ales_
Heir
You know that it's Javanese, don't you?
You can download the free demo, the files are there.
You can download the free demo, the files are there.
You know that it's Javanese, don't you?
You can download the free demo, the files are there.
Or have a look at this.You know that it's Javanese, don't you?
You can download the free demo, the files are there.
i can help with tagalog
I finished translations for "Intro" and "Request," but I'm also going to go ahead and include the partial translations I have so far as well:
Finished:
Intro: How are you (lit:are we well)? I am Pachacuti, emperor of the Incas. (Allinllachu kanchik? Ñuqami kani Pachakutiq, Inkakunapa qhapa.)
Request: The Incan people offer this fair trade. (Inkarunakunaqa wak'aychinmi kay makipurayta.)
Partial:
Declare War: [???] You will not stand against the mighty Incan Empire! [???] ([???] Mana ñuqanchik sinchi Imperio Inka ñawpapi sayarinkichu! [???])
Defeated: [???] How has this happened? Someone has betrayed me! ([???] Ima hinataq kay pasani? Pipasmi ñuqata wasachawasqa!)
Only one remark: venetian is not a dialect, it is a western romance language on its own.
I see some small mistakes here and there, but since Dandolo should speak eastern venetian and I speak central venetian, there may be some words that are different than the ones I use.
I'm rather bemused that so far no Javanese speaker has been found despite there being 80 million speakers... I'll try asking my Indonesian friends to see if they can make any sense of it.
*Old Javanese
What's more hilarious is the fact that practically every line of spoken dialogue refers to "Gayah Mada" and the "Mayapahit Empire" which I find extremely odd; all the cultures I'm aware of w.r.t the south east asian region pronounce the 'j' as 'j', not some esoteric silent j. Maybe it's a western thing; I dunno.
Those are the same as Defeat.Fantastic work...was wondering if you are able to get the 'dead spy' speeches (when you kill theirs and they come to you apologizing for spying). Some of them are fairly extended, was curious what they are saying.
Old Javanese has tenuous ties to modern Indonesian at best, which in turn has enough linguistic ties to a language I understand that I can understand some words and phrases but nowhere near enough to make a coherent translation.
What's more hilarious is the fact that practically every line of spoken dialogue refers to "Gayah Mada" and the "Mayapahit Empire" which I find extremely odd; all the cultures I'm aware of w.r.t the south east asian region pronounce the 'j' as 'j', not some esoteric silent j. Maybe it's a western thing; I dunno.
I'm rather bemused that so far no Javanese speaker has been found despite there being 80 million speakers... I'll try asking my Indonesian friends to see if they can make any sense of it.
but it's hard to find an old javanese speaker....
Old Javanese has tenuous ties to modern Indonesian at best, which in turn has enough linguistic ties to a language I understand that I can understand some words and phrases but nowhere near enough to make a coherent translation.
What's more hilarious is the fact that practically every line of spoken dialogue refers to "Gayah Mada" and the "Mayapahit Empire" which I find extremely odd; all the cultures I'm aware of w.r.t the south east asian region pronounce the 'j' as 'j', not some esoteric silent j. Maybe it's a western thing; I dunno.