It is said that "you don't speak Cherokee unless you speak it from the cradle." It seems to be true. I can speak half a dozen languages, but Cherokee is not one of them. I've studied many languages, and Cherokee is the most complex. It is now believed that there are not more than two thousand people who can speak Cherokee fluently. In one or two generations, there will be none. Since I care about the language, this struck me as very sad. I came to the conclusion that it would be better to save what can be saved (the vocabulary), rather than see it all disappear. So, in 2017 and 2018 I created the Udugi language.
Udugi is a constructed language that is based on Cherokee vocabulary and a subset of Esperanto grammar. I chose Esperanto, not only because I speak it, but also because it is very logical, and the grammar has only sixteen rules, with no exceptions. It is also extremely expressive, one of the most expressive languages I know.
The project was even more successful than I had anticipated. I soon had a language that could preserve all of Cherokee's vocabulary, but was relatively simple and easy to learn. I could also express things in it that I would not be able to express in Cherokee.
Since the vocabulary is Cherokee, I was also able to preserve the use of the Cherokee syllabary, invented by Sequoia. But if one prefers, one can write it in the Roman alphabet.
I published (in this blog) an Udugi dictionary, with a simple grammar, on May 26, 2020. I am no longer developing the language, so I will not be adding anything further to the dictionary, but others can, if they wish.
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