Kalyahekwe: Difference between revisions

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When an object is possessed by somebody, it is marked by a possessive marker. All possessive prefixes are represented in the table below:
When an object is possessed by somebody, it is marked by a possessive marker. All possessive prefixes are represented in the table below:
{| class="wikitable"
{| class="wikitable"
! colspan=2 |Subject prefixes
! colspan=4 |Subject prefixes
|-
|-
| colspan=2 | singular
|  
| singular
| dual
| dual
| plural
| plural

Revision as of 14:18, 24 June 2020

Kalyah language
Kalyahekwe
Pronunciation[/kalʲ.ˈja.hɛ.kʷɛ/]
Created byRaistas
Settingplanet Liifam
EthnicityKalyaheen
Settameric languages
  • Western Plains languages
    • Kalyah language
Early form
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.

Kalyah (with four varieties, known as Möhkinis, Teimyois, Šonoowis and Eihtoomis) is a language, spoken in the western part of a vast flat region of the Northern continent, simply called the Plains. The most commonly spoken variety is Teimyois, it is referred to as an "ð-dialect", because the *θ is still distinct in most cases as a phoneme /ð/. The grammar and the examples used here are from Teimyois, but data on other dialects will be given as well. It is spoken by approximately 117,000 people across the northern part of the Plains near the Frost Bay (Iniikekwa).

Kalyah is believed to have begun as a Plains Settameric dialect spoken between 2,500 and 3,000 years ago in the original homeland, near the Kahaaler mountains and slowly spread eastward. However, it's divergence into separate dialects began much later, around 700 years ago. The main criteria of division are reflexes of *l, *š and *θ as the boundaries, made by those reflexes, are quite clear. Another important phonological variation involves the palatalisation of the phoneme *k to "č" before /j/ and /i(ː)/, however the division is not as clear, since *ky is often pronounced as [c] in the west, slowly becomes [c͡ç], when moving eastward, until it finally becomes [t͡ʃ] Eihtoomis dialect.

Phonology

Consonants

This table shows the possible consonant phonemes in the Kalyah language and its varieties:

Bilabial Dental Postalveolar Palatalized Velar Glottal
plain labialized
Nasal m n ny /nʲ/
Stop p t ky /c/ k kw /kʷ/
Fricative f θ s š /ʃ/ hy /ç/ h
Affricate c /t͡s/ č /t͡ʃ/
Approximant w ð y /j/
Lateral Approximant l ly /lʲ/
  •   Found only in the Möhkinis dialect, where it is a reflex of *č. This dialect has no [t͡ʃ]
  •   Present in Teimyois and Möhkinis. [ð] comes from *θ between two vowels in Teimyois and from *l in Möhkinis. *l is preserved as [l] in Teimyois, becomes [n] in Šonoowis and [j] in Eihtoomis.
  •   Present in Šonoowis and in Southern Eihtoomis. In other dialects *š becomes [s].

When /j/ precedes a consonant, it becomes palatalized. In most dialects /j/ then disappears. For example the name of the language is often pronounced [ka.ˈlʲa.he.kʷe] with a palatalized (or even a trully palatal /l/). In Eihtoomis plain velars also palatalize before /i(ː)/ and become [t͡ʃ]. A unique combination is "hy" which is almost always pronounced [ç], but that sound is rare, for example: lyahyi "rime" is [lʲaçɪ]. Whether palatalized consonants are separate phonemes or not is a matter of debate, but there is at least one minimal pair: lyoma ([ˈlʲo.ma], "hiding") and loma ([ˈlo.ma], "hammer, obviative") since two consonants in a row are not allowed word-initially in Kalyah. Both plosives and affricates (except č) can be preaspirated between two vowels and word-finally in monosyllabic words, which is marked with "h" before a consonant, for example: ahto "man", fohk "leaf", iskahceh "s/he fed it", fiihp "lake", liihkʷ "fire".

Vowels

Vowels
Front Back
unrounded rounded
Close ii |[iː] öö [øː~ʉː] oo [oː~uː]
Near-Close i [ɪ] ö [ø~ʏ] o [o~ʊ]
Mid ee [eː]
Near-Open e [ɛ]
Open a [a] aa [ɑː~ɔɑ]

All dialects have the same set of vowels, but they may differ in certain words. Kalyah has several diphthongs as well, that can be monophthongized in many Southern varieties. The quality of those diphthongs varies too among dialects:

Diphthongs
Dialects:
Möhkinis Teimyois Šonoowis Eihtoomis
ei [aɪ] [eɪ] [ɛæ] [eɪ]
aa [ɒː] [ɔɑ] [ɔɑ] [ɑː]
oi [oɪ] [ʊɪ] [ɛɵ~œ] [øʏ]
yo [jo] [jo] [œː] [je]
ya [ja] [ja] [ɛæ] [je]
[jo] [jø] [øː] [øː]

Prosody

Stress in Kalyahekwe is non-phonemic. Traditionally, the word stress is antepenultimate and dynamic. This means that it falls on the third from last syllable in words with three or more syllables, but on the first syllable of the root in other words. But in Northern dialects it is always placed on the initial syllable instead. Both variations are correct in modern Kalyah. In its earlier stages of development Kalyah probably had a pitch accent, but it was lost completely nowadays. If a word is longer than four syllables, a secondary stress can be placed on the second to last syllable, for instance: koočikwaaniitis [koː.ˈt͡ʃɪ.kʷɔɑ.ˌniː.tɪs] "we might not be running around".

Morphology

Like most Settameric languages, Kalyah is highly synthetic, meaning it exhibits a great deal of synthesis and a very high morpheme-to-word ratio. It is agglutinating, and thus builds up words by stringing morpheme after morpheme together, rather than having several affixes which carry numerous different pieces of information, but certain morphemes can fuse together.

Kalyahekwe distinguishes between animate and inanimate categories in nouns and person markers. Animate nouns are generally living things that can move on their own, and inanimate ones generally nonliving things, although that is not a simple rule because of the cultural specifics. Some words are distinguished by their noun class and have the same root; for example, hacikwi means "fir tree" and is animate, while hacikw is inanimate and means "wood".

Nouns

Apart from animacy, Kalyah nouns have a category of number, a simple singular/plural contrast for almost all nouns, but words for naturally paired objects have dual, which acts like plural. Verbs must agree with the animacy and number of its nouns. Kalyah nouns do not have a case distinction, but it has obviation instead, where one of the two participants would be marked as proximate (whichever one was deemed more important), and the other marked as obviative. In some situations, like when a sentence contains an intransitive verb, obviative marking is omitted. This is also true of sentences with only one noun where the role of the noun is obvious from the personal marking on the verb.

Inanimate Animate
"hammer" "woman"
Singular Plural Singular Plural
Proximate lom loma lomin lomoi
Obviate očča oččoo oččan oččone

When an object is possessed by somebody, it is marked by a possessive marker. All possessive prefixes are represented in the table below:

Subject prefixes
singular dual plural
1st k(i)- kas- kil-
2nd t(i)- tas- til-
3rd an. h(i)- has- hil-
3rd inan. yo- yas- yil-

Verbs

Verbs mark aspect, mood, subject and object and have two categories: independent (in a main clause) and conjunct (used in subordinate clauses, with participles and question particles).