

Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd., 1935, LCCN: 35016722) is the only example of this language. Searight's book, Sona an auxiliary neutral language (London, K.
#Sonority dothraki plus
Thus, ra "male" plus ko "child" makes rako "boy". Ideas and sentences are formed by juxtaposing the radicals. The language has 375 radicals or root words-based on the terms in Roget's original thesaurus. Sona is an agglutinative language with a strong tendency towards being an isolating language. Searight used inspiration from many diverse languages, including English, Arabic, Turkish, Chinese and Japanese, to create his eclectic yet regular and logical language. The papers in this volume explore sonority from a variety of perspectives (articulatory and acoustic phonetic, formal phonological, lexical statistical) and raise our understanding of this pervasive yet elusive feature to a new level.' Michael Kenstowicz of MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). Thus, Sona sacrificed familiarity of grammar and lexicon for some measure of "universality", while at the same time preserving basic notions common to grammars around the world such as compounding as a method of word formation. At the same time, Searight intended his language to be more practical than most a priori languages like Solresol or Ro, which were intended to be unbiased by any particular group of natural languages. Searight created Sona as a response to the Eurocentricity of other artificial auxiliary languages of his time, such as Esperanto and Ido. The word Sona in the language itself means "auxiliary neutral thing", but the name was also chosen to echo "sonority" or "sound". apostrophe represents nothing and the initial rising sonority cluster of. Sona is a worldlang created by Kenneth Searight and described in a book he published in 1935. Martin did not invent the Dothraki and Valyrian languages himself.

The language has 375 radicals or root words based on the terms in Roget's original thesaurus.
