Sarus may refer to:
Germanic culture
Other uses
Sarus is an artificial language created by animator Adam Phillips.
Sarus consists of syllables which, when communicated, consist of symbols, tones, numbers, colors, gestures, or glyphs. Its concept is based on Solresol, an artificial language developed in France early in the 19th Century.
Sarus primarily uses the phonetic or abbreviated representation of the tonal syllables. The tones exist as the solfege set of Do, Re, Mi, Fa, So, La, and Ti (equivalent to musical notes C – D – E – F – G – A – B). In Sarus, these are abbreviated to d, r, m, f, s, l, t.
Words in Sarus consist of a series of uninterrupted syllables, for example: "mls" (music), "sds" (number) "lfmf" (mountains). A word may also be expressed as a whole heptagonal glyph, called "septaglyphs". Alternative syllable forms are numbers 1-7 and the seven colours of the spectrum, R - O - Y - G - B - I - V. However any set of seven unique characters, including hand signals (a feature of 19th Century Solresol), may be used to represent the individual syllables.
Sarus or Saurus (d. 413 AD) was a Gothic chieftain and commander for the emperor Honorius. He was known for his hostility to the prominent Gothic brothers-in-law Alaric I and Ataulf, and was the brother of Sigeric, who ruled the Goths briefly in 415.
Nothing is known of his life before he comes to notice in 406 commanding a force of Gothic troops, along with other barbarian foederati, against the invasion of Italy by Radagaisus of 405-6. Roman and federate troops ultimately defeated the invaders at the Battle of Faesulae.
In 407 he was sent against the British usurper Constantine III. First he defeated and killed Iustinianus, one of Constantine's magistri militum, then tricked and killed the other, Nebiogastes. Then Sarus laid siege to Constantine himself in Valentia, but fled back to Italy at the approach of Constantine's new generals Edobichus and Gerontius, being forced to surrender all his booty to Bacaudae (late Roman bandits or rebels) for passage over the Alps. As he must have commanded an army, he may have been appointed magister militum (general) for this expedition; elsewhere he is said to have had a following or warband of only about three hundred.