AhmuldeinWhere can we buy this?
It's not available for purchase, krosis!
A community for the dragon language of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
paarthurnax Administrator July 24, 2014 |
Ahmuldein It's not available for purchase, krosis! |
AhmuldeinWhere can we buy this?
It's not available for purchase, krosis!
yaropolk July 26, 2014 |
um. and the digital version is? e-book or a Word document office? |
um. and the digital version is? e-book or a Word document office?
paarthurnax Administrator July 26, 2014 |
yaropolk There isn't a digital version available either, sorry! |
yaropolkum. and the digital version is? e-book or a Word document office?
There isn't a digital version available either, sorry!
yaropolk July 26, 2014 |
so. вы замутили клевую штуку! where and how it can be read? or you have not yet come to the final version? |
so. вы замутили клевую штуку! where and how it can be read? or you have not yet come to the final version?
In Sil Ah October 27, 2014 |
KROSIS F4 NECRO but if i only discovered this earlier i could have helped since my home language is Afrikaans |
Ahmuldein June 2, 2015 |
Is this up for purchase? |
Is this up for purchase?
paarthurnax Administrator June 2, 2015 |
Ahmuldein It isn't available for purchase, krosis. |
AhmuldeinIs this up for purchase?
It isn't available for purchase, krosis.
Orkar Isber June 3, 2015 |
dunno if someone pointed that out already but
i do. a lot. Some words are totally german with new meaning like Luft = face or Klo = sand Some words are written differently but pronounced like german words as example dov - doof. There are more examples if you go for it like Aal etc. Some words resemble older germanic versions like Iiz is basicly germanic - is, ice, eis - you get the ideal Icelamndic would be is. Soundwise - speaking as hobbylinguist - a lot of the words from dovahzul could indeed be german / nordic words from the sound pattern they use. Also some "typical germanic" sounds made it into dovahzul like the ch. And for those unknowing - old english is a germanic language and back in the day old english and old high german were very close languages similiar to swedish and norwegian today. Ahhh good old times when germans knew how to pronounce th and english had grammar...
it has a nordic sound pattern. Similiar names / words would be Oskar, Orkar, Otter. However the name Otar derives from the turkish language and is still used in parts of turkey.
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dunno if someone pointed that out already but
I also can’t find similar sounding words or some that mean the same in other languages
i do. a lot. Some words are totally german with new meaning like Luft = face or Klo = sand
Some words are written differently but pronounced like german words as example dov - doof. There are more examples if you go for it like Aal etc.
Some words resemble older germanic versions like Iiz is basicly germanic - is, ice, eis - you get the ideal Icelamndic would be is.
Soundwise - speaking as hobbylinguist - a lot of the words from dovahzul could indeed be german / nordic words from the sound pattern they use. Also some "typical germanic" sounds made it into dovahzul like the ch.
And for those unknowing - old english is a germanic language and back in the day old english and old high german were very close languages similiar to swedish and norwegian today.
Ahhh good old times when germans knew how to pronounce th and english had grammar...
I thought so that Otar would maybe be a nordic name.
it has a nordic sound pattern. Similiar names / words would be Oskar, Orkar, Otter.
However the name Otar derives from the turkish language and is still used in parts of turkey.
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