Yrkyr: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 13:36, 26 June 2019

Yrkyr language
Jyrkyr
Irgva.png
Pronunciation[/ˈjər.kər/]
Created byRaistas
Settingplanet Morev
EthnicityJyrwutyr
Native speakers70 000 (271 local year)
Yrharian
  • Yrkyr language
Early forms
Proto-Yrharian
  • Proto-North-Yrharian
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Yrkyr (Yr: jyrkyr /ˈjər.kər/, or jyrharkyr /jər.ˈhɑr.kər/) is a North Yrharian language, spoken in the northeastern part of Mtovrex (Turix/tʷu.ˈrʲix/) in the Irgva continent (Kynon /kə.ˈnʌn/). The name of the language means "the speech of the local people". The other living Yrharian language is Yhkagur /jə.ʰka.ɣʷur/ spoken further north between the White Mountains and the Shallow Sea, which is unintelligible to Yrkyr. Both languages evolved from a common ancestor approximately 2 000 years ago and still remain in contact, allowing new words entering easily. Yrkyr also underwent a slight Mtari influence by the contact with the Mtari people. It is reflected by the presence of many Mtari loanwords in its vocabulary, however they were adapted to the Yrkyr phonology and thus may be almost completely unrecognizable to a Mtari speaker.

The Yrkyr language has approximately 70 thousand native speakers, most of whom are monolingual and illiterate. Some also learned Mtari due to the modern compulsory education policy, which requires children to get a basic education in boarding schools.

Yrhu

Yrhu (jyrhu /jər.ˈɦu/) is a dialect of Yrkyr spoken next to the Shallow Sea. While being intelligible with Yrkyr to some degree, it differ in vocabulary and grammar from the inland language. It shares some more lexical similarity with Yhkagur, while phonologically it is almost identical to Yrkyr.

Phonology

Consonants

Like other Yrharian languages, Yrkyr lacks a voiceless/voiced distinction in consonants, which is present in Mtari and thus makes a noticeable accent in Yrharians trying to speak it. Consonant clusters are not allowed word-intially and finally in native words, and only two consonants are allowed together medially, creating a steady rhythm while speaking the language. This rule is also applied to loanwords from Mtari, which allows long consonant clusters. Even the name of the language is Tari in Yrkyr. Syllables ending in a consonant are considered heavy and usually receive a stress, which is otherwise unpredictable.

Bilabial Dental Post-alveolar Velar Glottal
central lateral plain labialized
Nasal m n ŋ ŋʷ
Plosive p t k
Affricate t͡s t͡ʃ t͡ɬ[note 1]
Fricative s ʃ (ɬ)[note 2] x h (ɦ)[note 3]
Approximant j l w
Trill r
  1. ^ Merged with /r/ in the South due to Mtari influence.
  2. ^ In Yrhu dialect /ɬ/ is still a separate phoneme, while elsewhere it merged with /l/ due to Mtari influence.
  3. ^ In Yrhu dialect [ɦ] is present everywhere, except word finally, while in Yrkyr [h] is more common.

Palatalization and labialization are two unique Yrharian features. In Proto-Yrharian almost every consonant had a palatalized and a labialized variants. But a sound change, that resulted in lowering of North Yrharian high vowels, allowed to eliminate them as phonemic everywhere, except for velars, which still preserve labialized counterparts. In modern language both palatalization and labialization occure before /i/ and /u/ respectively, but these features are not phonemic anymore. Instead new consonant alterations derived from the change.

Vowels

Front Central Back
long short long short
Close i u
Mid ə
Open-mid ɛː ɛ ʌː ʌ
Open ɑ

There are five vowels, four of which contrast in length. The quality of long vowels mostly overlaps with the quality of short vowels, except long ones are pronounced slightly more closed, while short vowels are slightly centralized. The only exception is /aː/ which is fronted noticeably comparing to its short counterpart. Long vowels are denoted with a silent "h" before consonants in the orthography, since the consonant /h/ appeares in this environment, while conjugating various words. In Yrhu the final "h" is pronounced as a weak aspiration, but it is still silent before other consonants, lengthening a preceding vowel.

Phonotactics

Most basic Yrkyr word roots are monosyllabic. Typical syllable structures are V, CV and CVC, where C is a consonant and V is a vowel. The first two types are called light syllables, which take part in vowel alterations and don't receive stress, when there is a heavy syllable of a CVC structure nearby. There are no limitations to which consonant may appear word-initially or in consonant clusters, which are only possible on syllable boundaries. Root final clusters are not allowed, an epenthetic [ə] being inserted between the consonants, when such a cluster would appear. Vowel sequences are also not allowed, except between different words. Nearby consonants and vowels are affecting each other, creating a comlex system of alterations, some of which became unpredictable with time, for example: lyči /ˈlə.t͡ʃi/ - "to see", lyteŋ /lə.ˈtɛn/ - "I see it", where /t/ always palatalizes to /t͡ʃ/ before /i/; kʷocawun /kʷʌ.t͡sɑ.ˈwun/ - while bathing, lykwos /lə.ˈkʷʌs/ to wash (something) - kwoskyŋ /ˈkʷʌs.kəŋ/ "I wash up", laxkwohŋ /lɑx.ˈkʷʌːŋ/ - "I took a bath", where /t͡s/ becomes /s/ and dissappears.

Morphology

All Yrkyr words fall into one of three, clearly differentiated, classes; verbs, nominals, and particles. The latter class is a collecting term for various non-inflecting words. Nominals may be derived from verbal stems but apparently no verb is derived from a nominal stem, instead a nominal root is attached to an existing verb - a process, called noun incorporation. Nominals may be derived from verbal stems but. Adjectives and adverbials derive from either verbs or nominals, but all of them behave like stative verbs, so they are not listed as a separate class. Yrkyr is between agglutinative and fusional types of language and inflections are often essential to clear understanding and transmission of information. It is also fairly regular in its nominal morphology, but more irregular in the verb one. There are dozens of old irregular verbs with completely unpredictable conjugation patterns, resulted from various sound changes. Proto-Yrharian is considered to had been far more regular polysynthetic, but over time all of its descendants gained more and more irregularities.

Nominal morphology

Yrharain has two nominal declensions based on animacy: animate and inanimate. Each declension has its own set of case markings. Most animals, people, some weather fenomena like thunder, and supernatural entities are animate, while most non-living things, insects, abstract and collective nouns, plants, and sky/weather features are inanimate. Animate nouns typically take the ergative case, while inanimate - either absolutive or instrumental cases, when two are present in a sentence, regardless of their actual role as a subject and an object.

Nominals are inflected for seven cases and three numbers (singular, dual and plural). Any animate noun can take dual number, while only naturally paired inanimate nouns can take it. The rest usually take plural. Mass nouns do not have plurals but new nouns can be derived from them by attaching a plural marker. They would still be declined as singular ones, while the plural marker becomes a suffix. This process is called suffixaufnahme. It can also occure with genitive and dative markers, which become suffixes and can receive new endings. For example, toj - "side", tojiha "sideways" (of the side), become tojihka "to the side", tojihcan "suddenly" (out from the side).

Case endings
Animate Inanimate
Singular Dual Plural Singular Plural
Absolutive -Ø/-i -x -x
Ergative -an/-ahn -yn -iŋ -i/-ih -nyŋ
Dative -ka -yŋka -iŋa -ki -nyŋa
Instrumental -o -(u)jo -no -o -jo
Genitive* -aha(t-) -yjxa(t-) -iŋka(t-) -iha(t-) nyŋka(t-)
Commitative -oš -uš -noš - -
Ablative -acaŋ -ycaŋ -incaŋ -icaŋ -yncaŋ
  • Genitive case can serve a locative case function when a -t suffix is added and then a locative particle is attached to the suffix.

In order to mark possession, genitive case is used. But Yrkyr does not have separate possessive pronouns like English "my" or "her". Instead there are possessive suffixes, attached to the end of a word. Possessive suffixes are almost the same as person markers in verbs, which they are derived from.

Possessive suffixes
Singular Dual Plural
1st person -(k)uŋ -toŋ
2nd person -kus -x(t)oŋ
3rd person -(k)e -we -kʷoŋ