Chakobsa
Neo-Chakobsa
Createdย by
DateFrom the 1960s
Setting and usageSpoken by the Fremen on Arrakis in Dune
Purpose
Chakobsa syllabary
Language codes
ISO 639-3โ€“

Chakobsa is a fictional language spoken by the Fremen in Frank Herbert's novel Dune (1965). The language was further developed by David and Jessie Peterson for the films Dune (2021) and Dune: Part Two (2024).[1][2][3] Because of the substantial changes made by the Petersons, the language used in the films is sometimes referred to as Neo-Chakobsa.[4][5]

Development

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Herbert's original language

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Herbert took the name for his language from Chakobsa, a language spoken in the Caucasus. He may have learned of the language from Lesley Blanch's book The Sabres of Paradise (1960).[6] Blanch described Chakobsa as a "mysterious tongue":

They laughed derisively, speaking among themselves in that mysterious tongue, Chakobsa, 'the Hunting Language', which the rulers and Princes used when they wished to converse in secret, and of which no more than a few words have been discovered.[7]

The original language created by Herbert was strongly influenced by Arabic.[1][2][3][8][9][10] The Fremen use at least eighty terms derived Arabic, many of which are related to Islam. Words of Arabic origin include ayat ('signs'), burhan ('proof'), ijaz ('prophecy'), ilm ('theology'), istislah ('natural law'), and karama ('miracle').[1]

Subsequent development

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David Peterson worked on the Chakobsa language alone for the first film, but for the second film he collaborated with his wife, Jessie (nรฉeย Sims).[1]

For the films, the Petersons created a language that eschewed Arabic influence.[1][2][8][9][10] David Peterson argued that Dune was set so far in the future that Arabic would have changed beyond recognition (as a result of natural language change): "The time depth of the Dune books makes the amount of recognizable Arabic that survived completely (and I mean COMPLETELY) impossible."[1][9] One example is the Chakobsa phrase translated as 'Long live the fighters'. In Herbert's novel, the phrase is Ya hya chouhada, which is derived from an Arabic celebratory chant used during the Algerian war of independence.[1] However, in the film Dune: Part Two, the phrase is Addaam reshii a-zaanta (lit.โ€‰'lives long to-the-fighters').[11]:โ€Š52โ€Š

The decision to move the language away from its Arabic and Islamic roots was criticized by a number of commentators.[8][9][10]

History in universe

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In the Dune universe, the language was a secretive language created by the Bhotani Assassins using mirabhasa principles during the first war of the assassins. It was later used in the eleventh millenium by the Bene Gesserit and used by the Fremen for rites and incantations.[12]

Linguistic structure

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Phonology and orthography

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Chakobsa has five short vowels, three long vowels, and twenty-three consonants.[13]

  • Short vowels:
    • i /i/
    • e /e/
    • a /a/
    • o /o/
    • u /u/
  • Long vowels:
  • Consonants:

The consonants /t/, /tสƒ/, and /k/ are unaspirated.[13]

In some environments, such as before /s/, /b/ is devoiced to [p].[13]

Chakobsa has consonant gemination. This is indicated in the romanization by the doubling of the consonant. For the digraphs โŸจchโŸฉ, โŸจthโŸฉ, โŸจdhโŸฉ, and โŸจshโŸฉ, only the first letter is doubled.[13]

In addition to the system of romanization, the Petersons created a Chakobsa syllabary.[4][14]

Morphology and syntax

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Chakobsa nouns have six cases: nominative, accusative, genitive, locative, allative, and ablative.[15]

Adjectives typically follow the nouns they modify:

addaam

adหˆdaหm

lives

reshii

หˆreสƒiห

long

a-zaanta

aหˆzaหnta

to-the-fighters

addaam reshii a-zaanta

adหˆdaหm หˆreสƒiห aหˆzaหnta

lives long to-the-fighters

'Long live the fighters!'[11]:โ€Š52โ€Š

Constituent order is verbโ€“subjectโ€“object:

qaubaka

หˆqaubaka

warned-they

kaalik

หˆkaหlik

mothers-your:PL

akaa

aหˆkaห

you:PL

rii

riห

about

hurayi

หˆhuraji

coming-my

qaubaka kaalik akaa rii hurayi

หˆqaubaka หˆkaหlik aหˆkaห riห หˆhuraji

warned-they mothers-your:PL you:PL about coming-my

'Your mothers warned you about my coming.'[11]:โ€Š48โ€Š

Verbal inflection means the subject can be omitted:

zaihaash

หˆzaihaหสƒ

drink-you:SG

lek

lek

sand

zaihaash lek

หˆzaihaหสƒ lek

drink-you:SG sand

'You're insane.'[11]:โ€Š46โ€Š

Sometimes a prepositional phrase is used with the infinitive:

oma

หˆoma

on-us

hiila

หˆhiหla

to-collect

ekker

ekหˆker

water

is-thanaha

isหˆฮธanaha

from-body-his

oma hiila ekker is-thanaha

หˆoma หˆhiหla ekหˆker isหˆฮธanaha

on-us to-collect water from-body-his

'We must get his body's water.'[16]:โ€Š8โ€Š

There is no copula:

shaidish

หˆสƒaidiสƒ

today

fizib

หˆfizib

day

shaidish fizib

หˆสƒaidiสƒ หˆfizib

today day

'Today is the day.'[11]:โ€Š28โ€Š

ho

ho

he

jedhii

dส’eหˆรฐiห

fat

omaiz

oหˆmaiz

too-much

ho jedhii omaiz

ho dส’eหˆรฐiห oหˆmaiz

he fat too-much

'He's too fat.'[11]:โ€Š36โ€Š

Negation is by the particle so:

kaah

kaah

they

so

so

not

is-reshma

isหˆreสƒma

from-desert

kaah so is-reshma

kaah so isหˆreสƒma

they not from-desert

'They are not of the desert.'[16]:โ€Š6โ€Š

so

so

not

nifriyi

หˆnifriji

can-I

jila

หˆdส’ila

go

a-noqchom

aหˆnoqtสƒom

to-south

so nifriyi jila a-noqchom

so หˆnifriji หˆdส’ila aหˆnoqtสƒom

not can-I go to-south

'I can't go south.'[11]:โ€Š42โ€Š

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g Singh, Manvir (28 February 2024). ""Dune" and the Delicate Art of Making Fictional Languages". The New Yorker. Archived from the original on 28 February 2024.
  2. ^ a b c Tracy, Marc (23 March 2024). "The Invention of a Desert Tongue for 'Dune'". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 23 March 2024.
  3. ^ a b Shachat, Sarah (1 March 2024). "Constructed Languages Don't Always Make It Into a Finished Film โ€” but 'Dune: Part Two' Shows Why They Should". IndieWire. Archived from the original on 1 March 2024.
  4. ^ a b "Neo-Chakobsa". Omniglot. Archived from the original on 24 April 2024.
  5. ^ ะŸะพะฟะพะฒะธั‡, ะก. ะ“.; ะ‘ะพั€ั‚ะฝะธะบะพะฒ, ะ’. ะ˜.; Popovich, Sofie G.; Bortnikov, Vladislav I. (2025). "Comparative Analysis of the Fremen Language with the Arabic Foundational Language". ะ˜ะฝะพัั‚ั€ะฐะฝะฝั‹ะน ัะทั‹ะบ ะฒ ัั„ะตั€ะต ะฟั€ะพั„ะตััะธะพะฝะฐะปัŒะฝะพะน ะบะพะผะผัƒะฝะธะบะฐั†ะธะธ ะฒ ัƒัะปะพะฒะธัั… ั€ะตะฐะปัŒะฝะพะน ะธ ะฒะธั€ั‚ัƒะฐะปัŒะฝะพะน ัั€ะตะดั‹. โ€” ะ•ะบะฐั‚ะตั€ะธะฝะฑัƒั€ะณ, 2025 (in Russian). ะ˜ะทะดะฐั‚ะตะปัŒัะบะธะน ะ”ะพะผ ยซะะถัƒั€ยป: 116โ€“124. ISBNย 978-5-91256-740-7.
  6. ^ Collins, Will (16 September 2017). "The Secret History of Dune". Los Angeles Review of Books. Archived from the original on 16 September 2017.
  7. ^ Blanch, Lesley (1960). The Sabres of Paradise. London: John Murray. p.ย 21.
  8. ^ a b c Drury, Sharareh (26 March 2024). "'Dune 2' Criticized for Lack of Middle Eastern and North African Inclusion and Influences: 'A Missed Opportunity'". Variety. Archived from the original on 26 March 2024.
  9. ^ a b c d Durrani, Haris A. (28 October 2021). "The novel 'Dune' had deep Islamic influences. The movie erases them". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 28 October 2021.
  10. ^ a b c Karjoo-Ravary, Ali (11 October 2020). "In Dune, Paul Atreides led a jihad, not a crusade". Al Jazeera English. Archived from the original on 11 October 2020.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Peterson, David J.; Sams, Jessie (20 November 2022). "Dune 2: Language Translations" (PDF). Dedalvs.com. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 May 2024.
  12. ^ McNelly (1991). "Dune Chakobsa - Secret Language of the Fremen & Bene Gesserit". Cal State Fullerton Linguistics Newsletter. Fall-Winter 1991. Archived from the original on 10 September 2025.
  13. ^ a b c d Peterson, David J. "Chakobsa Pronunciation and Romanization" (PDF). Dedalvs.com. Archived (PDF) from the original on 24 October 2021.
  14. ^ Peterson, David J. "The Chakobsa Orthography" (PDF). Dedalvs.com. Archived (PDF) from the original on 22 October 2021.
  15. ^ Peterson, David J. "Chakobsa Reference Grammar" (PDF). Dedalvs.com. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 May 2024.
  16. ^ a b Peterson, David J. (27 September 2020). "Dune: Language Translations" (PDF). Dedalvs.com. Archived (PDF) from the original on 22 October 2021.

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