Speedtalk
Speedtalk is a fictional constructed language and key plot device in Robert A. Heinlein's novella Gulf. Speedtalk is a logic-based language with complex syntax, minimal vocabulary, and a rich phoneme inventory ; it would make both communication and thought more efficient and precise. A single phoneme indicates a word, so a "word" indicates a sentence. In the only example given, a "word" means "The far horizons draw no nearer."
Examples of Speedtalk
Two untranslated conversations appear in the story:
"œnɪe ʀ ħøg rylp"
"nU"
"tsʉmaeq?"
"nø!"
"zUlntsɨ."
"ɨpbitʹ New Jersey."
Attempts at creating Speedtalks
's Language Construction Kit has a section on Speedtalk entitled . He highlights the main problems with Speedtalk:- Basic English claims to have reduced English to 850 basic words, but only by exploiting English-speakers' extensive vocabulary of homonyms and idioms
- The built-in redundancy of natural languages allows utterances to be understood in spite of not being clearly heard