Naeng/Literature: Difference between revisions
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These were originally trigger affixes but | These were originally trigger affixes but had become derivational affixes by Classical Windermere times. | ||
*Core triggers | *Core triggers | ||
**''‹ăc›'' = Patient trigger [telic] | **''‹ăc›'' = Patient trigger [telic] |
Revision as of 23:17, 17 February 2018
Naeng/Literature | |
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չէıɱ Ֆ·ժ›ƍᶑ brits Lăcoaf | |
Created by | IlL, Praimhín |
Setting | Verse:Tricin |
Tergetic
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Classical Windermere (native name: brits Lăcoaf /brits ʟəkoəv/, Eevo: Lycóov Yvẃr 'Noble Windermere') was a standard variety of Lăcoaf spoken in the historically Windermere territories (Wen Dămea) It is based on the language of Windermere texts from ca. fT 900-1100. A classical language of Talma, it lent many words to Eevo and other Talman languages.
See also Modern Windermere.
Introduction
Windermere was originally created by Praimhín for the Fifth Linguifex Relay. It is currently being revived and adapted for Verse:Tricin as a classical language of Talma. This version will also be more synthetic than the original creator envisioned. It is a conlang based on similarities between Hebrew and Mon-Khmer languages, such as final stress, minor syllables and overall head-initial syntax. Aesthetically it's also inspired by Tíogall, one of my old sketches.
Todo
- Eevo-ish grammar but more synthetic
- Need a "causative"
- find a good incopyfix verbalizer
- Grammar: Salish/Eevo + Austronesian
Neutral:
- Meac id-imstief leth tsip ăłüth no-bătseal.
- sleeping DIR PL-idea green without color ADV-fury
- Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
Focused:
- Id-imstief leth tsip ăłüth mo-meac no-bătseal.
- DIR=PL-idea green without color REL=sleep ADV=fury
- It is the colorless green ideas that sleep furiously.
- Düeth id-lun.
- naked DIR-king
- The king is naked.
Avoid
- șoa or șo'a or similar - sho'ah is holocaust in hebrew
Phonology of Windermerean Windermere
Orthography
Consonants
- Ϫϫ Շչ Ɑᶑ Ѡϙ Ғғ Ѵѵ Ƌժ Ƨƨ ſʗ = p b f t d th c g ch
- Ɨɟ ʢє Ϯ₼ = m n ng
- Ϟɥ Ɔɔ Պɱ Ҕҕ Ʌʎ = s ł ts tł ș
- Էէ Ӿӿ Գƪ Քƍ Ֆⱷ Пп = r w y h l ʔ
Vowels
The vowel signs are placed to the right of the consonant letter.
- · : ; ı › ˫/⸗ƍ ⸗ = ă u ü i o e a; :ƍ ;ƍ ıƍ ›ƍ ˫ƍ = ua üe ie oa ea
Consonants
Labial | Alveolar | Lateral | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | ng /ŋ/ | |||||
Plosive | voiced | b /b/ | d /d/ | g /g/ | ||||
voiceless | p /p/ | t /t/ | c /k/ | ' /ʔ/ | ||||
Affricate | ts /ts̻/ | tł /tɬ/ | ||||||
Fricative | spirant | f /f~v/ | th /θ~ð/ | ch /x/ | ||||
nonspirant | s /s̻/ | ł /ɬ/ | ș /s̺~ʃ/ | h /h/ | ||||
Resonant | w /w/ | r /r/ | y /j/ | l /ʟ/ |
The glottal stop is not transcribed word-initially.
Vowels
These are the realization of vowels in Windermerean Windermere:
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- Notes
- /ə/ occurs only in unstressed syllables.
Old Windermere had breathy voiced vowels ah eh ih oh uh üh /aʱ eʱ iʱ oʱ uʱ yʱ/ which became e ea ie oa ua üe in Classical Winderemre.
Stress
Stress is invariably final.
Phonotactics
Zero and C are the only permitted word-final codas.
Phonology of Rhythoed
Morphology
Lăcoaf morphology is exclusively prefixing and infixing.
Nouns
im- is used as the plural prefix.
The case markers are the following:
- id: absolutive (subjects of intransitive verbs)
- u: ergative (subjects of transitive verbs)
- mi-: locative
- ya-: comitative
- șa-: allative
- faC-: from
- tsip : without
Pronouns
I | thou (m.) | thou (f.) | he | she | it | we (exc.) | we (inc.) | you (pl.) | they (an.) | they (inan.) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Indirect | rie | łen | łes | in | is | tan | tsa | bang | ngea | ănam | tănam |
Direct | grie | găłen | găłes | cin | cis | dan | gătsa | găbang | găngea | cănam | dănam |
After a preposition, indirect forms are used.
Demonstratives
- this: __ se
- that: __ fe
- here: rădun se, runse (casual)
- there: rădun fe, rumfe (casual)
- who: ășak fa, ășfa (casual)
- what: fa (in the sense of which), mül fa (in the sense of which thing)
- where: rădun fa, runfa (casual)
- when sngith fa, sngiffa (casual)
- how li-tănsü fa; lifa, tsüfa or litsüfa in casual speech
- all tsor (preposed)
- many mea (preposed)
- some tăchung (preposed)
- few łüp (preposed)
- other nătha
Verbs
Lăcoaf verbs inflect for mood, aspect, and trigger/voice, but not for tense.
The trigger system is a Tagalog-style trigger system, with the focus on the direct case argument.
In the imperative, the subject is omitted. The cohortative ('let's VERB') uses the syntax VERB ya-tsa, lit. 'VERB with us (exc)'.
Verbs and adjectives are actually predicate nouns, so a patient trigger verb can be used as a patient noun just by placing a case marker in front of it.
Aspect
Aspect inflection uses a combination of prefixes and reduplication.
Reduplicant uses 1st consonant (F) or last consonant (L)
- habitual = unmarked for some verbs but marked with ta- for others
- perfective = unmarked for some verbs but marked with em- for others
- prospective = Fef- (closest equivalent of future tense)
- momentane = bla-
- progressive = ăL-
- gnomic = FăL-
- frequentative = FeLFă-
- inchoative/inceptive = oLFă-
- graduative = tăFa-
Intensive
- thu- = intensive prefix
"Trigger"
These were originally trigger affixes but had become derivational affixes by Classical Windermere times.
- Core triggers
- ‹ăc› = Patient trigger [telic]
- ‹ră› = Patient trigger [atelic]
- ‹ăs› = Agent trigger [= a weird way of syntacticizing passive voice/ergativity]
- ‹ăb› = Reflexive trigger
- Applicative triggers - these meanings are not always literal. Without an explicit direct case argument, these verbs must be nominalized.
- ‹ăn› = Applicative trigger
- ‹ith› = Locative trigger
- ‹ăng› = Instrumental trigger
- ‹ăfong› = Destination trigger
- ‹ălis› = Comitative trigger
- ‹ăm› = Source/cause trigger
- ‹ăchem› = Benefactive/purpose trigger
- ‹ărea› = Malefactive trigger
Adjectives
Adjectives are stative verbs: they behave almost idenitcally to verbs but they cannot take the imperative by themselves.
Derivational morphology
- ‹aL› incopyfixation = nom'zer for underived verbs; ‹am› = nom'zer for verbs ending in vowel
- bin- = nominalizer for derived verbs
- hăl- = nominalizer for adjectives
- sa- = nominalizer
- și- = negation
- ing- = verbalizer
- yăn- = adjectivizer
- nu- = agentive
- pa- = patientive
- mo- = adjectivizer for verbs
TODO: verbalizers, "adjectivizers" ("X-like", "characterized by X")
- Head-initial concatenation. Common concatenated morphemes:
- hălwier = '-logy' (lit. "beauty of")
- wang = 'matter, affairs'
Syntax
Constituent order
The basic word order of Lăcoaf is DIRECT-VERB-INDIRECT - if there is no direct case argument for the trigger to act upon then the word order is VERB-INDIRECT. This should help promote the "focus-first"/"predicate-first" word order in Eevo.
Noun phrase
Verb phrase
There is a preverbal negative particle die.
Time clauses
For a non-finite time clause, mi- + verbal noun may be used.
Relative clauses
mo- = relativizer
- often combined with the complementizer: mong
Complement clauses
nga = complementizer