Homurakitsune
Nini omé elúfi epo eyo-lu oto;
There's a whole guild of conlangers here on Gaia, actually. I have faith in people. If you're passionate about something, then you'll put thought into it. (At least that's what I'd hope.) OGODPAOLINI! He makes conlangers look like idiots! gonk
You were spot on about what the German said, actually. ^_^
But I don't speak(or read) a word of Latin, sorry. xD
What's your conlang called? How far have you gotten? =)
lu ni kamoo fa lo luhoa pu funa la.
There's a guild? *curiosity is piqued* Paolini makes fantasy writers in general look bad. D: It's a depressing sort of talent he has.
Whoo! I learned an eensy bit for a skit once upon a time from someone who didn't really know German either (she was in her first class or something), so I wasn't sure if I would be able to decipher that. xD
A Latin translation: "I speak a little Latin. I do not speak it fluently... I am a student of Latin 1." I can basically comprehend Latin on a "Frog and Toad are Friends" level and speak it on par with "Go, Dog, Go!" I'm just a very ambitious Latin 1 student.
I had the worst conlang EVER back in sixth grade. A smashing-your-head-on-the-keyboard, gee-this-looks-exotic-enough sort of language. I called it... *winces* the Common Tongue. Someone should have shot me then and there.
Thankfully, the one I'm in the midst of developing right now for a certain story is more complex and thought-out. I've only just started about a month ago and so far I've got basic grammar rules down as well as the alphabet. It's got letters similar to the Romance languages (with some letters omitted, some added, accents put on in a lot of places) because I'm really not ready to make a language consisting entirely of Arabic-esque symbols just yet. Right now I haven't got a very good name for it; I'm only calling it Fargue (named after a mythological god that supposedly created the language and the world among other things) for now.
... That was off-topic.
@Moonfall: Eh, we’ve all done it at least once. *pokes above paragraph* Just so long as you’ve learned from your mistakes and, when practical, you avoid making them in the future. n_n