Names are something that are normally thought of as simple, but the more you look across the world the more obvious it becomes that names come in more than the standard western format of First, Middle, and Family. Such examples include having the last name first like in many East Asian cultures, or not having a last name and being known as the offspring of someone else, such as in Scandinavia (ex. Hansen, meaning son of Han). The culture surrounding how a name is used is often very different, where in western nations children call adults by family name and adults call children by their first. In other cultures like Japan, everyone is initially called by their last name and the first name is only used once the two speakers are close enough. Ignoring maybe the most personal part of language when making one would be a terrible mistake and one every conlang that I know of has made, so here is my attempt to remedy that and introduce the Sudrean culture into personal identity.
In sadreil, individuals have three names like in the west (first, middle, and last). In sadreil, however, each name is used in its own way and using a specific name for an individual often reflects the relationship between the two speakers. This system of three names roughly parallels the system of three pronouns, where there are different ways on saying "I" and "You" dependent on how formal or familiar you are trying to be. Therefore the names someone has are not first, middle, and last/family, but are Formal, Familiar, and Family (The three fs).
Formal:
Familiar:
Family:
When you are introducing yourself or someone else, you really only need to tell someone the Formal and Familiar names of yourself or the person. This is because you never really use your last name, and would never be used in daily conversation. So if you were introducing /inari mifwin twa calistja/, you would say;
You ALWAYS tell someone both your formal and familiar names. This is because if you didn't (say you only told someone your formal name) then your friend next to you would call you by a name they have never heard. As you can imagen, this could lead to quite the confusion if it wasn't confusing enough already.
Making a name in a language is always fun, and is something we have all probably done in some high school language class at some point. In sadreil it is genuinely important however to make your own Sudrean name, because names in sadreil don't perfectly line up with names in other languages. If your name is phonetically valid of course you can try using it, but it doesn't translate perfectly. An example of this is say your name is Joe, but do you want Joe to be your formal or familiar name? Family names need the least tampering, and given the fact that their rarely used changing it wont matter much. If you have a standard English name with a first, middle, or last, there are three primary stratagies you can take here.
My name therefore is /ʃaʒer zacari twa rɪsɪcjel/
Male:
Female: