Radio Omniglot

Omniglot News (25/02/24)


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Here’s the latest news from the world of Omniglot.
There are new language pages about:

* Kwaio, a Southeast Solomonic language spoken on Malaita Island in Malaita Province of the Solomon Islands.
* Gela (Nggela), a Southeast Solomonic language spoken in the Nggela (Florida) Islands in the Central Province of the Solomon Islands.
* Arosi, a Southeast Solomonic language spoken on Makira Island in Makira-Ulawa Province in the east of the Solomon Islands.
* Touo, a Central Solomonic language spoken in the south of Rendova Island in the Western Province of the Solomon Islands.

New constructed script: Thieṛian Hieroglyphs, which were invented by Kitsune Sobo as a script for the constructed language Thieṛian.

New adapted script: Tengwar Persian, a way to write the Persian (Farsi) language with Tolkien’s Tengwar script devised by Daniyal Motamedi (دانیال معتمدی نیا).

New phrases page: Duala (Duálá), a Bantu language spoken in Cameroon in West Africa.
New numbers pages:

* Duala (Duálá), a Bantu language spoken in Cameroon in West Africa.
* Kikuyu (Gĩkũyũ), a Bantu language spoken mainly in the Central Province of Kenya.
* Gela (Nggela), a Southeast Solomonic language spoken in the Nggela (Florida) Islands in the Central Province of the Solomon Islands.
* Arosi, a Southeast Solomonic language spoken on Makira Island in Makira-Ulawa Province in the east of the Solomon Islands.

There’s a new Omniglot blog post entitled Various Verses about words for the world beyond your screen, and there’s the usual Language Quiz. See if you can guess what language this is:
Here’s a clue: this language is spoken in southern China but isn’t related to Chinese.
The mystery language in last week’s language quiz was Deg Xinag (Degexit’an), a Northern Athabaskan language spoken along the lower Yukon River in Alaska in the USA

In this week’s Adventure in Etymology, we look into the origins of the word Guide.

On the Celtiadur blog there’s a new post entitled A Bit of Bitterness about words for bitter, sour and related things, and I made improvements to the post about words for Honey, Sweet and related things.
New interview with me: https://www.twinkl.co.uk/blog/polyglots-why-languages-are-important
I also made improvements to the Duala language page.
For more Omniglot News, see:
https://www.omniglot.com/news/
https://twitter.com/Omniglossia
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Radio OmniglotBy Simon Ager

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