sort of possibilities one might encounter.

Something a little more basic, if any of you might have some ideas. My family moved around a lot when I was in young, and public schools in SoCal didn't teach grammar a lot in the 60's. So I missed learning formal basic written English skills. Does anyone know of a good e-source or ebook I could to learn the parts of speech/written language (with exercises)? I've read incessantly since I was six years old, so I know when something doesn't sound right, but I'm not always sure *why* it doesn't sound right, or how to fix it. All recommendations appreciated.


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