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Babm | |
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Created by | Rikichi (Fuishiki) Okamoto |
Date | 1962 |
Setting and usage | international auxiliary language |
Users | None |
Purpose | |
Sources | a priori language |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | None |
Babm (pronounced [bɔʔɑbɔmu]) is an international auxiliary language created by the Japanese philosopher Rikichi [Fuishiki] Okamoto (1885–1963). Okamoto first published the language in a 1962 book, but the language has not caught on even within the constructed language community, and does not have any known current speakers. [1] The language uses the Latin script as an abjad: each letter marks an entire syllable rather than a single phoneme by omitting the vowels. To readers used to the Latin script, this creates a rather oddly compacted script with far more consonant letters than vowel letters.
The language has in common with some 17th century artificial languages an over-riding concern with Taxonomy, and providing a universally consistent set of names for chemicals, etc.;[2] the author's "scientific" preoccupation is a contrast to the socio-political mandate of Esperanto, although the 1962 book is certainly not lacking in statements about world peace.
Contents |
[Babm:] V pajio ci htaj, lrid cga coig pegayx pe bamb ak cop pbagt.
[English:] I am reading this book, which is very interestingly written in Babm by a predominant scholar.[3]
[Babm:] Dedh cjis beg kobp.
[English:] Time causes youth to be old.[4]
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