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Langsame

Langsame is a fictional constructed language created for the speculative fiction setting of a multi‑world project. It was developed by linguist Mara Vell and first described in 2014 as part of the worldbuilding materials for the series “Orbits of Aether.” The language is intended as a tool for exploring how a comparatively analytic system can carry a rich lexical and cultural texture within fiction.

Phonology and writing. Langsame has five vowels (a, e, i, o, u) and a consonant inventory of

Grammar and syntax. Langsame is analytic and predominantly SVO in basic declaratives. It has no grammatical

Lexicon and sample. The core lexicon emphasizes stable roots with heavy use of compound words for new

In use. Langsame appears in fiction as a language with a distinctive cadence and culture, and it

about
23
phonemes.
Stress
falls
on
the
penultimate
syllable
in
most
words,
with
marked
vowels
as
a
secondary
cue.
The
writing
system
is
Latin-based
and
uses
diacritics
to
distinguish
vowel
quality
and
occasional
tone
within
longer
texts.
Orthography
generally
favors
a
straightforward,
one-to-one
correspondence
between
phonemes
and
graphemes.
gender
and
no
noun
inflection
for
number
or
case.
The
definite
article
la
marks
definiteness.
Adjectives
follow
nouns
and
do
not
agree
in
number
or
gender.
Verbs
do
not
conjugate
for
person
or
number.
Tense
is
indicated
by
particles
before
the
verb:
pa-
for
present,
ka-
for
past,
fu-
for
future.
Negation
is
formed
with
ne
preceding
the
verb.
Plurality
is
typically
conveyed
with
numerals
or
context
rather
than
a
plural
suffix.
concepts.
Core
sentences
include
Mi
pa
parla
Langsame,
meaning
“I
speak
Langsame,”
and
La
suno
brila,
meaning
“The
sun
shines.”
The
language
draws
on
Romance
and
Germanic
influences
while
maintaining
distinctive
word
formation
and
syntax
that
support
worldbuilding.
is
sometimes
studied
by
fans
and
scholars
of
constructed
languages
for
its
clear,
context-driven
grammar
and
evocative
vocabulary.