Gothevian: Difference between revisions
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* [w] is an allophone of /v/ when directly preceded or followed by a consonant. Compare ⟨[[Contionary:oš|{{lang|gthv|sc=Gthv|oš}}]]⟩ ['''v'''o̞ʃ] and ⟨[[Contionary:šoš|{{lang|gthv|sc=Gthv|šoš}}]]⟩ [ʃ'''w'''o̞ʃ]. | * [w] is an allophone of /v/ when directly preceded or followed by a consonant. Compare ⟨[[Contionary:oš|{{lang|gthv|sc=Gthv|oš}}]]⟩ ['''v'''o̞ʃ] and ⟨[[Contionary:šoš|{{lang|gthv|sc=Gthv|šoš}}]]⟩ [ʃ'''w'''o̞ʃ]. | ||
===Stress=== | ===Stress=== | ||
===Historical evolution=== | |||
==Orthography== | ==Orthography== | ||
<div style=display:inline-grid> | <div style=display:inline-grid> | ||
| Line 470: | Line 470: | ||
==Grammar== | ==Grammar== | ||
===Syntax=== | ===Syntax=== | ||
The predominant word order in Gothevian is [[w:Subject–verb–object word order|subject–verb–object]] (SVO), but in practice, word order exhibits a high degree of flexibility without much ambiguity. | |||
škázɛiny bóky | |||
Within the [[w:noun phrase|noun phrase]], adjectives commonly precede the noun. | |||
* '''<span style="color:#CC5E5E">{{lang|gthv|sc=Gthv|škázɛiny}}</span> <span style="color:#CC9D5F">{{lang|gthv|sc=Gthv|bóky}}</span>''' — ''''<span style="color:#CC5E5E">leather</span> <span style="color:#CC9D5F">book</span>'''' | |||
They can however follow the noun when marked for emphasis. | |||
* | |||
Although not present in the standard variety, a common feature of southern dialects is placing all adjectives ''after'' the noun. | |||
* | |||
Possessors commonly follow the noun. | |||
* | |||
For pronominal emphasis however, a genitive phrase with a dative pronoun is used. | |||
* | |||
Possessors are allowed to go before the noun for poetic license without any loss of meaning. | |||
* | |||
===Morphology=== | |||
===Nominals=== | ===Nominals=== | ||
====Pronouns==== | |||
=====Personal pronouns===== | |||
=====Demonstrative pronouns===== | |||
=====Interrogative pronouns===== | |||
=====Relative pronouns===== | |||
=====Indefinite pronouns===== | |||
====Nouns==== | |||
====Adjectives==== | |||
===Clitics=== | |||
===Verbs=== | ===Verbs=== | ||
==Vocabulary== | ==Vocabulary== | ||
==Sample texts== | ==Sample texts== | ||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
Revision as of 21:27, 9 July 2025
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| Gothevian | |
|---|---|
| gušk | |
Flag of the Republic of Gothevia | |
| Pronunciation | [ɡuʃk] |
| Created by | Vrianne |
| Date | 2024 |
| Setting | Earth |
| Native to | Gothevia |
| Ethnicity | Gothevian |
Indo-European
| |
Early forms | Proto-Indo-European
|
| Official status | |
Official language in | Gothevia |
Recognised minority language in | |
| Regulated by | Institute for the Gothevian Language |
Map of areas where Gothevian is spoken
...as a majority language
...as a minority language | |
Gothevian (gušk, gušk [ɡuʃk], formally róždun gúškun, róždun gúškun [ˈrwo̞ʒdun ˈɡuʃkun]) is an East Germanic language descendant from Gothic or a language mutually intelligible with it. Its speakers mainly reside within the borders of Gothevia, though there exist significant Gothevian-speaking communities in Bulgaria, Greece, and Serbia. it is the only surviving member of the East Germanic branch of the Germanic languages, though with being a member of Balkan sprachbund, it has evolved to be quite distinct in some aspects of its structure compared to other Germanic languages, with features such as evidentiality and the eradication of the Germanic strong verb.
Old Gothevian shares most of its features with Wulfilan Gothic, likely being descendent from dialects mutually intelligible with it. It was written in a descendant of the Gothic script, which modern Gothevian still uses. Gothevian, however, would begin to diverge from Wulfilan Gothic, with the biggest drivers being the Balkan sprachbund and Slavonic and Greek superstrata.
Classification
Gothevian is an Indo-European language that belongs to the East Germanic branch of the Germanic languages. It is the only surviving member of the East Germanic languages, with its closest living relatives being from other Branches of Germanic, such as Dutch, English, German, and Icelandic. Within the East Germanic branch, its closest relative is Gothic, followed by other East Germanic languages such as Vandalic, Burgundian, and likely Crimean Gothic.
Due to being located within the core Balkan region, it has features that set it apart from other Germanic languages. Such features include post-fixed articles, syncretism of locative and directional expressions, a future-tense particle, an inferential mood, among others. Gothevian was also under Greek and Slavic language influence for most of its history. This influence came with many lexical borrowings, but also several grammatical influences, such as the retention of a synthetic passive voice and creation of a synthetic aorist.
History
The history of Gothevian can be divided into several periods.
- The Migratory period (6th-8th century)...
- Old Gothevian (9th–12th century)...
- Middle Gothevian (13th–16th century)...
- Modern Gothevian (17th century–present)...
Etymology
The exonym "Gothevian" is a Latinized borrowing of the Koine Greek term "Γότθευικος" (Góttheuikos), itself a variant of older "Γότθευδικος" (Góttheudikos), a borrowing from "𐌲𐌿𐍄𐌸𐌹𐌿𐌳𐌹𐍃𐌺𐍃" (gutþiudisks), from "𐌲𐌿𐍄𐌸𐌹𐌿𐌳𐌰" (gutþiuda) + "-𐌹𐍃𐌺𐍃" (-isks), thus meaning "of the Goths". The endonym gušk (gušk) is a cognate of the Latin exonym, being a simplification of earlier gútsišk (gútsišk), from Old Gothevian gútsiudišk (gutþiudisk).
Phonology
Vowels
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Close | i | ɨ~ə~ɐ | u |
| Mid | e | o | |
| Open | a |
- Gothevian lacks a phonemic length distinction, but vowels in stressed syllables may allophonically be slightly lengthened.
- Mid vowels /e, o/ are mostly true-mid [e̞, o̞]. They may be allophonically pronounced closer to open-mid [e, o] in the vicinity of open vowels /i, u/, or closer to open-mid [ɛ, ɔ] in the vicinity of central vowels /a, ɨ/.
- The open vowel /a/ is true-central [ä].
- The non-open central vowel (notated here on out as /ɨ/) takes on a couple if realizations. In stressed positions it is commonly [ɨ]. In unstressed positions it is either also [ɨ], [ə], or, particularly in eastern and far-western dialects, [ɐ].
Consonants
| Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m | n | |||
| Plosive | voiceless | p | t | t͡ʃ | k |
| voiced | b | d | d͡ʒ | ɡ | |
| Fricative | voiceless | f | s | ʃ | x |
| voiced | v~ʋ | z | ʒ | ||
| Trill | r | ||||
| Approximant | l | j | (w) | ||
- /p, t, k/ are unaspirated [p, t, k].
- /s, z/ are denti-alveolar [s̟, z̟].
- /v/ may be a true fricative [v] or an approximant [ʋ].
- /r/ may be pronounced as either a trill [r] or a tap [ɾ]. The trilled pronunciation is commonplace when it is followed by a glide, such as in ⟨róždy⟩ [ˈrwo̞ʒdə].
- In eastern dialects, /l/ is velarized [ɫ].
- [w] is an allophone of /v/ when directly preceded or followed by a consonant. Compare ⟨oš⟩ [vo̞ʃ] and ⟨šoš⟩ [ʃwo̞ʃ].
Stress
Historical evolution
Orthography
| Letter | Translit. | Name | IPA | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| a | a | áfy (áfy) | /a/ | Gothic 𐌰 (a) |
| b | b | béty (béty) | /b/ | Gothic 𐌱 (b) |
| g | g | gámy (gámy) | /ɡ/ | Gothic 𐌲 (g) |
| d | d | déty (déty) | /d/ | Gothic 𐌳 (d) |
| ɛ | ɛ | ècy (ɛ́cy) | /e/ | Gothic 𐌴 (ē) |
| q | q | qèrsy (qɛ́rsy) | /k/1 | Gothic 𐌵 (q) |
| ž | ž | žéty (žéty) | /ʒ/ | Gothic 𐌶 (z) |
| z | z | zéty (zéty) | /z/ | Cyrillic З (z) |
| e | e | éty (éty) | /je/ | Greek Η (ē) |
| đ | đ | đèty (đɛ́ty) | /d͡ʒ/, /ʒ/2 | see below |
| h | h | hály (hály) | /Ø/ | Gothic 𐌷 (h) |
| s | s | séty (séty) | /s/ | Gothic 𐌸 (þ) |
| i | i | íöty (íöty) | /i/ | Gothic 𐌹 (i) |
| k | k | kápy (kápy) | /k/ | Gothic 𐌺 (k) |
| l | l | léty (léty) | /l/ | Gothic 𐌻 (l) |
| m | m | mvɛ (mvɛ) | /m/ | Gothic 𐌼 (m) |
| Letter | Translit. | Name | IPA | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | n | nvɛ (nvɛ) | /n/ | Gothic 𐌽 (n) |
| j | j | éry (éry) | /j/ | Gothic 𐌾 (j) |
| ɔ | ɔ | òmy (ɔ́my) | /o/ | Greek or Cyrillic Ο (o) |
| u | u | úry (úry) | /u/ | Gothic 𐌿 (u) |
| p | p | pe (pe) | /p/ | Gothic 𐍀 (p) |
| r | r | ro (ro) | /r/ | Gothic 𐍂 (r) |
| š | š | šíwmy (šíwmy) | /ʃ/ | Gothic 𐍃 (s) |
| t | t | taw (taw) | /t/ | Gothic 𐍄 (t) |
| y | y | ýcy (ýcy) | /ɨ/ | Gothic 𐍅 (w) |
| v | v | vècy (vɛ́cy) | /v~w/ | derived from y (y) |
| f | f | fe (fe) | /f/ | Gothic 𐍆 (f) |
| x | x | xe (xe) | /x/ | Gothic 𐍇 (x) |
| ƕ | ƕ | ƕaíry (ƕaíry) | /Ø/1 | Gothic 𐍈 (ƕ) |
| c | c | cèty (cɛ́ty) | /t͡ʃ/, /ʃ/2 | see below |
| o | o | ómy (ómy) | /vo~wo/ | Gothic 𐍉 (ō) |
Digraphs and Trigraphs
| Letter | Translit. | IPA |
|---|---|---|
| ai | ai | /ja/ |
| aw | aw | /va~wa/ |
| ɛi | ɛi | /je/ |
| iw | iw | /vɨ~wɨ/ |
| ow | ow | /va~wa/ |
| Letter | Translit. | IPA |
|---|---|---|
| qa | qa | /kwa/ |
| qai | qai | /kwɨ/ |
| qɛ | qɛ | /kɨ/ |
| qɛi | qɛi | /kwe/ |
| qe | qe | |
| qi | qi | /kwɨ/ |
| Letter | Translit. | IPA |
|---|---|---|
| ƕa | ƕa | /va~wa/ |
| ƕai | ƕai | /vɨ~wɨ/ |
| ƕɛ | ƕɛ | /ɨ/ |
| ƕɛi | ƕɛi | /ve~we/ |
| ƕe | ƕe | |
| ƕi | ƕi | /vɨ~wɨ/ |
Obsolete letters
| Letter | Translit. | Name | IPA | Source | Replaced by |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| θ | θ | θéty (θéty) | /t, s/ | Greek θ (th) | t (t), s (s) |
| ξ | ξ | ξe (ξe) | /kʃ, ks/ | Greek ξ (x) | kš (kš), ks (ks) |
| ψ | ψ | ψe (ψe) | /pʃ, ps/ | Greek ψ (ps) | pš (pš), ps (ps) |
Grammar
Syntax
The predominant word order in Gothevian is subject–verb–object (SVO), but in practice, word order exhibits a high degree of flexibility without much ambiguity. škázɛiny bóky Within the noun phrase, adjectives commonly precede the noun.
- škázɛiny bóky — 'leather book'
They can however follow the noun when marked for emphasis.
Although not present in the standard variety, a common feature of southern dialects is placing all adjectives after the noun.
Possessors commonly follow the noun.
For pronominal emphasis however, a genitive phrase with a dative pronoun is used.
Possessors are allowed to go before the noun for poetic license without any loss of meaning.