Verse:Tdūrzů/Knench: Difference between revisions
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'''Knench''' /nɛnt͡ʃ/ (natively / | '''Knench''' /nɛnt͡ʃ/ (natively /ˈkʰnɔ{{tilde}}ːnɪð/) is a divergent descendent of Canaanite spoken in Lõis Great Britain. It does not lose Semitic triconsonantal morphology, but it loses older Semitic conjugated verb forms in favor of a construction using the infinitive construct. Knench is the second largest Lõis British minority language after Welsh, in fact its syntax is similar to Colloquial Welsh. | ||
The Knench were druids, kinda, before they converted to Christianity | |||
l and r treated as in British English, Maghrebi-Arabic-like consonant clusters | l and r treated as in British English, Maghrebi-Arabic-like consonant clusters | ||
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pronouns: | pronouns: | ||
* 1sg /ɪ/, (after | * 1sg /ɪ/, (after vowel) /nɪ/ | ||
* 2sg /tʰə/ | * 2sg /tʰə/ | ||
* 3sg m /hʏ/ | * 3sg m /hʏ/ | ||
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/-əs/ becomes the default feminine suffix; e.g. /luːh/ 'god/God', /luːhəs/ 'goddess' | /-əs/ becomes the default feminine suffix; e.g. /luːh/ 'god/God', /luːhəs/ 'goddess' | ||
k-b-r 'big': / | h-g-y 'to savor' | ||
ʔ-h-b 'love': /hyːb/ |ʔhyːb| 'dear, beloved' | |||
k-b-r 'big': /kʰəˈpiːə̯/ |kʰəbbiːr| 'big' | |||
g-d-l which has merged with q-T-l means 'tyranny, violence, cruelty': /ktuː/ 'tyrant, tyrannical' | g-d-l which has merged with q-T-l means 'tyranny, violence, cruelty': /ktuː/ |gduːl| 'tyrant, tyrannical' | ||
ʔ-š-r (''ser'' 'sacred tree' -> 'soul') | |||
One derivation I'm proud of is Knench młur ’daily life, waking life’ (hypothetical mâʕôr in Hebrew from biliteral ʕ-r 'awake') | |||
== Phonology == | == Phonology == | ||
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* |tʰ| from Old Knench /t/ | * |tʰ| from Old Knench /t/ | ||
==== | ==== Vocalizables ==== | ||
'' | ''Vocalizables'' are underlying consonants that have vocalized forms when reduced or manifest as vowel lengthening or closing elements of diphthongs. These are: |ʔ|, |h|, |r|, |ʁ{{tilde}}|, |l|, and |w|. | ||
=== Mutation === | === Mutation === | ||
== Morphology == | |||
=== Verbs === | |||
Citation form is the singular imperative (same as the bare infinitive construct) | |||
Knench verbs can be from inherited binyanim (fłul, iffłel, itfəłłel, fəłłel, afłel, istəfłel) or from noun patterns (Assumes speakers are aware of literal meanings of the syntactic constructions) | |||
Latest revision as of 21:51, 5 July 2025
Knench /nɛnt͡ʃ/ (natively /ˈkʰnɔ̃ːnɪð/) is a divergent descendent of Canaanite spoken in Lõis Great Britain. It does not lose Semitic triconsonantal morphology, but it loses older Semitic conjugated verb forms in favor of a construction using the infinitive construct. Knench is the second largest Lõis British minority language after Welsh, in fact its syntax is similar to Colloquial Welsh.
The Knench were druids, kinda, before they converted to Christianity
l and r treated as in British English, Maghrebi-Arabic-like consonant clusters
Lots of nativized Latin loans, as in Welsh
/ʏ/ (more central than front, as in Icelandic) <- unstressed Vw; /ʊ/ <- unstressed Vl; /ə/ <- unstressed Vr
samekh -> /tsʰ/, tsade -> /ts/, zayin -> /z/, sin/shin -> /s/
definite suffix: /-əz/ singular; /-ʊ/, dialectally /-əl/ plural
Heth and he merge
pronouns:
- 1sg /ɪ/, (after vowel) /nɪ/
- 2sg /tʰə/
- 3sg m /hʏ/
- 3sg f /hɪ/
- 1pl /nʏ/
- 2pl /tʰəm/
- 3pl /həm/, (after vowel) /‿m/
Prepositions inflect Colloquial Welsh-style
/-əs/ becomes the default feminine suffix; e.g. /luːh/ 'god/God', /luːhəs/ 'goddess'
h-g-y 'to savor'
ʔ-h-b 'love': /hyːb/ |ʔhyːb| 'dear, beloved'
k-b-r 'big': /kʰəˈpiːə̯/ |kʰəbbiːr| 'big'
g-d-l which has merged with q-T-l means 'tyranny, violence, cruelty': /ktuː/ |gduːl| 'tyrant, tyrannical'
ʔ-š-r (ser 'sacred tree' -> 'soul')
One derivation I'm proud of is Knench młur ’daily life, waking life’ (hypothetical mâʕôr in Hebrew from biliteral ʕ-r 'awake')
Phonology
Knench phonology is complex, with underlying phonemes resulting in multiple phones depending on the phonetic environment (most importantly, stressed versus unstressed syllables; prevocalic or non-prevocalic for certain laryngeals)
Vowels
Consonants
Phones
Underlying consonants
- |ʔ| from Old Knench /ʔ/
- |b| from Old Knench /b/
- |g| from Old Knench /g/ and /q/
- |d| from Old Knench /d/ and /tˁ/
- |h| from Old Knench /h/
- |w| from Old Knench /w/
- |z| from Old Knench /z/ (from PSem *z and ð)
- |ħ| from Old Knench /ħ/ (from PSem *x and *ħ)
- |j| from Old Knench /j/
- |kʰ| from Old Knench /k/
- |l| from Old Knench /l/
- |m| from Old Knench /m/
- |n| from Old Knench /n/
- |tsʰ| from Old Knench /ts/ (from PSem *s)
- |ʁ̃| from Old Knench /ʕ/ (from PSem *ɣ and *ʕ)
- |f| from Old Knench /p/
- |ts| from Old Knench /tsˁ/ (from PSem *ṣ, *ṣ́, and *θ̣)
- |r| from Old Knench /r/
- |s| from Old Knench /s/ (from PSem *š, *ś, and *θ)
- |tʰ| from Old Knench /t/
Vocalizables
Vocalizables are underlying consonants that have vocalized forms when reduced or manifest as vowel lengthening or closing elements of diphthongs. These are: |ʔ|, |h|, |r|, |ʁ̃|, |l|, and |w|.
Mutation
Morphology
Verbs
Citation form is the singular imperative (same as the bare infinitive construct)
Knench verbs can be from inherited binyanim (fłul, iffłel, itfəłłel, fəłłel, afłel, istəfłel) or from noun patterns (Assumes speakers are aware of literal meanings of the syntactic constructions)