• Source: Musical language
    • Musical languages are constructed languages based on musical sounds, which tend to incorporate articulation. Whistled languages are dependent on an underlying spoken languages and are used in various cultures as a means for communication over distance, or as secret codes. The mystical concept of a language of the birds tries to connect the two categories, since some authors of musical a priori languages have speculated about a mystical or primeval origin of the whistled languages.


      Constructed musical languages


      There are only a few language families as of now such as the Solresol language family, Moss language family, and Nibuzigu language family.
      The Solresol family is a family of a posteriori languages (usually English) where a sequence of 7 notes of the western C-Major scale or the 12 tone chromatic scale are used as phonemes.

      Domila
      Eaiea
      Sarus
      Solresol
      Moss (language) is a pidgin built out of melodic shapes.
      The Nıbuzıgu family
      Kobaïan is a language constructed by Christian Vander of the band Magma, which uses elements of Slavic and Germanic languages, but is based primarily on 'sonorities, not on applied meanings'.


      Musically influenced languages


      Hymmnos


      In fiction


      Voyage to Faremido
      Close Encounters of the Third Kind


      See also


      Tonal language
      Whistled language


      References




      External links


      "Domila" at forum.unilang.org/viewtopic.php?t=30169
      Koestner Bruce. "Eaiea". eaiea.com BizHosting.

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