Created a first name list for Skrell, to replace the syllable assembler.
Created a surname list for Skrell to replace the syllable assembler.
Replaced the Skrell namegen with pre-written namelists, instead of the old syllable assembler.
its now part dutch, part lojban. turns out Lojban looks exactly like "humans tried to reverse-engineer an alien language and pasted over the gaps with Banthu or whatever"
* Adds Tajaran Akhani language.
Fixes plural form of Tajaran (Tajara->Tajaran) in about 50 places.
* Gives the language a colour distinct from Siik.
* Changelog
Brains now retain languages from the mob they were removed from, rather than forgetting them. Languages are also retained when a brain is transplanted into a new body.
AIs, as well as cyborgs/robots/drones, will load languages from your currently-active preferences when they spawn (just like humanoid mobs do). Brains removed from cyborgs/robots/drones will retain their original languages regardless of the current module.
Brains in MMIs can now speak EAL if they know it, and additionally fixes#2832 - sign language will no longer be usable when lacking both hands. Also fixes silicons being told the wrong language prefix by the known languages window, as it was still showing ':', leading to much confusion among new borg players.
Known issues:
AIs who can use sign language can use it even without a holopad - I'm not sure how to have it check for that. This could be seen as a non-issue, as signs could conceivably be displayed on the AI's screen.
AIs signing over holopad will also have the language verbs overridden by the synth speech verbs (states/queries/declares). I'm pretty sure this has something to do with the already-existing bug that all languages can be understood by everyone when an AI speaks them over holopad.
* Adds a lot of languages.
* Removes the languages I just added.
Instead updates old ones.
* Fixes a minor typo.
* how the hell did i accidentally remove sinta'unathi
Returns that stuff.
* Fixes two things.
* doesnt actually change name length
``/mob/dead/observer`` -> ``/mob/observer/dead``
``/mob/eye`` -> ``/mob/observer/eye``
Reason being that they are similar in that they both don't interact with
the world in any way. Some procs were shared, some checks as well, and
it overall makes more sense this way. Plus, there were no ``/mob/dead``
mobs.