Difference between revisions of "Alien languages"

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==AL2==
==AL2==
[[Image:A Venusian Corporation.jpg|right|thumb|AL2]]
[[Image:A Venusian Corporation.jpg|right|thumb|AL2]]
The second alien language was more complicated, and is not for the faint of heart. Each symbol had a numerical value. To decode a message, the first symbol's value is translated directly into a character (0='A', 1='B', and so on). For the remaining letters, you subtract the previous symbol's numerical value. If the result is less than zero, you add 26. Then that number is converted into a character as before.
The second alien language is more complicated, and is not for the faint of heart. Each symbol has a numerical value. To decode a message, the first symbol's value is translated directly into a character (0='A', 1='B', and so on). For the remaining letters, you subtract the previous symbol's numerical value. If the result is less than zero, you add 26. Then that number is converted into a character as before.


Not until the release of {{flink|Bender's Big Score}} was the symbol 1 ("B") known.
Not until the release of {{flink|Bender's Big Score}} was the symbol 1 ("B") known.

Revision as of 14:13, 30 August 2009

AL1 appearing on the DVD

The alien languages in Futurama are set of background jokes, appearing in the background through out the length of the show. The intention of these alien languages was for its viewers to discover how they work and then decipher them. A feat its fanbase have become excellent at.

Technically, they are not 'languages' per se, but a ciphered form of English, or more precisely, Latin characters, since not all of their 'translations' are in English.

There are only two of these 'languages' known to exist, or at least deciphered, but fans believe a 3rd language was introduced in the fourth season, but since it marked the end of the original run, it never made it to definitely define the language.

For a list of sightings, see list of alien language sightings.

AL1

The first alien language (Alien Language 1; AL1) is a simple substitution cypher. This means that each Latin letter is simply replaced with a new symbol. The script can be translated into English simply by learning each symbol, or by looking it up in a table.

In the episode "Leela's Homeworld", the script is referred to as "Alienese".

Symbols

AL2

AL2

The second alien language is more complicated, and is not for the faint of heart. Each symbol has a numerical value. To decode a message, the first symbol's value is translated directly into a character (0='A', 1='B', and so on). For the remaining letters, you subtract the previous symbol's numerical value. If the result is less than zero, you add 26. Then that number is converted into a character as before.

Not until the release of Bender's Big Score

Film

was the symbol 1 ("B") known.

Note: If you ever see two identical symbols in a row, the second is always an "A".

Symbols

This translation table shows all known AL2 symbols.

Other Alien Languages

Various Alien Language symbols.The highest one up (in red) is Morse code.

If two Alien Languages aren't enough, the Futurama writers have also done other Alien Languages that seem to be Gibberish, and have not been translated, like Leela's bracelet under her Wristlojackimator, various symbols in My Three Suns and others.

Additional Information

Note

  • Many fans think that AL1 is Alienese and AL2 is Betacrypt 3. Although Alienese is used to refer to AL1 in one episode, Betacrypt 3 is never actually linked to either AL1 or AL2. Throughout the audio commentaries, the creators refer to each language as "Alien Language one" and "Alien Language two"—so we use the same standard here.
  • In the commentary for "A Bicyclops Built for Two," David X. Cohen makes note of some fans referring to AL2 as Betacrypt 3. It is seen on a door to a chat room.

Links