Re: YYMMDD (was: Re: Laadan)
From: | J Y S Czhang <czhang23@...> |
Date: | Sunday, December 15, 2002, 16:45 |
In a message dated 2002/12/13 04.22.51 AM, isaacp@UKR.NET writes:
>How do your conlangs treat dates?
Bein' influenced by both Asian-Pacific cultures and international
standards, Gomilego uses YYYYMMDD HHMMSS, i.e. 2002/12/13 04.22.51 ;)
Hanuman Zhang, 3-Toed-Sloth-Style Gungfu Typist ;)
"the sloth is a chinese poet upsidedown" --- Jack Kerouac {1922-69}
€º°`°º€ø,¸¸,ø€º°`°º€ø,¸¸,ø€º°`°º€ø,¸¸,ø€º°`°º€ø,¸¸,ø€º°`°º€€º°`°º€ø,¸~->
"One thing foreigners, computers, and poets have in common
is that they make unexpected linguistic associations." --- Jasia Reichardt
"There is no reason for the poet to be limited to words, and in fact the
poet is most poetic when inventing languages. Hence the concept of the poet
as 'language designer'." --- O. B. Hardison, Jr.
"At some point in the next century the number of invented languages will
probably overtake the number of surviving natural languages." - Cullen Murphy
in _Atlantic Monthly_ (October, 1995)
"La poésie date d' aujour d'hui." (Poetry dates from today)
"La poésie est en jeu." (Poetry is in play)
--- Blaise Cendrars