loglang

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

A blend of logical +‎ language; compare conlang.

Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

loglang (plural loglangs)

  1. A language designed to allow (or enforce) unambiguous statements; a logical language.
    • 1997 November 19, Jack Durst, “NGL & the Gnoli triangle”, in alt.language.artificial.ngl[1]:
      I think that NGL sounds like a loglang. (I confess I have not read the NGL thread.)
    • 2005, Keith Brown, editor, Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics[2], →ISBN:
      For example, from 1955 the sociologist and science fiction writer James Cooke Brown invented a loglang called 'Loglan', created to test out the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis in linguistics []
    • 2020 August 12, “A Primer on Constructed Languages”, in Jeffrey Punske, Nathan Sanders, Amy V. Fountain, editors, Language invention in Linguistics Pedagogy[3], →ISBN, page 25:
      The most notable well-developed examples of loglangs are James Cooke Brown's Loglan (1960) and its derivative Lojban, which was developed between 1987 and 1997 by the Logical Language Group (Cowan 1997).