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Over a few years of serching i have piced all of this together to make a form of book on the Draconic language (otherwise known as "Druatch") its not much to go at:( sorry..
If you scroll down to the bottom there are a few basic words coverted from english to Draconic language
take a look :)
if anyone can help me find more info on the draconic language please get in contact with me :)
-
John
Kaetaa - Hello / Goodbye same word holds both meanings
First Class
a - fATHer b - bet
e - Elephant c - SHeep
i - bIt d - Dog
o - bOtch f - Father
u - lUnch g - Goat
h - THud
aa - YAk j - aZure
ae - JAm k - baCK
ai - sAY l - Laugh
ao - JAil m - Mother
au - lAUrel n - Never
p - Pet
ea - YEs r - Rain
ee - JElly s - Sane
ei - sEA t - Tap
eo - EOn v - Very
eu - EUnuch
ia - YIp
ie - JIm
ii - EYE
io - YIkes
iu - tissUE
oa - YOlk
oe - JOlly
oi - tOE
oo - mOOn
ou - cOUgh
ua - YOung
ue - JUly
ui - YOU
uo - tOUgh
uu - cOW
ya - YEAH (used only in one word, "ya" - thing)
PRONOUNS, POSSESSIVES, ETC.
Ieo - (I, masculine) Iea - (I, feminine)
Nieo - (You, masculine) Niea - (You, feminine)
Aeo - He
Aea - She
Ae - It
Ois teigat k'aen. This is their boat.
This boat is theirs.
This boat belongs to them.
Oiten teigat k'ieo. Those are my boats.
or Those boats are mine.
Oiten teigat k'iea. Those boats belong to me.
The phrase "Teigaten k'iea" is NOT equivalent to the phrase
"Iea aya teigaten". Even though both literally mean
"I have some boats", the first phrase implies OWNERSHIP, while
the second implies physical POSSESSION.
"Iea aya teigaten k'iea." is a phrase which indicates both ownership
and physical possession.
INDICATIVES
Ois - this Oit - that
Oisen - these Oiten - those
INTERROGATIVES
Toit - what Examples:
Tekeme - who Taia oisen? = Whose are these?
Tena - where Tekeme oit? = Who is that?
Taia - whose Toit ois? = What is this?
Teile - why
Teolui - when
Temaga - how
CONJUNCTIONS AND MISCELLANEOUS WORDS (CONDITIONALS, ETC.)
elg - and (for joining two words or phrases only)
eln - and (separates words in a spoken series)
elb - and (used before the last word in a spoken series)
eli - and (used for joining two numbers only)
elh - and (separates numbers in a spoken series)
eld - and (used before the last number in a spoken series of numbers)
glaa - if
ouso - or (exculsive)
ouse - or (inclusive)
da - not
d'na - no
d'naya - nothing
ber - false
ana - yes
rei - true
verb root + cai = "place" of verb, e.g. geicai = "place of healing"
pronoun/noun + na = "place" of pronoun/noun = Ieana = "my home"
kor - possessive "of" (becomes k' before vowels)
hi - with
sle - else
keir - large, great, big
aor - small, tiny, insignificant
TIME-RELATED WORDS
loeth - before
laseth - after
vrara - forever
gese - for a short time, brief
PREPOSITIONS
u - but
tine - while
ol - to
e - from
ni - on
na - in
ra - of (non-possessive)
VERBS AND DERIVED WORDS
Verb root + nne = infinitive form of the verb
Verb root + p (ap) = gerund
Verb root + t (at) = noun derivative
Verb root + r (ar) = adjective derivative
Verb root + s (as) = adverb derivative
Verb root + re (are) = past tense (Standard/Informal form)
Verb root + ro (aro) = future tense (Standard/Informal form)
r (ra) + verb root = passive voice
-eo = flag for masculine "I"
-ea = flag for feminine "I"
-eon = flag for masculine "We"
-ean feminine "We"
-en mixed "We"
-no (-ano) masculine "You"
-na (-ana) feminine "You"
-non (-anon) masculine "You" (plural)
-nan (-anan) feminine "You" (plural)
-nen (-anen) mixed "You"
-ao He
-aa She
-ae It
-aon masculine "They"
-aan feminine "They"
-aen mixed "They"
cal Tense marker for "present"
recal Tense marker for "past"
rocal Tense marker for "future"
Note: There are several intermediate tense markers, i.e. before and
after, but the three markers above are the ONLY ones to determine
the tense "flavoring" of the entire phrase or sentence.
Sample conjugation: AIANNE = "to have", "to hold"
verb root: aia
gerund : aiap
noun derivatives: aiat - coin/money (plural: aiaten)
aiart = pet, possession
aiarya = pet, possession (term of endearment)
There are several more derivatives!!!!
adjective: aiar
adverb: aias
I. Standard (Informal) Conjugation:
Verbs conjugated in the standard/informal manner are hard coded for tense
as well as for voice. The passive voice is RARELY used in standard/informal.
Also, pronouns may or not precede a conjugated verb in standard/informal
form. As a general rule, they DO precede in talking or writing to
non-intimates and DO NOT in talking/writing to intimates. Conjugated
verbs without pronoun precedents are hard-coded for person.
Present Tense:
a) With pronoun precedent
Ieo/Ie'aia I have
Ieon/Iean/Ien aia We have
Nieo/Nie'aia You have
Nieon/Niean/Nien aia You (plural) have
Aeo/Ae'aia/Ae aia He/She/It has
Aeon/Aean/Aen aia They have
b) Without pronoun precedent
aiaeo/aiaea I have
aiaeon/aiaean/aiaen We have
aiano/aiana You have
aianon/aianan/aianen You (plural) have
aiaao/aiaaa/aiaae He/she/it has
Aiaaon/aiaaan/aiaaen They have
II. Non-Standard (Formal) Conjugation
Verbs conjugated in the non-standard/formal manner are hard coded for ONLY
voice. And, voice is ALWAYS passive in this form.
Tense is "soft-coded"; a tense marker is put forth either as part of
a sentence, or as a statement all to itself. The first style is
characteristic of dialogue, while the second is of formal writings and
decrees. The presented tense marker 'flavors' all of the conjugated verbs
which follow it and come before another tense marker (which will ALWAYS
be one which will change the tense....if it isn't, it's HORRIBLE GRAMMAR)
Pronouns ALWAYS precede a conjugated verb in non-standard/informal form.
Therefore, verbs conjugated in this form do not require pronoun flags.
Note: The following conjugation is "general formal"; used by social
equals.
"Very formal" or "Ceremonial" would call for the pronouns being
substituted by titles ("very formal") or by Servant/Master
("ceremonial")
Ieo/Iea raia had by me
Ieon/Iean/Ien raia had by us
Nieo/Niea raia had by you
Nieon/Niean/Nien raia had by you (plural)
Aeo/Aea/Ae raia had by him/her/it
Aeon/Aean/Aen raia had by them
VERBS AND INTERESTING DERIVATIVES
acinne - to accept; to take (after being offered)
acit - small refreshment offered by host (hors d'oeuvre)
aianne - to have; to hold
aginne - to hide; to conceal
alemnne - to shine (reflect light)
alemat - moon
ateinne - to enter
ateit - door, gate
buenne - to multiply (numbers); to reproduce; to give birth
buer - pregnant (female); fertile (cropland, pasture)
danne - to add (numbers); to increase; to grow
deinne - to descend; to fall
chenne - to enclose; to encircle;
chet - circle
ecolnne - to give; to offer
eilenne - to be (sentient beings)
eprinne - to exchange
erdonne - to speak; to talk; to express
erdot - word; erdoten - LANGUAGE
erondenne - (to make/work) magic; to enchant (magically)
erondet - magic, enchantment, illusion
erondeao/erondeaa - magician, enchanter, illusionist
keir erondeao/keir erondeaa - "skillful magician" (wizard)
Eronder Daerao/Eronder Daeraa= "Magician" (title)
Keis Eronder Daerao/Keis Eronder Daeraa = "Wizard" (title)
genne - to heal
geunne - to steal
glinne - to recognize; to identify (glinne + book, etc =to read)
gorunne - to bathe
isnne - to bite; to pierce
isat - tooth (also spear)
isar - sharp; biting; piercing
jacusenne - to flirt; to banter
jolernne - to play; to joke
kaisenne - to lead
kaiset - path, road
kedenne - to scratch
kedeteo/kedetea - cat
kelisenne - to make; to build; to create; to implement; to construct
keliset - tool
kemenne - to learn; to understand
kenne - to cut
ket - knife
maganne - to do; to work; to toil
meranne - to ascend; to climb/scale; to soar
mesenne - to see; to visualize
misanne - to entangle; to snare; to trap
misardat - jungle
nandanne - to rule; to govern
nandat - law; rule
nondanne - to sleep
oionne - to rush; to race
oluinne - to happen; to occur
sarnne - to teach; to instruct
sebenne - to love
sitauaienne - to please; to make happy
teiganne - to float; to elude
ularnne - to fly
Numbering System
Dragons (shapechangers, at least -- regular dragons don't really have
much use for a numbering system) believe that the existence of Ea is
based on numbers. Therefore, their numbering system is based on
directional affixes joined to numerical suffixes.
DIRECTIONS MEANING DIRECTIONAL AFFIXES
cai Here ca-
gana East ga-
meracai Up mera-
digana Southeast diga-
dina South di-
diduna Southwest didu-
duna West du-
aaduna Northwest aadu-
deicai Down dei-
aana North aa-
aagana Northeast aaga-
Each digit has both a consonant and a vowel/vowel-preceded representation;
consonant + vowel/vowel preceded = numerical suffix
DIGIT CONSONANT VOWEL/VOWEL PRECEDED
0 b a
1 c an
2 d e
3 f en
4 g i
5 h in
6 j o
7 k on
8 l u
9 m un
10 n aa
11 p aan
EXAMPLES:
0 ba 11 baan
1 ban 12 caban
2 be 13 cabe
3 ben 14 caben
4 bi 15 cabi
5 bin 16 cabin
6 bo 17 cabo
7 bon 18 cabon
8 bu 19 cabu
9 bun 20 cabun
10 baa 21 cabaa
Numbers after "aagapaan" = 1,666 are expressed by joining numbers in
equations by the use of either "da" (from "danne" - to add) or
"bue" (from "buenne" - to multiply).