ITT in this thread: Slavs from different countries vocaroo ( vocaroo.com/ ) Medžuslovjanski meme language. Here is the text:
In Latin script: Medžuslovjanski jest język, ktory Slovjani iz råznyh narodov koristajųt, že by komunikovali medžu sobojų. To jest možno, ibo slovjanske języki sųt shodna i srodna grupa. Znanje jednogo języka obyčno jest dostatočno, že by imělo sę priblizno pojmanje, o čem jest tekst na kakom-nebųď drugom slovjanskom języku. Črěz věki, Slovjani sųt naučili dogovarjati sę s svojimi sųsědami posrědstvom prostyh, improvizovanyh narěčij. Jednočasno, medžusobna shodnosť vsěh slovjanskih językov jest nadyhala językoznavcev i drugih k tvorjenju generičnogo slovjanskogo języka, råzumlivogo vsěm Slovjanam. Srěd nih nahodęt sę slavny starocŕkovnoslovjanski język iz 9. stolětja, kako i mnoge ine projekty, publikovane od 16. stolětja do dneś pod imenami kako «vseslovjanski», «medžuslovjanski», «novoslovjanski», «obćeslovjanski» ili prosto «slovjanski», vse osnovane na těhže prědpoloženjah, čto čini ih blizko identičnymi.
This isn't too hard to understand. My only question is: how do you pronounce ę, å, ų, ě, ŕ and what is the difference between i and y?
Jordan Rogers
...
Aaron Harris
Hmmm... I read the Cyrillic version
Ethan Scott
>ę, å, ų, ě, ŕ
Ask him
Juan Thompson
more girls for god of girls
Hudson Morales
C'mon, no bully.
Jaxson Mitchell
Can actual read it
Matthew Mitchell
have a bump for your meme language
William Lopez
thanks
Colton James
Vocaroo please
Hunter James
>how do you pronounce ę, å, ų, ě, ŕ and what is the difference between i and y? >ę pronounced as 'on' >å The Slovenian 'close O' (ozki o). This letter is not used by any Slavic language, only Germanic ones. >ų Used only in Lithuanian and Swedish, it represents a nasal u, which again must not sound far off from 'on' for the Slovenian. >ě represents 'je' with e being a broad (dolgi) vowel. This is just West Slavs being lazy and not writing all the letters they should. >ŕ Czech and Slovak, it's apparently a sound halfway between R and Š, but closer to Š. Fucked up stuff, I know.
Also, of all the stupid sounds in Slavic languages, the Russian soft sign takes the cake. It literally spells 'üj', like some Savinja valley redneck accent.
Thomas Ramirez
bump because this is interesting.
Something like this for Germanic languages is being developed right now too, called Folkssprak.
Asher Hall
vocaroo.com/i/s11ILQxOf0N7 i paid no real attention to the letters and just read it as it came to me desu
Adam Allen
>pronounced as 'on' >nasal u >a sound halfway between R and Š, but closer to Š
Camden Ramirez
Thank you! You read Latin version, I guess?
Ayden Cooper
>>ŕ >Czech and Slovak, it's apparently a sound halfway between R and Š, but closer to Š. Fucked up stuff, I know. lol no, it's long r vocaroo.com/i/s0Y8bkD1R3zT
>You read Latin version, I guess? yes, but i know cyrillic scipt too
David Harris
Oh, so it's just a prominent R. Just like CH and H are almost exactly the same sound. You sure like to make a fuss over nothing.
Josiah King
>all those circumflexes polluting the pure Latin script
Lôôks dîsgûstîng dęsû
Owen Gonzalez
>long r Sounds useless and kind of stupid tbqh
Nolan Thompson
>long r Slovaks confirmed for latent Spaniards
Oliver Richardson
I have a friend from slovenia and his girlfriend is croatian, I'm russian, one night we were drunk and started to talking in our languages just for fun, at the end we realized we pretty much could hold a decent conversation and undertand each other.
Dylan Reed
Bump for meme language. I find cyrillic easier to read in this case even though we use both, Cyrillic and Latin
Henry Adams
There's one for Romance + Germanic too, it's called English.