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1[[quoteright:350:[[TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/bs_7.png]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:WARNING: [[{{TheseAreThingsManWasNotMeantToKnow}} Reading may cause]] a [[{{Understatement}} slight]] [[GoMadFromTheRevelation headache.]]]]
3
4->''"Ash nazg durbatulûk, ash nazg gimbatul,\
5Ash nazg thrakatulûk agh burzum-ishi krimpatul" [[note]]"One ring to rule them all, one ring to find them, one ring to bring them all, and in the darkness bind them."[[/note]]''
6-->-- ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'': Inscription on the One Ring, with inflection
7
8The language of {{Mordor}}, spoken only by [[TheScottishTrope The One Whose Name Must Never Be Uttered]] and his ReligionOfEvil and various dark {{cult}}s. An [[SpeakingSimlish indecipherable language]] that is [[BrownNote cruel to the ears]], full of hard consonants, guttural sounds, and always spoken loudly and harshly. Every word sounds like a [[ReligiousHorror blasphemy]] against All That Is Good, and the people speaking it often [[AlwaysChaoticEvil are as evil as they sound.]] If there is magic in the setting, expect [[BeCarefulWhatYouSay speaking this language]] to be necessary to use BlackMagic. In some cases, it's so alien and [[EvilSoundsDeep gravelly]] that it seems that a normal human throat should be [[StarfishLanguage incapable of speaking it]]… and sometimes, they ''[[EldritchAbomination can't]]'' speak it, only those with the VoiceOfTheLegion can. In many cases, merely speaking the words is sufficient to twist reality or [[SpeakOfTheDevil make unspeakable horrors appear.]]
9
10This is the Black Speech, the default mode of communication for inhuman villains, and SoundCodedForYourConvenience. Where the [[OurElvesAreDifferent elves]] and humans will speak in a pleasing, song-like language, and dwarves may (read: [[OurDwarvesAreAllTheSame always]]) have a charming Scottish burr or Welsh brogue [[note]]in Tolkien's world, this is averted, as what is known of Dwarvish holds more similarity to Hebrew, but in the film, it's in full force with Gimli[[/note]], the EvilMinions using Black Speech can shatter glass and eardrums and sanity with a simple "pass the salt".
11
12On a more [[MetaConcepts meta level]], this is a direct emotional appeal to the viewer, invoking the "otherness" felt when hearing a foreign language crossed with the ScareChord to make the good guys seem like downright ''saints'' compared to the bad guys. The effect is sometimes doubled by having [[strike:[[AliensSpeakingEnglish Aliens]]]] [[AliensSpeakingEnglish Natives Speaking English]].
13
14Once upon a time, [[ThoseWackyNazis Nazis]] speaking German were considered to be using Black Speech (likely, the actors were hamming it up to sound scarier). Nowadays, German is just another language alongside [[EverythingSoundsSexierInFrench French]] (indeed, if anything, it's [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39EPz2JsbUk a bit camp]]).
15
16Using real but obscure languages as models for a fictional Black Speech [[AsLongAsItSoundsForeign because they sound very peculiar to native speakers of your language]] can [[UnfortunateImplications get you into trouble]]. This seems to happen to Native American languages quite a bit.
17
18Although the villains may speak among themselves in black speech, their dialogue [[TheLawOfConservationOfDetail may provide important details]] for the audience to understand the plot. In this case, the dialogue may have normal subtitles.
19
20Works using this trope will often discuss ThePowerOfLanguage. [[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant Not to be confused]] with [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ebonics_(word) Ebonics]] ([[DontExplainTheJoke although it literally means "black speech"]]), or with black ColorCodedSpeech or RainbowText.
21
22[[noreallife]]
23----
24!!Examples:
25
26[[foldercontrol]]
27
28[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
29* Forbidden Magic in ''Manga/BlackClover'' is seen as this. The subs don't even bother to translate the name of the spells.
30** When [[OurDemonsAreDifferent Zagred]] speaks his native tongue from the Underworld while using one of his [[WordsCanBreakMyBones spells]], he utters a bunch of utterly incomprehensible sounds that the subs translate as "[[FunWithSubtitles ┘░╣╩┐┤]]". The resulting spell summons an EldritchAbomination that [[VampiricDraining devours the magic and life force of those unfortunate enough to touch it.]]
31* In ''Manga/DragonBall'', King Piccolo would speak to his minions and mind slaves in some strange tongue. Due to their mutual origin, Kami could speak to him in the same language. {{Retcon}}ned in ''Anime/DragonBallZ'', where he's explicitly an alien and it was just his native tongue.
32* ''Manga/SayonaraZetsubouSensei'': if Meru's cellphone is moved out of reception range/broken [[TheVoiceless (she ONLY communicates by text messages)]], she'll snap and start speaking [[https://youtu.be/7J6dA1u9qiw like this]], taking [[strike:an exorcism]] a huge crucifix to the head to stop her. The main character, [[ThePollyanna Ka]][[HilariouslyAbusiveChildhood fu]]Ka [[CuteAndPsycho Fuu]]Ra's mother also did this from time to time, after being possessed by the devil. Forcing her to kill her own mother... it's [[BlackComedy comedy, I swear!]]
33* The title character of ''Manga/AhMyGoddess'', while benevolent, uses a language like this for some of her spells. (It's part of [[AFormYouAreComfortableWith a larger issue of understanding]] between her and the male lead.)
34[[/folder]]
35
36[[folder:Comedy]]
37* South-African comedian Trevor Noah does a routine on how South Africans, and especially South African accents, are viewed in the rest of the world. He admits that being mixed-race, he gets a free pass, but it has to be hard for white people who, the moment they open their mouths, are by default assumed to be [[UsefulNotes/TheApartheidEra pining for the good old days]]. Trevor riffed on speaking German as in his case it was his fifth or sixth language ([[{{Polyglot}} he claims to have lost count]]). The unfortunate consequence of learning German, for somebody whose first language is Afrikaans, is that inevitably their spoken German is accented, to the point where German listeners hear a strong perceived-Austrian accent and cadences, reminds them of [[UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler a certain demagogic politician making a speech at a rally attended by hundreds of thousands of people]]... even if all you're doing is asking somebody to pass the salt.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Comic Books]]
41* The wicked rat creatures in ''ComicBook/{{Bone}}'' have a secret language called Nessen that [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything sounds mysteriously like broken German]]. Mind you, Nessen is closer to a military cypher than actual black speech: Ratmen speak in human language normally and only switch to it when they're discussing sensitive subjects and are afraid to be overheard. Several humans listen in to it without any worse effects than "cannot understand any of it", and some of the characters like [[RetiredBadass Lucius]] can also understand it.
42* ''ComicBook/TheInvisibles'' has a section where Miss Dwyer, a servant of the Conspiracy who's pretty much out of options, is about to let loose a string of hyperdimensional language [[BrownNote that can give those it's directed at cancer]]. As the narration describes it, "Miss Dwyer is saying her prayers."
43* ''ComicBook/TheTransformersMoreThanMeetsTheEye'': The Primal Vernacular (the oldest Cybertronian language) sounds like this, especially when sung loudly in a Tetrahexian accent, which sounds like someone being violently murdered. The only beings known to still speak it are Cyclonus (the aforementioned singer) and [[TortureTechnician Vos]], who considers himself a "linguistic purist" and can only manage a few guttural syllables of modern [=NeoCybex=] at a time.
44* ''ComicBook/TheUltimates2002'': When they are among themselves, the Chitauri talk with an unintelligible font. There are subtitles for the reader's convenience.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Fan Works]]
48* ''Fanfic/ItsAlwaysTheQuietOnes'': Luna performs a terrifying chant in an an alien language that makes [[EldritchAbomination the Wrackspurts]] visible to everyone.
49* In ''Fanfic/LiveAHeroMHA'', when [[spoiler:Izuku's Quirk is turned on others, his speech is rendered as barely legible text covered in intense amounts of random symbols and static. The sound of his voice is grating to the ears of everyone who hears it, amplifying or twisting their senses and feelings of pain and filling their minds with static that makes it nearly impossible for them to form coherent thoughts. A few sentences spoken in this way was enough to get the Sludge Villain, an unrepentant, psychopathic murderer, to beg for his life moments after he was in the middle of EvilGloating because of the excruciating pain Izuku's voice brought him.]]
50* ''Fanfic/TheNewAdventuresOfInvaderZim'': Whenever [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Norlock]] casts magic, he's described as speaking in a language no one else present understands. A snippet of this is presented in Episode 16 when he's summoning up an army of monsters from the underworld; WordOfGod is that it's just random gibberish the author typed out while writing the chapter.
51* ''Fanfic/TheNightUnfurls'':
52** Kyril and his apprentices (except Soren) have advanced through Rad, killing everything in their way to hunt down Shamuhaza. Upon reaching a courtyard, a maddening drone drowns out the silence, "in a language so incomprehensible that lesser men would have torn their own throats to escape it". [[TheStoic Kyril]], of course, is unfazed, but not so much for the other three. Sanakan mutters that [[ThisIsWrongOnSoManyLevels everything sounds wrong]], Hugh shakes his head in a grimace, and Lily turns paler than usual.
53** The tongue of Garan that the [[OurElvesAreDifferent dark elves]] speak merely ''[[SubvertedTrope comes across]]'' as this. This language is described as "sibilant" or "spiteful", "like the whisperings of a murderer at the bedside of a dead man", but it is not inherently evil, just as how the [[DarkIsNotEvil dark elves]] are not depicted as AlwaysChaoticEvil. There's also no BrownNote involved, obviously.
54* ''Fanfic/StarryEyes'': The language spoken by Taylor's [[EldritchAbomination friends]] is this.
55-->'''Vista:''' The mouths opened, and from them issued a hellish chorus of gibberish.\
56The same gibberish from another voice cut through the chorus. The new voice was, at its core, recognizably female, but it was hollow and echoing, as if its owner were speaking in a crypt. Countless resonating tones accompanied the voice, some high, others so low Vista heard them not with her ears but with her bones, all gnawing at the back of her mind, feeding the fear that had taken root.
57[[/folder]]
58
59[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
60* ''WesternAnimation/{{Beowulf|2007}}'' has Grendel speak Old English (the language in which the poem was originally written) while everyone else speaks modern English, probably to emphasize how old and monstrous he is. His mother speaks both old and current English, since she's been re-imagined as a sexy sorceress.
61* The Vikings talk like this in ''WesternAnimation/TheSecretOfKells'', emphasizing how monstrous and incomprehensible they are to the people of Ireland as they pillage and raze everything they come across. The only understandable word they speak is something that sounds like "gold", which is what they're after.
62[[/folder]]
63
64[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
65* ''Film/TenThousandBC'' has the slavers speaking an incomprehensible, guttural language, and certain characters have their voices digitally distorted to make them sound inhumanly guttural.
66* All but one of the vampires in ''Film/ThirtyDaysOfNight'' speak like they tore out their own windpipes. (In fact, the filmmakers took the sound of an Amazonian language and mixed in animal noises.) This is not true of the comic in which they spoke English, albeit in [[PaintingTheMedium colored]] SpeechBubbles.
67* ''Film/Pathfinder1987'': The heroic Saami speak Saami and the evil, invading Tshud speak influenza.
68* ''Film/Pathfinder2007'' has the good guys speaking English and the invading Vikings speaking Icelandic, but in a very guttural fashion.
69* PlayedForLaughs in ''Film/LittleNicky'', wherein the titular character is the youngest Spawn of Satan. Although he normally speaks in a nonthreatening nasally voice, he talks in his sleep, inevitably demonically. Listening to it induces manic paranoia in his roommate and drives animals crazy. Seemed to be pleasant to a pair of stoner death metal fans, however ...
70* Used humorously in ''Film/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy2005'' when the Vogon commander switches effortlessly from a charming Received Pronunciation accent to one of these in under a second. (In [[Literature/TheHitchhikersGuideToTheGalaxy1 the book]], Vogon speech is: "like a man trying to gargle whilst fighting off a pack of wolves".)
71* ''Film/Constantine2005'' briefly gives us an example of "Hell-speak".
72* There's a Filipino movie where two devils speak in their native tongues. The subtitles apologize to the viewer for the lack of translation because they don't know anyone who's been in Hell before.
73* The Engineers in ''Film/{{Prometheus}}'' were supposed to speak in a tone like this.
74* The predators in the ''Franchise/{{Predator}}'' franchise sound like this when trying to mimic English. They may, however, just have a respiratory system set up the opposite way from a mammal one (i.e. it defaults to inhaling rather than exhaling), and thus [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingressive_sound talk while inhaling]] (try it). Birds' respiration works like that, which is part of why parrots and ravens squawk when they speak.
75* In the German/Israeli film ''Film/WalkOnWater'', German was this during Eyal's childhood - his German Jewish family survived the Holocaust, and only spoke Hebrew after they came to Israel (when they thought he wasn't listening, that is).
76* The hillfolk in the ''Film/WrongTurn'' series understand English, but most of them forgo speaking it in favor of a bizarre gibberish.
77* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
78** Death Troopers in ''Film/RogueOne'' communicate in a choppy, sinister noise that has this effect. It combines with their size and black armour to make them appear as sinister as possible. Even the sounds they make when falling aren't really all that human.
79** The Sith language in ''Film/TheRiseOfSkywalker'' is treated this way. The heroes need to translate information written in Sith runes, and C-3PO informs them that while he can understand them, he's programmed not to translate them in accordance with Old Republic law - and the information can only be accessed by black market hacking.
80* Doing the voice work for The Necromancer/Sauron in Film/TheHobbit made Creator/BenedictCumberbatch feel a bit dirty. He said in an interview that afterwards he wanted to "speak The Queen's English and have a cup of tea."
81* ''Film/CaptiveState'': Legislator language consists of guttural clicks, shrieks, and angry howling.
82* ''Film/TheLordOfTheRingsTheFellowshipOfTheRing'' has Gandalf read the inscription on the One Ring in Black Speech. His voice becomes inhumanely deep, resonant and guttural, and the light seems to recede as he speaks. Frodo and the elven nobility recoil in pain as they hear it.
83* ''Film/TheWhispererInDarkness''. Nathaniel Ward quickly switches off the phonograph when Wilmarth says he's been listening to the wax cylinder recording of the cultist ceremony throughout the night. In a MissingTrailerScene, Wilmarth listens to the cylinder while a cat sits impassively nearby. Suddenly ANOTHER voice cuts in on the recording, and the [[EvilDetectingDog cat startles and hisses]].
84
85[[/folder]]
86
87[[folder:Gamebooks]]
88* ''Literature/LoneWolf''
89** The Giak tongue, spoken by the Darklords and all of their minions in the Darklands, as well as the evil humans, the Drakkarim. Certainly looks harsh-sounding when transcribed, and is described as such. Complete with a full {{fictionary}}. Funnily, Giak seems to be the only tongue Joe Dever ever developed for his world. So if you want to immerse yourself linguistically into Magnamund, you're forced to do so with the ugly tongue (crude grammar, nasty vocabulary) of the Bad Ones' cannon fodder. Too bad.
90** And then there's the Dark Tongue, which humans aren't even ''able'' to speak. The only ones who ever speak it in the series are the Darklords themselves. The Darklords use the Dark Tongue to summon nasties to fight Lone Wolf.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:Literature]]
94* Named for the language of Mordor in ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' (books and movies). "The Black Speech" is a brutal-sounding language full of guttural throat-growls and spits and snarls, extremely unpleasant and alien to the more pleasant languages. Moreover, like many things created by Sauron it seems to incorporate some of his power and malice: at the Council of Elrond, when Gandalf repeats the Ring-inscription in the original Black Speech, his voice becomes harsh and cruel, while the sky grows dark and the Earth trembles. A fan once gave Tolkien a goblet with the Ring-inscription in Black Speech as a gift, but he found the message in those words so ugly and ominous that he couldn't bring himself to drink out of it. He wound up using it as an ashtray. [[note]]WordOfGod is that he had Irish Gaelic in mind, a language he found utterly unlovely. Compare to Welsh, which Tolkien explicitly drew upon in developing Sindarin (a language of the Elves noted for its silvery elegance).[[/note]]
95** Notably, it's an in-universe example of a ConLang that Sauron invented so that his servants could all understand one another. It didn't pan out, as after his defeat by the Last Alliance the language fell into obscurity, leaving behind only a handful of loanwords in various Orcish dialects, and only the Nazgûl retained full comprehension of the language.
96* A classic example (might possibly be the UrExample) are two lines that show up during the Inferno part of ''Literature/TheDivineComedy'', the first is a threat/curse yelled by the demon Pluto: "Papé Satàn, papé Satàn aleppe". The second line is spoken by the giant Nimrod: "Raphèl maí amèche zabí almi". The meaning of both lines are left ambiguous, and like everything else in the book, they have been hotly debated for centuries, with linguists and scholars making connections with everything from Hebraic to Greek. The general consensus is that they have no concrete meaning outside of conjecture.
97* The demons in ''Literature/TheFirstDwarfKing'' speak in a language that is incredibly difficult for mortals to pronounce (though possible with enough effort and practice).
98* ''Literature/{{Awoken}}'' starts with Andi waking up on the shores of an EldritchAbomination's FisherKingdom with IdentityAmnesia, [[RuleOfCreepy surrounded by a sea unleashing violent waves, plunging hills, ruins of great, majestic towers and grey mist]]... then, as if this wasn't creepy enough, amid the mist, out of nowhere, starts an ominous chanting in this sort of language... and being a {{Cloudcuckoolander}}, Andi reacts in a way that could be summed up best by simply quoting:
99-->'''Mysterious voice:''' Gharsh S'gn Wahl O'rre Sgn'!\
100'''Andi:''' ''[narrating]'' It sang to my ears, a song full of freedom, deliverance and individuality. It was like the proudest of whalesongs come to life. It sounded like the voice of an angel.\
101'''Mysterious voice actually coming from the stones themselves:''' THROD ! SGN'WAHL ! O'RRE CTHULHU GHARSH !
102* ''Literature/SecondApocalypse'':
103** The monstrous Sranc (a species genetically-engineered for rape and sadism, who serve as the {{Mooks}}) speak Aghurzoi, which means "cut tongue." The Sranc were once called Tongueless Howlers, apparently due to their tongueless speech.
104** When the Inchoroi first crash-landed on Earwa, they spoke only the indecipherable language that the Nonmen called Cincûlic, "the Gasping of Many Reeds," apparently due to the Inchoroi's bizarre alien anatomy. After the Inchoroi "birthed mouths," they were able to converse with the Nonmen in their own language.
105* In ''Literature/EllaEnchanted'', the Prince's reaction to Ella's simple farewell in troll language is, "It sounds evil." Ella replies that it is.
106* Creator/HPLovecraft:
107** "Literature/TheCallOfCthulhu" has several languages spoken by cultists which sound and look disturbing, thanks to being adaptations of StarfishLanguage to human vocal apparatus. It contains arguably the most famous snatch of this trope outside of Tolkien: ''Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn''.
108** In "Literature/TheShadowOverInnsmouth", the voices of Innsmouth's mutant inhabitants is described as a "bestial babel of croaking, baying and barking without the least suggestion of human speech" and a "hateful guttural patois."
109* Creator/TerryPratchett steered clear of this one in ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'': Dwarfish is very difficult "if you haven't eaten gravel all your life", but isn't ''evil'' as such. Likewise, the Troll language, which seems to consist of tonal grunting. The words of certain spells, however, can make you feel distinctly ill. And a language called Black Oroogu mentioned in ''Literature/TheColourOfMagic'' has "no nouns and only one adjective, which is obscene."
110** Having a discussion with a troll in Troll language could very well lead to receiving a bonk on the head, though. You see, Trollish is in large part a body language, and trolls like to shout...
111*** Also, in many Troll dialects, extending one's hand is a very rude comment about their mother. It is amazing how long it took for trolls and humans to understand this.
112* The Molvanian language as described in ''[[Literature/JetlagTravelGuides Molvanîa, A Land Untouched by Modern Dentistry]]'' is supposed to have a highly irregular grammar and difficult pronunciation, often requiring crude gestures to make simple phrases intelligible. Readers are advised: "Due to the abundance of guttural phonetic sounds found in the spoken language, non-native Molvanian speakers are warned about the risk of laryngeal damage that can arise from attempting anything more than a few short phrases."
113** The real-life source is likely the Georgian languages. Try the [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Georgian_language#Words_that_begin_with_multiple_consonants words starting with eight consonants]].
114*** But the proper way to pronounce Georgian is very lightly, so even eight consonants should not be so troublesome.
115* Creator/DianaWynneJones's ''Literature/TheToughGuideToFantasyland'' contains a similar warning about pronouncing ominous-sounding placenames such as [[PunctuationShaker Gna'ash]] if you have "insecurely mounted tonsils".
116* While the Black Speech in Creator/BentleyLittle's ''The Vanishing'' sounds normal to a character who discovers he can read it (thanks to unknowingly being a [[HalfHumanHybrid descendent]] of the race of monsters who originated it), when he finishes reading it aloud, the people around him inform him he's been screaming like a wild animal. Even trying to read in a whisper isn't enough to lessen the language's cacophonous effect. Also, speaking it makes plants grow.
117* In Creator/LarryNiven's ''Literature/KnownSpace'' series, the [[ProudWarriorRaceGuy Kzinti]] Hero's Tongue is reputed to sound like an epic catfight. Thoroughly appropriate for a race of felinoid slave-takers. Two speaking normally are described as a catfight in an echo chamber, four arguing among themselves as "A major feline war, with atomics". In his first novel "The World of Ptavvs", humans attempting to utter Overspeak, the language of the ancient Slavers, tend to choke violently.
118* Although not inherently evil, Parseltongue in ''Literature/HarryPotter'' definitely sounds creepy, seeing as it's the language of {{snakes|AreSinister}} and consists entirely of inhuman hissing. It doesn't help that certain infamous practitioners of TheDarkArts (including Herpo the Foul, Salazar Slytherin, and Slytherin's descendant Lord Voldemort) could speak the language. As such, in the Potterverse, SealedEvilInACan often requires a Parseltongue password to unlock.
119* In ''Literature/JonathanStrangeAndMrNorrell'', re-animated dead Italian soldiers initially speak one of the dialects of the Language of Hell (they were all ''Papists'', so of course they were all damned), which is described as "...having a much higher percentage of screams than any language known to the onlookers." (Wellington approves of their having mastered it after having been dead for only three days.)
120* In Creator/ArthurMachen's novella ''The Three Imposters'' - not surprisingly, a favorite of Creator/HPLovecraft - [[HalfHumanHybrid a boy from the country]] begins speaking in a strange tongue of his [[EldritchAbomination ancestors]]: "He seemed to pour forth an infamous jargon, with words, or what seemed words, that might have belonged to a tongue dead since untold ages and buried deep beneath Nilotic mud, or in the inmost recesses of the Mexican forest. For a moment the thought passed through my mind, as my ears were still revolted with that infernal clamour, 'Surely this is the very speech of hell.'"
121** Amusingly, the language is initially assumed to be an obscure local dialect of Welsh.
122* ''Literature/TheRedemptionOfAlthalus'', by Creator/DavidEddings: the Book of Daeva is effectively ''written'' in this.
123* In the ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' novel ''Literature/{{Ravenor}} Returned'', the language "Ennuncia" contains words (or rather, "unwords") which, when read, can disorientate and, when spoken, tend to damage the lips and teeth of the speaker. The effect of a single word on the targeted listener is worse. A lesser word, or fragment of one:
124-->It wasn't a word. It wasn't even so much a proper sound. Just giving voice to it made her mouth hurt.
125-->But it did a lot more to Suldon. He instantly, explosively vomited, then fell onto his knees, clutching at his belly, violently retching up his stomach contents.
126* In Rob Thurman's ''Literature/CalLeandros'' novels, the language of the Auphe is impossible for humans to speak and almost impossible for supernatural beings to speak. Hearing it "feels like someone shoving ground glass in your ear." It is described as damaging the air and the universe itself whenever it is spoken.
127* Creator/CharlesStross' ''Literature/TheLaundryFiles'', based partly on the Cthulhu mythos, has the old Enochian languages, mainly used for writing magical "computer code" in order to, say, command zombies. It is described as a "dead tongue, for which to command dead things", completely unsuitable for the human larynx. Don't even think about making an experienced magician ''swear'' in that language.
128* In ''Literature/TheShadowspawn'', the lingua demonica, Mhabrogast, spoken by the vampiric-shapeshifting-sorcerer [[OurVampiresAreDifferent Shadowspawn]] race, is either the language of Hell or the operating code of the universe (maybe both).
129* In the ''Literature/NewJediOrder'', the [[ScaryDogmaticAliens Yuuzhan Vong]] language is extremely harsh, alternately guttural and sibilant, and bears a passing resemblance to the TropeNamer. One character (who recognizes the language, but doesn't speak it) thinks it sounds like it's composed entirely of curses. Interestingly, the direct translations given show it to be a surprisingly poetic language, one rich in imagery and metaphor, albeit one that is often used, owing to the nature of its speakers, to talk about horrible things.
130* Some examples from ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'':
131** The language of the ice demons known as the Others is unpronounceable for humans and sounds like scratching of ice.
132** The Asshai'i language is heavily associated with dark magics. It sounds only twice in the series and is described as "shrill and ululating".
133** The ancient Ghiscari language was spoken in the local sandy despot land a long time ago; at the time of the books, it was reduced to merely an accent bleeding through [[ClassicalTongue Valyrian]] spoken by the Ghiscari. Even in this reduced form it still sounds harsh and barking, and people joke that you have to put a bee into your nose to speak like a Ghiscari. Rudiments of the old language survive in Ghiscari names, all of which sound like influenza.
134* In Jack Chalker's ''The Rings of the Master'' series, a character is gender bent, captured by a space pirate and used as a sex slave. The language of the evil pirate is described as sounding evil, glutteral and disgusting. It turns out to be English (the captured character was asian and not an English speaker).
135* In Creator/CSLewis's ''[[Literature/TheSpaceTrilogy That Hideous Strength]]'', the villains are forced to worship a demonic severed head, a ceremony which involves the chant, "Ouroborindra! Ouroborindra! Ouroborindra, ba-ba-hee!"
136* In ''Literature/DarkOnesMistress'', both the soul-stealing and {{Brainwashed}} spell come out as a guttural, garbled mess that pulls at those who hear it.
137* In "Literature/BanditsInYourGrocersFreezer", Pete has no idea what language the bandits speaks and describes it as being guttural and "generic villain"; having no idea if they're speaking something mundane like [[UsefulNotes/GenghisKhan Mongolian]], or fantastic like [[OurOrcsAreDifferent Orcish]] or [[Franchise/StarTrek Klingon]].
138* ''Literature/HomeroomsAndHallPasses'' has a mildly parodic take on such languages, two of which are used in the story's resident TomeOfEldritchLore:
139** Shadownese is "the primordial language of darkness." This is a {{downplayed|Trope}} example, since it's also the language of the [[OurElvesAreDifferent gloom elves]], who [[DarkIsNotEvil aren't necessarily evil]].
140** Fiendish is "the unholy language of demons."
141* In ''Literature/TheLockedTomb'' [[UndeadAbomination resurrection beasts]] have their own tongue. Supernatural {{omniglot}} Nona reveals its existence when she comments she didn't [[CrypticConversation understand what a person speaking it was talking about]], surprising the others who had not realized there was any meaning behind their screaming. It's unhealthy to speak or hear.
142* ''Literature/{{Once}}'': Several [[PowerIncontinence inadvertently conjured]] phantom witches, said never to have been "of human breed" taunt their [[WickedWitch summoner]] in "an unknown language."
143[[/folder]]
144
145[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
146* The language of the [[AlwaysChaoticEvil Goa'uld]] of ''Series/StargateSG1'' isn't ''technically'' an evil language, considering townspeople and Jaffa speak it, and it's supposed to be based on Ancient Egyptian... but when spoken by a Goa'uld with their flanged voices and glowy eyes? Running seems a good option. Considering how often O'Neill pointed out mistakes in their grammar, maybe they just felt safer that way. Also, [[VoiceOfTheLegion English as spoken by snakeheads is pretty damn Black, too]]. That language has way too many expressions that translate as "Surrender or die!". And about half the language consists of the word "kree!" Since "Kree!" is a word that equates to "Attention!", "Mach Schnell!" and/or "Make It So!" depending on context, it makes sense that it gets said often by tyrants barking orders.
147* In ''{{Series/Lucifer}}'', South African languages are used by demons (technically, just by Mazikeen but aimed to her siblings); for the most part, it's Afrikaans, native for Lesley-Ann Brandt and used by her in several occasions, once also a phrase in Zulu for which actress had to consult with a friend.
148* In ''Series/{{Torchwood}}'', Owen speaks in this while TheGrimReaper passes through him. Ironically, the magic words Owen repeats in that demonic voice are taken from Stephen Donaldson's ''Literature/TheChroniclesOfThomasCovenant'', in which they are the "Seven Words", a blessing.
149* Minor example but in ''Series/DoctorWho'', the Weeping Angel that pursue the Doctor and co. begin emitting horrible, hellish shrieks not dissimilar to the sound of an animal being maimed. The sound is enough to rattle the usually confident River Song. It turns out this is the sound of their laughter.
150* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
151** If you're going to speak Klingon, have a glass of water handy. Your throat will thank you. Though its stint as a more-or-less purely ''evil'' language was a short one (the Klingons didn't stop speaking Klingon just because they allied with the Federation. If anything, it meant that our Federation main characters spoke more Klingon, sometimes even as part of ''recreational'' activities!)
152** ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'':
153*** The Breen speak an electronic-sounding, guttural tongue.
154*** Gul Dukat summons a Pah-wraith to take possession of him by chanting in ancient Bajoran while breaking an ancient Bajoran artifact.
155** When Tholians are shown in Enterprise (their ships were seen in the Original Series, but not the occupants), their untranslated speech sounds like lava flowing and cracking. Apropos, since their bodies are quartz-like and they find the melting point of lead pleasantly warm.
156* The ''Franchise/KamenRider'' series has a few examples, such as the languages of the [[Series/KamenRiderKuuga Grongi]] and [[Series/KamenRiderBlade Undead]]. Additionally, we see the [[Series/KamenRiderDenO Imagin]] language written but not voiced, and the [[Series/KamenRiderKiva Fangire]] tongue is long-forgotten and only spoken by Sagarc, Kamen Rider Saga's high-voiced, living TransformationTrinket, which makes it sound less than imposing. Ordinarily, the [[Series/KamenRiderGaim Overlords]] talk in an incomprehensible language, too, but they're also perfectly capable of speaking Japanese later.
157* In ''Series/TheLordOfTheRingsTheRingsOfPower'', the Orcs speak several words in the BlackSpeech.
158-->'''Orcs''': Nampak uglursha!
159* ''Series/BabylonFive'':
160** The language of an ancient sinister race of Shadows consists of barely comprehensible rustle, chirps, and humming, and, in case of their living battleships, eardrum-puncturing shrieks. Although the human emissaries of Shadows can understand them (probably due to some [[TranslatorMicrobes implants]]), they cannot speak in Shadowish themselves. It's stated that, for example, the true name of the race is about 10,000 sounds long and is completely unutterable.
161** Similarly, the Shadows' nemesis, the Vorlons' natural "voice" is heard as an odd combination of chimes, wind, and other electronic effects. The Shadows' servants, the Drakh, have an alien language as well, which is spoken in a whispered (and sinister) manner, much like Ralph Fiennes' rendition of Voldemort (and when they do speak English, they whisper it too).
162* Enochian in ''Series/{{Supernatural}}''. Partly subverted in that it's used in just about equal measure by both good guys and bad guys (chiefly for spells and exorcisms).
163* [[spoiler: [[HumanoidAbomination The Woodsmen]]]] from the revival of ''Series/TwinPeaks'' are a weird example, in that they're speaking regular English ([[WordSaladHorror kind of]]), but their voices are so crackly and distorted it sounds like Music/TomWaits doing an impression of the [[Film/RogueOne Death Troopers]], and it still seems to have this trope's typically [[BrownNote painful effect]] on those who appear it.
164* German, Japanese and Russian on ''Series/TheXFiles'' had mostly dark implications of post WWII and post-Cold War world.
165* The Scarrans in ''Series/{{Farscape}}'' have one of the few alien languages that's not translated by the translator microbes--i.e. it's one of the only alien languages that we hear in all its gutteral glory.
166* ''Series/SleepyHollow'': [[BigBad Moloch]] speaks in a guttural, inhuman language.
167* ''{{Series/Salem}}'': What the Elders of the witches speak, though they seem to know English as well.
168* The only way to break Jasmine's Glamour spell on ''{{Series/Angel}}'' was to speak her true name. When the Fang Gang gets ahold of the head of a demon whose [[MouthStitchedShut mouth is sewn shut]], they cut it open. What sounds like a mere exhale was Jas' true name, but sounded like something humans (or vampires) wouldn't even be able to pronounce.
169* ''Series/PennyDreadful'' has the Verbis Diablo, the language spoken by the witches and the demonic entities they serve. It is said to be a corrupted version of the angelic language spoken in the Garden of Eden before the fall of man.
170* On ''Series/WorldsDumbest'', Kevin [=McCaffrey=] describes German as this.
171--> "You could say 'I love you; here are these flowers' in German, and I would [BLEEP] myself."
172* ''Series/ReservationDogs'': In a flashback to an [[BoardingSchoolOfHorrors Indian residential school]], the abusive English-speaking nuns and teachers have their words dubbed with meaningless gibberish. This shows the boarding school experience from the point of view of Native children who do not speak English. Their tone is always very harsh, which serves to make them sound guttural and quite menacing, even monstrous, appropriately enough.
173[[/folder]]
174
175[[folder:Music]]
176* Music/{{Magma}} a band who from their first gigs onwards sang mostly in an invented tongue called Kobaïan, a teutonic-sounding sci-fi proto-language that went perfectly with the music, a kind of prog version of Stravinsky and Carl Orff's most paroxystic traits. They had such a natural supervillain-effect with their stage costumes and album covers that director Jodoroswky planned to have them make the background music for the Harkonnen's planet in his never-finished film version of Dune. H.R. Giger, who was to design the whole planet on screen, was later hired to make the beast and settings in Alien... Sadly, Ridley Scott didn't hire Magma.
177* DeathMetal and BlackMetal vocals often sound like Orcs' Black Speech. Although most bands sing in English and other natural languages, it is usually distorted[[note]]typically very deep, hoarse, throaty, guttural, and ''loud''—there's a technique to it, actually, so as to avoid laryngitis[[/note]] to the point of being unintelligible.
178* Many viking/folk metal bands from Scandinavia use their native languages, unintelligible to most of their audience (if they build up a fanbase abroad, that is), for authenticity.
179** Music/{{Summoning}}, a ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings''-themed black metal band, went one step further by ''actually writing a song in the Black Speech''. It's called ''Mirdautas Vras'' (trans. "A good day to kill") and [[SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic it's awesome]]. Listen [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MMVYI9DOHkg here]].
180* Parodied by Martin Pearson in his ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings''-themed folk-comedy show ''AudioPlay/TheUnfinishedSpellingErrorsOfBolkien'', in which he sings the One Ring's inscription to the tune of "King of the Road" in a voice that borders on an Elvis impression.
181** Similarly parodied in Music/EbenBrooks' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxScTbIUvoA "Hey There Cthulhu"]], where the above quote from "The Call of Cthulhu" is ''sung'' to the tune of "Hey There Delilah" by the Plain White Ts.
182** "Cthulhu fhtagn" has also been filked to the tune of "Hakuna Matata".
183* Norwegian BlackMetal band Burzum's name comes from the actual Black Speech. It means "[[DarknessEqualsDeath Darkness]]".
184** Other metal bands with a name in a Tolkien language include Gorgoroth (the plateau around Mount Doom), Amon Amarth (the Sindarin name for Mount Doom itself), and Cirith Ungol (the mountain pass to Mordor and home of the spider Shelob), though Cirith Ungol mispronounce the name, using a soft c sound instead of a hard one.
185* Music/{{Tool}} has a song called "Die Eier von Satan" that plays on the preconceived notions of the German language. The song consists of the singer growling German over clanging industrial beats, punctuated with apocalyptic cries that are greeted by a roaring crowd. The overall effect is somewhere between a [[ReligionOfEvil Black Mass]] and a Nazi rally, but the translated lyrics show that the speaker is reciting a recipe for egg-shaped hash brownies. His rallying cry, "Und keine Eier!" means, "And no eggs!", since there are no actual eggs in the recipe. "Eggs" are also an informal term in German for testicles, giving the hash brownies a rather silly, scatological name: "Satan's Balls."
186* Norwegian FolkMetal band Trollfest write their lyrics in a constructed language they call Trollspråk, a mix of German and Norwegian which, when combined with the band's growly BlackMetal vocals, can sound very evil.
187** They intended it to sound evil, that's why they used German. But nobody of them actually speaks German, so they mixed it with their mother tongue, Norwegian. Because of their overall theme it sounds more silly than evil, especially if you understand German or Norwegian.
188* Finnish experimental metal band Aarni doesn't make [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpkvY_Y4jno ancient Egyptian]] sound nice.
189* ''Music/JeffWaynesMusicalVersionOfTheWarOfTheWorlds The New Generation'': At the beginning of "Horsell Common and the Heat Ray, there's an unsettling sample of some Martian dialect.
190* Parodied in "Hey There Cthulhu" by Music/EbenBrooks, who sings a line of Black Speech to the tune of "Hey There Delilah".
191* Someone edited "Wrecking Ball," by Miley Cyrus, to be this. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ne0b7r-T6ec Here it is.]]
192* In classical music, Hector Berlioz's ''The Damnation of Faust'' contains a chorus comprised of chanting in a demonic language, as does the original version of Modest Mussorgsky's ''Night on Bald Mountain''.
193* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xHffjNbWmig "Honey I'm Home"]] by the Vocaloid composer GHOST features sections that sound like this, along with a sizeable dose of ReligiousHorror and GodIsEvil.
194[[/folder]]
195
196[[folder:Radio]]
197* In ''Radio/OldHarrysGame'', Andy Hamilton's Satan reflects that if God had wanted people to like South Africans, then He would not have designed them to speak like that. Which is why they all end up here.
198[[/folder]]
199
200[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
201* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' has a few examples:
202** ''The Book of Vile Darkness'' has the Dark Speech, which is the language of pure evil and destruction. Speaking it can cause [[WordsCanBreakMyBones pain to the good and neutral creatures]]. By contrast, the Words of Creation are the direct opposite, and can help create things as well as bind evil power.
203** The Warlock in 3.5 has the invocation Baleful Utterance, which duplicates the spell Shatter and can potentially deafen opponents. And yes, he does it with Dark Speech. More specifically, he does it by uttering a ''random syllable'' -- the 'invocation' itself is basically a safety device that keeps the Warlock's brain from realizing what the mouth just said.
204** Infernal and Abyssal are the native tongues of devils and demons, respectively. They have no special properties, but probably include an impressive array of curse words.
205** In the first edition of the game, alignments had their own languages understandable only to creatures of the same alignment. When played at all, the evil alignment languages tended to get played like Black Speech.
206** The various {{Eldritch Abomination}}s have their own languages, most of which can't be spoken by the normal people due to sheer physiological difference. Take the [[FlyingSeafoodSpecial Aboleth]]-ese for example: if a human wanted to speak it, they would require extra larynxes, which can be emulated by speaking while playing pipe organs. For extra creepiness: the language can be written as glyphs, which hurts one's head just by looking at it.
207** Undercommon, a language composed of pidgin Common mixed with loaner words from languages like Deep Speech and unique jargon and slang, is the bastard brother of Common in 5e and a more mundane form of this trope. It is almost exclusively spoken by Underdark dwelling races like the Drow, Duregar, and certain other sentient races down there, but aside from its grating qualities to the ears it doesn't have the mind-blasting qualities that Abyssal, Infernal, and Deep Speech can have.
208* ''TabletopGame/{{Pathfinder}}'':
209** Aklo, taken from Creator/ArthurMachen and Creator/HPLovecraft, appears as the preferred tongue of various horrible creatures and {{Eldritch Abomination}}s.
210** Necril in First Edition was a mundane language often spoken in undead societies, but in Second Edition was upgraded to the true tongue of undeath. All undead creatures rise knowing it, and even mindless undead respond to commands given in the language. While living creatures are capable of learning it, doing so exposes them to the same negative influences that tend to drive even well-intentioned undead to evil over time.
211* ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer}}'' and ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}''
212** The Dark Tongue of Chaos, which is generally the language of daemons and sorcerers in both Fantasy and 40K.
213** The various languages used by the Chaos-worshiping human tribes -- Norse, Kurgan and Hung -- also tend to be influenced by Dark Tongue to a certain extent, though they remain their own distinct languages with their own grammatical structures and so forth. The influence of Dark Tongue on these languages is mostly seen via loan-words and etymology. Norscan runic-script is also influenced by written Dark Tongue.
214** Enuncia is a pre-human language that appears in books written by Dan Abnett for Warhammer 40 000. It can be used to control daemons and heretic engines, and damage opponents but can have terrible effects on those that speak it as well, with outcomes from bleeding from the mouth to cranial rupturing.
215** 40K also has scrapcode, which is the Black Speech as a ''programming language''. The Dark Mechanicus can speak it, too; it makes the already mechanical binary cant of the Adeptus Mechanicus sound ''so much worse''.
216* ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'':
217** Parodied with the Abyssals, who, when enacting their darkest rituals, ritually atoning for misbehavior, or otherwise communing with their Neverborn masters, will often speak in a disturbing, nigh-unpronouncably ominous tongue that seems to have all the traits of the Black Speech... until the Abyssals {{splat}}book reveals that it's complete gibberish that doesn't actually mean anything.
218** The demons of Malfeas (who aren't evil so much as alien, albeit in a manner that is implicitly dangerous to other beings) speak Old Realm, the same native language used by the gods and TheFairFolk, albeit apparently with a distinctive accent and somewhat offputting vocabulary.
219* In ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'', the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o7ixdHQj3O4 language of the Phyrexians]] is this. A guttural-sounding tongue where harsh, unbroken strings of consonants are common, Phyrexian incorporates clanking and slashing noises into its vocabulary, making it impossible to speak properly without the extensive body modifications that Phyrexians undergo.
220* The [[EldritchAbomination Darkness]] aligned princesses in ''TabletopGame/BleakWorld'' can ONLY use the black speech, using it to communicate with each other or the Darkness itself.
221* The ''TabletopGame/NewWorldOfDarkness'' has the supernatural language of [[OurDemonsAreDifferent demons]], the Dragon's Tongue. The "tortured glossolalia" is [[AppearanceIsInTheEyeOfTheBeholder perceived differently by everyone]] and can only be learned through direct tutelage, though some people are unlucky enough to be born fluent. Knowing the language can be an advantage in [[DealWithTheDevil bargaining for a pact]].
222* ''TabletopGame/WickedOnes'': Most monsters speak a language simply referred to as the Dark Tongue. Descriptions of what this sounds like are never given, but seeing as this is a game all about playing archetypal fantasy monsters the name is almost certainly meant as a reference to this trope.
223[[/folder]]
224
225[[folder:Video Games]]
226* ''VideoGame/BugFables'': In the Forsaken Lands is an abandoned town that was once a temporary settlement for Elizant I and her ant settlers. The place is currently inhabited by strange bugs wearing masks and cloaks whose speech bubble text is made of pulsating, scribble-like blotches. [[spoiler:Given that the False Monarch "ruling" these bugs is actually [[TheWormThatWalks a cluster of Mothflies]], it's left ambiguous if they were ever speaking anything comprehensible in the first place.]]
227* ''Franchise/DragonAge'': While it never shows up outside of cutscenes, the appearance of the Darkspawn is frequently heralded by an ominous whispering. Possibly this is meant to indicate that the Warden is sensing them.
228* ''VideoGame/TheLordOfTheRingsOnline'' features the One Ring inscription (as given in the page quote) performed as a kind of faux-Gregorian chant by a choir as background music in some regions of the game (most notably in certain parts of Moria). In contrast to the normal expectations of Black Speech sounding harsh and guttural, it's much softer and gentler than the occasional scrap of Dwarven one hears in the game (usually "Baruk Khazâd! Khazâd ai-mênu!").
229* ''VideoGame/MiddleEarthShadowOfMordor'' features The One Ring inscription sung as OminousLatinChanting. Meanwhile, [[VideoGame/MiddleEarthShadowOfWar the sequel]] features actual Black Speech being spoken by some characters (without translation, to the consternation of some who no longer understand it.) Amusingly the game suggests that Black Speech ia a major hassle to learn. [[spoiler:Ratbag]] can't speak a word and even as one of the smarter denizens of Mordor Bruz off-handedly mentions he can't speak a word, calling the language a pain in the ass.
230** A [[OurDemonsAreDifferent Balrog]] named Tar-Goroth speaks in a very guttural language separate from black speech (which doesn't have subtitles) so nobody (except maybe Celebrimbor) [[TheUnintelligible have any idea what the hell he's saying]], Talion even asks what Tar-Goroth is saying to which Celebrimbor replies "Does it matter?"
231* Eredun (often referred to as simply "Demonic"), and its written form, Eredic, in ''VideoGame/{{Warcraft}}'' games. Lots of Xs and Zs here too. As an added bonus, reading demonic scriptures places your sanity at risk. Presumably, the language of the Draenei, which is based on the uncorrupted version of Eredic and sounds quite similar, doesn't have that effect.
232** Additionally, it seems that speaking demonic has a negative effect on one's ability to cast spells for non-demons. Evidenced by the fact that Warlocks can curse an opponent into being able to speak nothing else, which slows the speed at which they can cast spells.
233** In ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'', demonology-spec warlocks had a spell called Metamorphosis, which temporarily transformed them into a demon. While under the influence of this spell they are affected by demon-targeting spells (such as Banish) and speak only in Demonic.
234** Kalimag, the language of the Elementals. Considering it's in use by the Twilight's Hammer cult, it counts. [[http://youtu.be/J3mwPfqu_3Y Listen for yourself]].
235** There's also the language of the [[EldritchAbomination Old Gods]], Shath'yar, spoken in-game only by them, their servants, and those unfortunate mortals who have been driven insane by prolonged contact. You can view a good sampling of it [[http://www.wowhead.com/npc=39644/twilight-servitor#comments here.]] It sounds much like a ShoutOut to the Franchise/CthulhuMythos, as all things related to the Old Gods are.
236** The Scourge has its own language, referred to in the game as the 'language of death'. It appears that only a current or former member of the Scourge can speak or translate it. Amusing if one's character is a Death Knight, but still has to take a Scourge tome to an NPC Death Knight to have it translated.
237** As a ShoutOut, one of the Nathrezim's warcries is "Ash nazg kimpatul!"
238* ''VideoGame/NeverwinterNights2'': Late in the main quest you acquire the {{true name}}s of several creatures called Shadow Reavers that were created by the BigBad from the corpses of mages that had been working for him. However, the scrolls are written in a fiendish language that only your party members Zhjaeve (a planewalking scholar and cleric) and Ammon Jerro (a warlock who has trafficked extensively with demons and devils) can read.
239* Parodied in ''VideoGame/FableII'' with the hollow man, who guards the Stone of Myr'Bregothill. They want to do the hollow dance of Ur'Cyrandoandor upon your bones...if only they could reliably remember what it's called.
240* ''VideoGame/ArTonelicoIIMelodyOfMetafalica'''s Corrupted Pastalia certainly [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezH7gslZm5k sounds]] like this, and the context in which it's used doesn't help.
241* In ''VideoGame/KnightsOfTheOldRepublicIITheSithLords'', Darth Nihilus speaks in a ridiculous, over-the-top evil sounding language that is completely undecipherable, and the player is never given a translation to see what he's actually saying, though it's almost certainly the ancient Sith language. Explained in-universe as the Exile's translator module not having a setting for it.
242* ''VideoGame/{{Bayonetta}}'' has Enochian, the language of angels. The Angels of Paradiso and Infernal Demons use it as their preferred tongue, while Umbra Witches and Lumen Sages use it for their magic. When the Cardinal Virtues speak it, it's creepy.
243* The cultists of the ''VideoGame/{{Blood}}'' series speak a language which is a mixture of Latin and Sanskrit words and grammar. By ''VideoGame/BloodIITheChosen'', only Zealots and, occasionally, Ishmael still speak it, though [[MythologyGag some of the Fallen]] in ''VideoGame/ShogoMobileArmorDivision'' also use it.
244* ''VideoGame/BatenKaitos Origins'': Your companion, Guillo, who is some sort of androgynous puppet/robot, speaks in two voices simultaneously. One is female and one is male, just to confuse you a little bit more. Additionally (and a better example), when angry, Guillo's voice becomes intensely more demonic.
245* Some of the ghosts in ''VideoGame/GhostbustersTheVideoGame'', such as Possessors and Cultists, engage in this.
246* The evil White Legs tribe in ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas: Honest Hearts'' speak a barbaric pidgin language.
247* The language of the [=DomZ=] in ''VideoGame/BeyondGoodAndEvil''. There's even an [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuSP5MoEQTU entire song]] in the soundtrack with lyrics entirely in the [=DomZ=] language that plays whenever there's a full-on [=DomZ=] invasion.
248* ''VideoGame/NieR'' deconstructs it. Although it seems like Black Speech on the first playthrough, [[spoiler: on the second playthrough it turns out to be a real language, and you have the ability to understand it, leading to the game becoming a deconstruction of [=RPGs=].]]
249* In ''VideoGame/FiveNightsAtFreddys1'', Freddy will taunt you over the phone using Black Speech exactly 24 hours after he [[spoiler:kills the Phone Guy]]. [[labelnote:Spoilers]]As part of another story-related EasterEgg, it's a garbled, backmasked excerpt from "Autobiography of a Yogi" by Paramhansa Yogananda, speaking about [[KillerRobot "marvelous mechanisms"]] used for farming.[[/labelnote]]
250* Satan from ''VideoGame/TheBindingOfIsaac'' talks in some deep, guttural, incomprehensible growling. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jtZmwXvCug0 Turns out it's actually]] [[spoiler: voice clips from Mom, but pitched down, distorted and played backwards.]]
251* Mentioned in ''VideoGame/RuneScape'' with the note dropped after defeating one of the early Dungeoneering bosses.
252--> "One such unique example calls itself 'Plane-freezer Lakhrahnaz' in our tongue. I regret asking it to state its name in its own tongue, as the resultant combination of both audible and inaudible sound from its many lipless mouths gave me a huge headache and caused blood to cascade from my nose, which Lakhrahnaz then froze."
253** During a quest, the player is tasked with retrieving a magic artefact known as the "Frostenhorn". Azzanadra clarifies that the [[HornyVikings Fremennik]] gave it that name because they assumed it had powers over [[AnIcePerson ice]] (it didn't); when asked what his race calls it, Azzanadra politely declines to answer and replies that speaking its true name would make the player's ears melt from the sides of their head.
254* Every single one of the [[PowersThatBe Elder Powers]] from ''VideoGame/NexusClash'' has a cultic language spoken by their followers, full of concepts that only make sense in that language. Most of them count as this trope [[HolyIsNotSafe for various reasons]].
255* In ''VideoGame/{{Sundered}}'', the Shining Trapezohedron speaks in [[https://thunderlotusgames.com/rlehshyshtag-lirl-ehmgvrlaekeh-creating-new-language-sundered/ a harsh and guttural language]] that the player can only understand through the magic of subtitles. The written form of it, which shows up in the names of major bosses and certain areas, has a lot of apostrophes, X's, and Z's. For instance, the word "Hysteria" is translated as "X'zea'shia".
256* ''VideoGame/TheSecretWorld'' features numerous cases of this, most prominently the demonic tongue and languages touched by [[MysticalPlague the Filth]]. Not only do they sound immensely disturbing, but they often have [[BrownNote potentially dangerous consequences]] for mortals who make the mistake of listening too closely: the demonic tongue can't even be spoken by humans without first [[TongueTrauma ritualistically mutilating your tongue]], and translating some of the nastier threats into English runs the risk of boiling the bowels of anyone in earshot; meanwhile, people infected by the Filth can sing hymns that kill small birds and other animals in range, and a few can even reproduce the Filth as graffiti capable of infecting humans by sight alone.
257** Subverted in the case of the Draug; their language might ''sound'' threatening and unearthly, especially given that it's being spoken by a horde of semi-decayed FishPeople, all of whom have extremely deep, guttural voices. However, according to Dr Bannerman's notes, it's just Old Icelandic - a relic of the [[FallenHero original Viking heroes]] who were enslaved by [[EldritchAbomination the Dreamers]] and [[ReforgedIntoAMinion made into the first Draug]].
258* ''VideoGame/{{Faith}}'' has a monster in the woods [[spoiler: [[DemonicPossession named Michael]]]] who shrieks jumbled phrases when warded off.
259* ''VideoGame/{{Destiny}}'' and [[VideoGame/Destiny2 its sequel]] have [[DeusEstMachina Rasputin]] the [[AIIsACrapshoot Warmind]], who speaks in heavily-distorted Russian. It's not so bad in the first game, but by the time of the second, he sounds like [[https://clyp.it/stek1iie this]].
260** [[DyingRace Fallen]] Speak sounds pretty Black Speech-y, too.
261* The Ascians' speech in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' is an incomprehensible, guttural tongue presented in sinister black text boxes, although it's subtitled normally thanks to [[{{Omniglot}} the Echo]]. [[spoiler:Subverted when ''Shadowbringers'' reveals it's just the language of their ancient civilization; while the text boxes are still black and spooky, it's much less terrifying when they're asking if you need help getting home rather than threatening to kill you.]]
262* Ozkavosh in ''VideoGame/Dota2'', a language mainly spoken by demons and those affiliated to them.
263* The Devil in ''VideoGame/{{Cuphead}}'' speaks in some otherly language when casting spells for certain attacks.
264* ''VideoGame/{{Gift|2001}}'': Little Darks and Little Clears tend to mumble something like that.
265* You'd better have the subtitles on when playing the Hirschfelden Halloween missions in ''VideoGame/TheHunterCallOfTheWild'', because the Roe Devil [[https://youtu.be/HiF-zjSwjvI?t=525 talks like this.]]
266* ''VideoGame/Nioh2'' gives the player the ability to hear Yokai speech (justified, as the main protagonist is a half-human, half-Yokai hybrid). However, the player is unable to understand anything at the beginning of the game, as their speech is so incomprehensible that the subtitles only display red runes instead of text. It's only when you start completing missions and increasing your Astral Wisdom that the runes are slowly replaced by text.
267* ''VideoGame/GenshinImpact'' has the magic scrolls, dropped by Samachurls on death. Depending on the rarity of the scrolls, they also have their own descriptive texts. The most common ones "exude an inexplicable but ominous warmth", while the rarer ones are said to be indecipherable; the few who could understand it "have all went mad".
268* ''Videogame/{{Dungeonmans}}:'' The dreaded [[EldritchAbomination Purpleonians]] and those awful outsiders and cultists related to them have Purple Language. It's not usually relevant to your character, but a [[BarbarianHero Southern Gentlemans]] that's maxed out the [[WordsCanBreakMyBones Fire and Brimstone skill tree]] can use it for the most destructive ForeignLanguageTirade you can imagine: The capstone skill Blasphemous Tirade does ''enormous'' damage and knocks both enemies and items around in a huge radius, usually reducing an entire surrounding horde to a heap of corrupted meat-paste in a single move. Just be careful of overdoing it, ''[[ButtDialingMordor they]]'' [[ButtDialingMordor can hear you]].
269* ''VideoGame/{{Warframe}}'':
270** Fitting their brutish and industrial aesthetic, the Grineer's language sounds very rough and harsh on the ears, and may even sound like gibberish at first - though it's actually modified, heavily corrupted English, leading to almost unrecognizable phrases like "Gredoarhung" ('Reloading'), or "Kley'gre reger" ('they're here') to what sounds basically like English with a speech impediment, like "No aktuvhutee to gregort." (No activity to report). [[JustifiedTrope Justified]], as the Grineer are a race of clones who suffer from severe CloneDegradation, it's a miracle most of them are able to speak at all.
271** The eldritch avatar of [[HyperspaceIsAScaryPlace the Void]] of ''VideoGame/{{Warframe}}'', [[HumanoidAbomination The Man in The Wall]], speaks a bizarre language of harsh consonants and guttural sounds referred to as the "Voidtongue" by Albrecht Entrati. The good professor was worried it was meaningless, but was even ''moreso'' that there ''was'' meaning to it, especially since the Requiem Mods [[PlayerCharacter Tenno]] use to kill Grineer Kuva Liches and the Corpus' Sisters of Parvos use Voidtongue words and said words do have translations.[[note]]For example, "Jahu" means "Form" and "Lohk" means "Void".[[/note]] On top of that, the first ''spoken'' instance of the Voidtongue - which occurs at the end of the "The New War" quest - is so utterly [[EvilSoundsDeep deep]] and distorted that for literal ''years'' players misheard it as a recitation of several of those Requiem Mod words.[[note]]The misheard sequence was given as '''"OULL RIS XATA VOME, KHRA LOHK,"''' which have associated requiem poem segments that matched the quest's story beats quite closely and, aside from "Oull", all have translations.[[/note]] Below is the ''actual'' transcript of the Voidtongue recitation at the end of "The New War", given with the "Whispers in the Walls" quest tied to The Man in The Wall:
272-->'''VOULL NE XATA VOK, MARA LOHK?'''
273[[/folder]]
274
275[[folder:Webcomics]]
276* Death in ''Webcomic/{{APOC}}'' speaks in a language that seems otherworldly, and tied to it's existence as Death. No-one can understand it, but readers may be able to decipher it with a pen and paper handy.
277* ''Webcomic/DanAndMabsFurryAdventures'': the [[http://www.missmab.com/Demo/HG10.php Insectis]] race. Apparently, they're bad enough when they're actually speaking English, and then you get to their actual language. According to the author, it's not evil sounding, but it is painful to listen to, like trying to form vowels with the sounds of an angle grinder.
278* The radio in chapter 3 of ''Webcomic/StandStillStaySilent'' utters some, written as white, scribbled letters on black background. It's gibberish mixed with Swedish [[NightmareFuel "who am (I)", "please", "beware" and "no no no"]]. [[spoiler:The earliest sign that Tuuri did indeed get infected with [[ThePlague the rash]] was that she started to hear it without a radio.]]
279* Subverted by Luna in ''Webcomic/DominicDeegan'', who has a couple outbursts in an ancient, guttural language (represented by black word bubbles filled with nothing but punctuation and non-letter symbols) during the too-long March Across Maltak saga. The Shintula and Bikta orcs view her using this language as horrible blasphemy, despite the fact that each outburst makes beautiful greenery appear all around her in an otherwise completely dead landscape.
280** We later learn that, like the Words of Creation discussed in the "Book of Vile Darkness" entry under Tabletop Games, the language is actually the polar ''opposite'' of Black Speech - it is a holy language, and the orcs' offense comes from the fact that an unworthy human has dared to speak it.
281* ''Webcomic/IrregularWebcomic'': the several personifications of death talk in ALL CAPS when talking to mortals. They talk normal among peers though, because they don't have to act ominous then.
282* ''Webcomic/{{Parhelion}}'': Basilisk speaks in [[http://parhelioncomic.tumblr.com/post/140372042828/parhelion-interlude-1-page-3-basilitany-would jagged, glitched static]] that gets more distorted when they're agitated. No translator is necessary.
283* The Pixel Dogs in ''Webcomic/{{Paranatural}}'' talk in [[http://www.paranatural.net/index.php?id=232 skulls]]. (It's a cipher language -- the skull's features can be counted up to match an English word spoken on a previous page of the comic). Forge also speaks a single word of it. This is significant, because Cursetongue is learned at the rate of one word per evil act committed by a spirit.
284* [[OurDemonsAreDifferent The Inferni characters]] talk with this trope in mind in ''WebComic/MyBestFriendMarneao''. It doesn't seem to have any side effect for the humans, they just think is a weird language. [[RefugeInAudacity Marneao convinces the kids at school they are speaking canadian.]]
285* In ''Webcomic/TheZombieHunters,'' the evil-looking black SpeechBubbles and glowing [[PaintingTheMedium white lettering]] of NightOfTheLivingMooks contains a frightening cacophany of various gutteral grunts and moans, but to [[spoiler:[[HalfHumanHybrid half-zombie]] Charlie]], they increasingly begin to resolve themselves [[spoiler:into broken, rasping English]], the [[WhatMeasureIsANonHuman implications]] of which leave the character ''profoundly'' disturbed.
286* ''Webcomic/LastRes0rt'' plays with this; the Tone language of the Celeste uses this as a vehicle for their CompellingVoice, but...Tone itself is ''completely silent'', only audible to the Celeste themselves and any individuals with the appropriate level of resistance.
287* ''Webcomic/{{Homestuck}}'': after [[GoMadFromTheRevelation going]] [[spoiler: grimdark, Rose]] appears to be incapable of talking outside of this. This naturally leads to a language barrier when she runs into [[spoiler: John]].
288** [[spoiler: Becsprite]] seems to have a similar problem, though since his speech is only denoted with scribbles, it could just be a case of YouCannotGraspTheTrueForm.
289* Minnie and Grim Jr. of ''Webcomic/GrimTalesFromDownBelow'' can communicate this way.
290* In ''WebComic/YokokasQuest'', Darkness Clan language appears as jagged grey text on a black background, or as jagged markings if the perspective character doesn't understand it. It's described as sounding screechy and hurts the throats of those not used to speaking it. It's also the language of curses.
291* Invoked in ''WebComic/DraconiaChronicles.'' To a dragon, the tiger language is "hideous" and "full of phlegm." Of course, [[TigerVersusDragon they hate each other]].
292* Demons in ''WebComic/KillSixBillionDemons'' speak a language known as "Black Speech" amongst themselves. When it's translated to English via TranslationConvention it resembles a temporal mish-mash of English mixing modern and antiquated terms, alongside slipping into words that look like they came from [[Literature/AClockworkOrange Nadsat]] and a ''lot'' of invective. Translation notes translates it further into comprehensible English.
293* ''Webcomic/DebuggingDestiny'' presents Osborne's speech this way. His SpeechBubbles have the [[DarkIsEvil darkest background]], [[RedAndBlackAndEvilAllOver blood-red text]], [[NoPunctuationPeriod little to no punctuation]], and [[AllLowercaseLetters avoid capital letters]].
294[[/folder]]
295
296[[folder:Web Original]]
297* ''Podcast/DiceFunk'': Austin explicitly refers to the Abyssal language as "the Black Speech" when it is revealed that Anne understands it.
298%%* ''Literature/WhateleyUniverse'': The prayers to the Kellith, daughter of [[EldritchAbomination Gothmog]].
299* WebOriginal/{{Zalgo}} is a [[MemeticMutation memetic]] EldritchAbomination whose influence can cause very distorted text in web browsers.
300* ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2'': The Vagineer's speech is guttural and unintelligible. It's the real Engineer's lines, albeit reversed. Numerous abominations in similar vein, known as [=TF2=] Freaks, are often given reversed or warped versions of their real lines.
301* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'': Eppaljeck sounds like someone talking sped up, backwards, and possibly in G-major. Alternately, her 'jitter' effect that [[spoiler:causes Applejack to explode]] sounds like a primitive Atari-era video game, sped up to the point of uncomfortable auditory dissoance.
302* ''WebOriginal/{{Inglip}}'': Lord Inglip's speech is naturally distorted — being captcha and all.
303* There's a {{meme|ticMutation}} on Website/YouTube called "G-Major" (mentioned briefly above) where an uploader takes a normal video and inverts the colours and edits the audio to create a strange harmony (usually in G-Major, hence the name) to cause this effect.
304* ''Podcast/PokemonWorldTourUnited'': In episode 21, Rose is using her Togepi, Scramble, in a Contest. Every round she has Scramble use Metronome. When Scramble does so, it's described as summoning the aura of the Pokemon using the move Togepi's Metronome causes. All goes mostly well until the final round of the contest, when Scramble [[spoiler:channels a move belonging to ''Mewtwo'']]. Togepi's voice changes ("Toge'''priiii!''') and people close by hear a deep, dark voice say ''"Psycho Cut"''.
305* ''Website/SCPFoundation'': The Antimemetics Division, written primarily by [[Website/ThingsOfInterest qntm]], frequently encounter antagonists which speak in meaningless syllables and phrases, interspersed with normal speech. This having been said, the syllables may be meaningless, but they're ''just close enough'' to meaning as we know it that the human mind tries to decipher them. [[ParanoiaFuel And that's how they get you.]]
306%%* ''Fanfic/FarceOfTheThreeKingdoms'': Sima Zhao speaks in Zalgo text.
307[[/folder]]
308
309[[folder:Western Animation]]
310* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': One of the show's favorite gags is the depiction of Russian and German languages as guttural and hostile to English speakers. In every instance, the subtitles reveal that the speaker is actually saying something pleasant or benign.
311* ''WesternAnimation/TheGrimAdventuresOfBillyAndMandy'': Lord Pain can speak in a strange tongue which is forbidden for mortal ears. Despite sounding like silly and uncomprehensible gibberish, it causes a canary to lose its feathers, a fish to die and its tank to rotten up and Billy to ooze some kind of weird green goo from his ear, then fall unconscious.
312[[/folder]]

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