Syzkyn

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Syzkyn
сызқынҟы мол / სჷზქჷნყჷ მოლ
syzkynqy mol
Pronunciation[ˈsɘzˌkʲʰəɴ.qʹə mɔɫ]
Created byrnifnuf
Date2017-
Native toRussia, Georgia, Turkey, with small diaspora
EthnicitySyzkyn
Native speakersApproximately 400,000 (2021)
Indo-European
  • North Germanic
    • East Scandinavian?
      • Syzkyn
Early form
Old Norse
Official status
Official language in
Russia
  • Syzkyn Republic
Recognised minority
language in
Jordan
Turkey
Israel
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Syzkyn is a North Germanic language spoken predominantly in the Syzkyn Republic, a Federal Subject of the Russian Federation located in the western Caucasus. It is the native language of the Syzkyn people, who are thought to be the only descents of the Scandinavian Rus' people who were not fully assimilated by Slavs.

Phonology

Syzkyn's phonological inventory is similar to those of Kartvelian languages.

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Postalveolar Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal m n [ŋ]1 [ɴ]2
Plosive Aspirated kʰ~kʲʰ
Voiced b d g~gʲ
Ejective kʹ~kʲʹ (ʔ)
Affricate Aspirated t͡sʰ t͡ʃʰ [qχʰ]3
Voiced d͡z d͡ʒ [ɢʁ]3
Ejective t͡sʹ t͡ʃʹ
Fricative Voiceless f s ʃ x~χ ħ~h
Voiced v~ʋ4 z ʒ ɣ~ʁ
Approximant l j
Rhotic r~ɾ
  1. Allophone of /n/ before velars
  2. Allophone of /n/ before uvulars
  3. [qχʰ] and [ɢʁ] are realizations of /χ/ and /ʁ/ after nasals
  4. The fricative [v] and approximant [ʋ] are in free variation
    1. [ʋ] is the most prevalent realization after a vowel
    2. /v/ is realized as [ʷ] after a consonant

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i ɨ~ə1 u
Mid e~ɛ3 o~ɔ4
Open a~ɑ2
  1. /ə/ has several allophones:
    1. [ɘ] or [ɨ] when stressed and not following a labialized or palatalized consonant
    2. [ɪ] after a palatalized velar (in dialects that palatalize the velar stops) or /j/
    3. [ʊ] after a labialized consonant
  2. Typically reduced to [ɐ] when unstressed. Broadly transcribed as /a/
  3. Broadly transcribed as /e/
  4. Broadly transcribed as /o/

Prosody

In Syzkyn, stress can be located on any syllable in a word. Typically, in words of Norse origin, primary stress is on the first syllable, often occurring on other syllables in words of non-Norse origin. However, stress remains on the same syllable in all inflected forms.

Orthography

The primary modern orthography for Syzkyn is the Cyrillic alphabet, which is similar to the alphabet used for Abkhaz. Historically, it has also been written in the Mkhedruli script, which some speakers in diaspora still use.

Cyrillic Mkhedruli Transliteration IPA Notes
А а A a a
Б б B b b
Г г G g g
Ӷ ӷ Ğ ğ ɣ~ʁ Can be substituted with ҕ
Д д D d d
Дж дж Dž dž d͡ʒ
Дз дз Dz dz d͡z
Е е (ჲ)ე (J)E, (j)e (j)e /je/ initially and after vowels, otherwise /e/
Ё ё ჲო Jo jo jo
Ж ж Ž ž ʒ
З з Z z z
И и I i i
Й й J j j
К к K' k'
Қ қ K k
Ҟ ҟ Q q
Л л L l l
М м M m m
Н н N n n
О о O o o
П п P' p'
Ԥ ԥ P p Can be substituted with ҧ
Р р R r r
С с S s s
Т т T' t'
Ҭ ҭ T t
У у U u u
Ф ф F f f
Х х X x χ
Ҳ ҳ H h h
Ц ц C c t͡sʰ
Ҵ ҵ C' c' t͡sʹ
Ч ч Č' č' t͡ʃʹ
Ҷ ҷ Č č t͡ʃʰ
Ш ш Š š ʃ
Ы ы Y y ə
Э э E e e Only used initially or after vowels
Ю ю ჲუ Ju ju ju
Я я ჲა Ja ja ja

Stress is typically unmarked, but for documentation is indicated with an acute (á).

Grammar

Syzkyn's grammar has been heavily influenced by Kartvelian languages, but continues some characteristic features of Old Norse. Broadly, Syzkyn is agglutinating, dependent-marking, pro-drop, and strongly head-final.

Morphological Alternations

Ablaut and Umlaut

Syzkyn preserved Germanic Ablaut and Norse Umlaut to a limited extent. Neither is productive in the modern language, and the u-mutation like that found in Icelandic is entirely lost in Syzkyn.

H-Vocalization

Old Norse /g/ debuccalized to *ɦ after a vowel. Later, *ɦ vocalized to /j/ after a non-low front vowel, /v/ after a non-low back rounded vowel, and eventually to /a/ after a low vowel but before a consonant or word boundary; all remaining *ɦ devoiced to merge with /h/. The vocalization to /a/ did not happen before a vowel, leading to an alternation between /a/ and /h/ when a vowel-initial morpheme is suffixed to roots ending in /ea/, /oa/, and /aa/.

For example, the plural form of даа, from Old Norse dagr, is даҳар from Old Norse dagar.

Glottalization

When two obstruents come into contact through affixation, they may merge into a single ejective consonant. This change is most common in constructions preserved from Old Norse.

Spirantization

/l/ spirantizes to /ʒ/ after a voiced stop, /ʃ/ after an aspirated stop, and /t͡ʃʹ/ after ejectives.

Uvularization and Velarization

/χ/, /ʁ/, and /qʹ/ may alternate respectively with /kʰ/, /g/, and /kʹ/ due to suffixation or ablaut.

Nouns

Syzkyn nouns are formed through a root that can take up to three suffixes. The first two suffixes, respectively encoding number (singular/plural) and definiteness, are inherited from the Old Norse nominative forms. The third suffix encodes grammatical case, with suffixes derived from prepositions, later postpositions, that became grammaticalized after the erosion of the Old Norse case system.

Inflection classes, number, and definiteness

Syzkyn nouns can be divided into four broad classes depending on how plurals and definiteness are marked. Although Syzkyn does not have grammatical gender, the classes are named for the gender that the noun would have had in Old Norse, albeit after the Masculine and Feminine merged into a Common gender. There are three Common declensions and one Neuter declension.

First Common Declension

First Common Declension nouns reflect the Old Norse masculine a-stem and an-stem nouns, as well as the feminine ō-stem and in-stem nouns. They usually end in a consonant or -ы, the latter of which is elided when a vowel-initial morpheme is suffixed.

First
Common
Declension
a/ō-stem reflex
боҭ 'boat'
an/in-stem reflex
қалақы 'city'
H-Vocalization
даа 'day'
Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural
боҭ боҭ-ар қалақ-ы қалақ-ар даа даҳ-ар
Second Common Declension

Second Common Declension nouns reflect the Old Norse i-stems and u-stems, as well as the feminine ōn-stems. Despite not having been masculine or feminine in Old Norse, the neuter an-stems are also reflected by this group, having been absorbed into the feminine ōn-stems due to their relative paucity and similar declension. They inflect similarly to a-stems but take plurals in -(ы)р. Singulars either use no suffix or -а, the latter of which is elided by the plural suffix but not the definite article.

Second
Common
Declension
i/u-stem reflex
сул 'sun'
ōn-stem reflex
ӷаҭа 'street/road'
Vowel-final example
ҟу 'shoe'
Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural
сул сул-ыр ӷаҭ-а ӷаҭ-ыр ҟу ҟу-р
Third Common Declension

Nouns of the Third Common Declension reflect the various Old Norse consonant stem nouns aside from the n-stems. The nominative plural *-iz suffix reconstructed in Proto-Germanic manifested in Old Norse as an -r that caused i-mutation in the stem in Old Norse. This plural ending is lost in Syzkyn, but the umlaut remained due to the frequent usage of these nouns. Due to the collapse of historical frontness and rounding distinctions among the reflexes of Old Norse's short vowels, however, umlaut only directly affects vowels that were long in Old Norse, so some Third Common Declension nouns do not directly show any alternation of the stem vowel; however, velarization may still occur.

Third
Common
Declension
r-stem reflex
музыр 'mother'
Consonant stem with velarization
ӷос 'street/road'
Number-agnostic common noun
ман 'person'
Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural
муз-ыр мез ӷос гес ман
Neuter Declension

Nouns of the Old Norse neuter a-stem are reflected in the Syzkyn Neuter Declension, for which there is no plural suffix. However, the definite article inflects for plurality.

Neuter
Declension
ҳус 'house' цу 'thigh' гыжды 'guild/company'
Singular Plural Singular Plural Singular Plural
ҳус цу гыжды

Definite Article

Inherited from Old Norse, the definite article is suffixed to the noun after the number marking if there is any. The definite article itself also inflects for number, even if the noun itself has no indefinite plural marking.

Definite
Article
Singular Plural
Common -(ы)н -ныр
Neuter -(ы)ҭ -(ы)н

The (ы) is included if the stem ends in a vowel that is not the result of H-vocalization; otherwise it is dropped. If the stem ends in a vocalized ҳ, then the (ы) is included and the vocalization is reversed. For example, the singular definite of даа '(a) day' is даҳын 'the day'. Some speakers, particularly of lower socioeconomic classes, elide the (ы) without reversing H-vocalization; in the case of даа, for example, the definite form for these speakers would be даан.

Cases

All nouns use the same set of case markers.

Case Ending Etymology Allomorphy
Nominative Inherited directly from Old Norse N/A
Accusative Nominative for inanimate nouns, dative for animate nouns
Genitive Old Norse a/i-stems and Georgian1 -ыс after sibilants
Dative -аҭ Old Norse at 'to' Elides final ы but is otherwise -ҭ after a vowel
Instrumental -ма/гвы Old Norse með and við 'with' -ма prohibited after labials, -гвы prohibited after dorsals, otherwise in free variation
Adverbial -ав Old Norse af 'of, from, by' Elides final ы but is otherwise -в after a vowel
Locative Old Norse í 'in, on' Elides final ы but is otherwise -й after a vowel
  1. The ending is homophonous with the Georgian genitive ending -ს -s. Some scholars believe that, since two of the most numerous classes of nouns in Old Norse already used -s as their genitive singular ending, Georgian influence caused this ending to spread to other nouns.

Adjectives

Pronouns

Verbs

Adverbs

Derivational Morphology

Syntax

Sample Texts