Sunbagel
Villager
lol my halfling was raised by a dragonborn so that would be a bit disturbingIt sounds like a Komodo dragon gargling a halfling.
lol my halfling was raised by a dragonborn so that would be a bit disturbingIt sounds like a Komodo dragon gargling a halfling.
ROOOOOOOAAAAAAR
For me, outside of Tolkien, Blood and Honor, and L5R...We all have an idea in our head about the typical 'sound' of some of the languages of D&D....Elvish is lilting Welsh/Irish/French-ish, with a lot of soft vowels and "L's", etc....Dwarvish is filled with "K's" and "Z's" with harsh stops and lung-coughing, closer to German/Scottish....heck, you can even imagine Halfling as some sort of heavily accented Aulstralian/Great Brittain English...
So, what do people hear in their head when they hear Draconic? What kind of "Earth Language" has similar phoentics and feel? Does it sound like something from an African tribe, with noises and sount effects and "oo's" and "M's" and "B's"? More smiliar to Spanish/Portuguese/Italian, with a lilting rush of letters in some sort of sing-songy nature? Perhaps it's something like Incan/Mayan/Aztec, with "X's" and "Z's," and "Atl's"?
Just thinking of what kind of feel most people have for Draconic.All suggestions welcome.
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I mean if Snails can meow then that ain't so far fetched.Turns out it sounds like geese.
Never actually heard belgian, but I've heard a number of russians speak french.Or Belgian, perhaps?
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Goblins are Liverpudlian.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.