Ljóðsmálið

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Ljóðsmálið
Ljóðsmálið
Pronounced: [ljɔu̯ːs.m̥ɔu̯.liː]
Species: Human
Spoken: Shetland
Writing system: Latin
Genealogy: Proto-Germanic
Old Norse
Old West Norse
Ljóðsmálið
Typology
Morphological type: Fusional
Morphosyntactic alignment: Nominative
Basic word order: SVO basic
Credits
Creator: Lumi
Created: November 4th, 2025

Ljóðsmálið is a North Germanic language, relatively close to Faroese and Icelandic, and like those two it remains relatively conservative, especially in spelling, where it very rarely makes any changes at all.

Etymology

"Ljóðsmálið" is a compound of "ljóð" ("song" or "poem") and "mál" ("language", the "-ið" is the definite ending), thus making it roughing "the language of song", a poetic way of saying "the beautiful language".

Phonology & Orthography

Consonants

Consonants
Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m n (ŋ)
Plosive Voiceless p t t͡ʃ k
Voiced b d d͡ʒ ɡ
Fricative Voiceless f s ç h
Voiced v
Approximant Voiced r, l j
Voiceless r̥, l̥
  • Any of the sonorants (except /j/) may be devoiced next to a voiceless consonant.

Vowels

Unlike most vowel tables, this is made corresponding to Old Norse. This is largely due to orthographic complications arising from it being extremely historic, for example, the eð vowels are only treated differently due to the way they're written, normally such things would be disregarded, but here they're not as it is a rather important aspect of interacting with the language.

This first table is the vowel orthography, it applies to all the following phoneme tables. It's shown as a phoneme table so you can more easily see the value of each letter when put against the phoneme tables.

Vowel orthography
Front Back
Unround Round
Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long
High i í y ý u ú
Mid-High e é ø ǿ o ó
Mid-Low ę æ ǫ ǫ́
Low a á

Eð vowels are those historically containing eð as the coda.

Plain Vowels
Front Back
Unround Round
Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long
High ɪ ai̯ ʏ ay̯ ʊ au̯
Mid-High ɛ ei̯ œ øy̯ ɔ ou̯
Mid-Low ɛi̯ ɔu̯
Low ɑ ɔɑ̯
Eð Vowels
Front Back
Unround Round
Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long
High ai̯ː ay̯ː au̯ː
Mid-High ei̯ː øː øy̯ː ou̯ː
Mid-Low ɛː ɛi̯ː ɔː ɔu̯ː
Low ɑː ɔɑ̯ː

Next are vowels in contact (contained in the same syllable) with labial consonants, the labels here are slightly misleading, but are again based on Old Norse.

Labial Vowels
Front Back
Unround Round
Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long
High ʏ ay̯ ay̯ ay̯ au̯ au̯
Mid-High œ øy̯ ʏ ay̯ ʊ au̯
Mid-Low œy̯ ɔ ou̯
Low ɔu̯
Labial Eð Vowels
Front Back
Unround Round
Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long
High ay̯ː ay̯ː ay̯ː au̯ː au̯ː
Mid-High øː øy̯ː y̯ː ay̯ː au̯ː
Mid-Low œˌ œy̯ː ou̯ː
Low ɔː ɔu̯ː

Next are vowels in contact with a velar.

Velar Vowels
Front Back
Unround Round
Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long
High ʊ au̯ ʊ au̯ au̯ au̯
Mid-High ɔ ou̯ ɔ ou̯ ʊ au̯
Mid-Low ɔu̯ ɔ ou̯
Low ɔu̯
Velar Eð Vowels
Front Back
Unround Round
Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long
High au̯ː au̯ː au̯ː au̯ː
Mid-High ou̯ː ou̯ː au̯ː
Mid-Low ɔː ɔu̯ː ou̯ː
Low ɔː ɔu̯ː

Another important note is irregular length, gemination was lost word finally, this happened prior to long vowel breaking, so when a geminate is present (in writing), treat it like an old long vowel, eg: "skegg" = "skég".

Spelling Orthography

The spelling orthography is a simplified form of the written language, it's largely limited to informal situations.

Orthography
Front Back
Unround Round
Monophthong Diphthong Monophthong Diphthong Monophthong Diphthong
Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long
High i í ì î y ý ŷ u ú ù û
Mid-High e é è ê ø ǿ ø̀ ø̂ o ó ò ô
Mid-Low ę ę̀ ę̂ ø̨ ø̨̀ ø̨̂ ǫ ǫ̀ ǫ̂
Low a á à â
Phonemes
Front Back
Unround Round
Monophthong Diphthong Monophthong Diphthong Monophthong Diphthong
Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long Plain Long
High ɪ ai̯ ai̯ː ʏ ay̯ ay̯ː ʊ au̯ au̯ː
Mid-High ɛ ei̯ ei̯ː œ øː øy̯ øy̯ː ɔ ou̯ ou̯ː
Mid-Low ɛː ɛi̯ ɛi̯ː œː œy̯ œy̯ː ɔː ɔu̯ ɔu̯ː
Low ɑ ɑː ɔɑ̯ ɔɑ̯ː

Dialects

Dynrastarnesmál

Natively called Dunnazónemmól (Or Dunrazónesmòl by older speakers), this is largely regarded as the most divergent form of Ljóðsmálið, so it will be covered the most of all the dialects presented.

Grammar

Syntax

Ljóðsmálið's basic word order is SVO, but this becomes VSO in questions, however, due to inflections, the word order is actually incredibly free.

Despite that freedom, V2 word order is inflexible, so take the following sentences (subject in yellow, verb in blue, object in red):

Mannfjoldinn var 1.500The population was 1,500

However (prepositional phrase in green):

Árið 2000 var mannfjoldinn 1.500In 2000, the population was 1,500 (lit. The year 2000 was the population 1,500)

But for questions, SV inversion is used, so:

Stefan er svangurStefan is hungry

and when turned into a question:

Er Stefan svangur?Is Stefan hungry?

Questions

As seen above, questions are formed through SV inversion (SVO > VSO), an example being:

Þú talar LjóðsmáliðYou speak Ljóðsmálið

Can be turned into:

Talar þú Ljóðsmálið?Do you speak Ljóðsmálið?

Inversion is still used even with interrogatives, which are simply placed at the start of the sentence:

  • hvat?what?
Hvað ert (þú) (at) gera?What are you doing?