M. Park wrote:
If I may interject my own question here, as it falls in line with what’s being talked about: From a lot of the conlang places I’ve been there seems to be the general consensus that a conlang sounding like English is bad. I’ve never really been given a good reason behind this. Is it just because, and I’m generalizing, that when creating a conlang it is considered ideal to make one removed from your own?
Generally, reinventing English conflicts with a conlang's design goals. However, this is not necessarily true. For some languages, similarity with English is a very good thing.
If a language is meant to be spoken by a fictional group of people not related to any community of English speakers, then it isn't realistic for it to bear a noticeable resemblance to English.
Also, a conlang that too closely resembles English in whatever aspect is often a sign of ignorance—the conlanger didn't
mean for the language to be overly-reminiscent of English, but because they didn't know enough about how different languages work, it didn't occur to them that certain things could be done differently. This, in my experience, is what most criticisms about English resemblance are really targeting.
M. Park wrote:
While I understand sound is the primary factor when judging how, shall we say, beautiful a language is
For some definition of "beautiful"
M. Park wrote:
, I guess my true question is: can a conlang sound like English (or any other Natlang) but be so different in other areas to merit it being unique, interesting and worthy of discussion?
Oh, most definitely.