Verse:Lõis/Thurish: Difference between revisions
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'''Thurish''' /ˈθɚrɪʃ/ ''THER-ish'' (natively ''þawrysko'', ''þawrysk gwered'' /θəwˈrɨsk gwered/ or more formally ''þawrysk wordrad''; ''þawrysk'' is cognate to Russian север 'north') is a Balto-Slavic language spoken in our Finland (its speakers are called "the Thurs" in English). It evolved in a sprachbund with English | '''Thurish''' /ˈθɚrɪʃ/ ''THER-ish'' (natively ''þawrysko'', ''þawrysk gwered'' /θəwˈrɨsk gwered/ or more formally ''þawrysk wordrad''; ''þawrysk'' is cognate to Russian север 'north') is a Balto-Slavic language spoken in our Finland (its speakers are called "the Thurs" in English). It evolved in a sprachbund with English, Brythonic languages and [[Hivatish]]. It's the most spoken Balto-Slavic language in the [[Verse:Unbegotten|Unbegotten]] timeline. It has some non-SAE features, such as split-ergativity (conditioned by tense as in Hindi). | ||
Thurish is a stem-Slavic language, meaning that it is descended from a dialect of early Proto-Slavic but not Common Slavic. Proto-Thurish (meaning the stage immediately after the hypothetical split from our Slavic) undergoes some palatalization early on but turns them into geminates or Greekifies them (ly > ll > ɬ etc.). | Thurish is a stem-Slavic language, meaning that it is descended from a dialect of early Proto-Slavic but not Common Slavic. Proto-Thurish (meaning the stage immediately after the hypothetical split from our Slavic) undergoes some palatalization early on but turns them into geminates or Greekifies them (ly > ll > ɬ etc.). |
Revision as of 21:12, 4 April 2021
Thurish /ˈθɚrɪʃ/ THER-ish (natively þawrysko, þawrysk gwered /θəwˈrɨsk gwered/ or more formally þawrysk wordrad; þawrysk is cognate to Russian север 'north') is a Balto-Slavic language spoken in our Finland (its speakers are called "the Thurs" in English). It evolved in a sprachbund with English, Brythonic languages and Hivatish. It's the most spoken Balto-Slavic language in the Unbegotten timeline. It has some non-SAE features, such as split-ergativity (conditioned by tense as in Hindi).
Thurish is a stem-Slavic language, meaning that it is descended from a dialect of early Proto-Slavic but not Common Slavic. Proto-Thurish (meaning the stage immediately after the hypothetical split from our Slavic) undergoes some palatalization early on but turns them into geminates or Greekifies them (ly > ll > ɬ etc.).
Thurish has lost the Balto-Slavic pitch accent system. Some vowel reflexes differ by accent; the PBS acute makes vowels RTR and thus has RTR-like effects on vowels (i > e, u > o, a > o in some cases). Stress is weakly final.
It is inspired by Welsh, Greek, and Hebrew.
PBS *dōra, *źemē, *waljā, *źwēris > *dōrə, *źemmē₁, *wallā, *ẑē₁rɨ > duar, jemne, gwəllo, ghieră /duər, jɛmnɛ, gwəɬɔ, ʀiərɨ/ "gift, earth, pleasure, animal"
dear? dêr? = tree (derwan > *dē₂r)
- dʰer-mos > dermas 'is suitable' > derm "good" (~ firmus, dharma)
Ăh gworðon þawryske derm /əx gwɐr'ðɔn θəwrɨs'kɛ 'dɛrɛm/ = I speak Thurish well
giwiþ = to live
TODO: Russian/Hebrew-esque vowel reduction
Phonology
Voiceless stops are aspirated; historical voiced stops may be devoiced
Declension
Warhinysko has 5 cases: nominative, accusative, oblique-ergative, genitive, and vocative. The oblique-ergative was formed from a merger of the PBS dative, instrumental and locative cases.
Thurish has lost IE grammatical gender. However, like in Slavic languages, there is an animacy distinction: the accusative case is the same as the genitive for animate nouns and the same as the nominative for inanimate nouns.
- Llawbdon mina jenos = I love my wife (animate)
- Llawbdon min wordrad = I love my language (inanimate)
o-stem declension
gwylk = wolf | guolo = head | morr /mor̥/ = sea | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | singular | plural | singular | plural | |
Nominative | gwylk | gwylke | guolo | guolos | morr | morre |
Genitive | gwylka | gwylku | guolos | guolu | morra | morru |
Accusative | gwylka | gwylku | guolo | guolos | morr | morre |
Oblique-Ergative | gwylki | gwylkăn | guole | guolon | morri | morrăn |
Vocative | gwylky! | gwylke! | guolă! | guolos! | morry! | morre! |
Segolates
"Segolates" come from PBS CVCC- stem nouns. Some segolates (the ones that have fixed accent in PBS) do not change their stems in the plural.
gwéren = raven | gwarnó = crow | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | singular | plural | |
Nominative | gwéren | gwrané | gwarnó | gwarnós |
Genitive | gwerná | gwranú | gwarnós | gwarnú |
Accusative | gwerná | gwranú | gwarnó | gwarnós |
Oblique-Ergative | gwerní | gwranán | gwarné | gwarnón |
Vocative | gwerný! | gwrané! | gwarná! | gwarnós! |
i-stem declension
u-stem declension
ma-declension
gwerrma = time (m.) | korma = result (m.) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
singular | plural | singular | plural | |
Nominative | gwerrma | gwerrmyno | korma | kormyno |
Genitive | gwerrmyn | gwerrmynu | kormyn | kormynu |
Accusative | gwerrma | gwerrmyno | korma | kormyno |
Oblique-Ergative | gwerrmyni | gwerrmynăn | kormyni | kormynăn |
Vocative | gwerrma! | gwerrmyno! | korma! | kormyno! |
(Korma is the in-universe source of English karma; it began as a slang term borrowed from Thurish immigrants.)
Pronouns
case | 1sg. | 2sg. (familiar) | 3sg. | 1pl. | 2pl., polite | 3pl. | refl. | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
he | she | it | |||||||
nom. | ăh | tu | săn | so | tăt | mus | wus | se | - |
acc. | myna | twa | ja | jo | tăt | năs | wăs | jus | swa |
gen. | myn, possessive min | tyw, possessive tin | ja | jos | ta | nah | wah | juh | syw, possessive sin |
obl. | myni | twi | jam | je | tam | nan | wan | jun | swi |
Verbs
Thurish has three different regular verb paradigms:
- -oþ verbs (merger of Lithuanian -oti, PS -ati and Lithuanian -ėti, PS -ěti; verbs that come from -ēʔtei become Greekified); e.g. jynoþ 'to know' (~ Pol. znać, Lith. žinoti); uðoþ 'to move' (~ Lith. judėti); ustêtoþ 'to result (from)' (~ Lith. tekėti)
- -iþ verbs (~ Lithuanian -yti, PS -iti); e.g. ărbiþ 'to work'; wordiþ 'to speak'
- -þ or -t verbs (~ Lithuanian -ti, PS -ti); e.g. nest, neþ- 'to carry'
agreement of the participle is with the direct object, unless the object is 1st or 2nd person in which case it's just "hymt es"
jynoþ 'to know':
- Present tense: jynon, jynoh, jyno, jynom, jynoþy, jynosaws
- Present participle: jynos (sg), jynosi (pl)
- Past participle: jynot (sg), jynote (pl)
- Past tense: jynot es, jynote sos
- Future tense: jynos bûsu, jynos bûs, jynos bus, jynosi bûsăm, jynosi bûsy, jynosi bus
- Imperative: jynonu! (sg), jynoþnu! (pl)
llawbiþ 'to love':
- Present tense: llawbdon, llawbih, llawbi, llawbim, llawbiþy, llawbdosaws
- Present participle: llawbdos (sg), llawbdosi (pl)
- Past participle: llawbit (sg), llawbite (pl)
- Past tense: llawbit es, llawbite saws
- Future tense: llawbdos bûsu, llawbdos bûs, llawbdos bus, llawbdosi bûsăm, llawbdosi bûsy, llawbdosi bus
- Imperative: llawbnu! (sg), llawbiþnu! (pl)
(Some -iþ verbs undergo stem changes in some forms: b p d t h g k l r m n w > bd pt ð þ þ d t ll rr mn nn j
Conjugation of beroþ 'to give birth' (irregular):
- Present tense: berăn, berăh, ber, berăm, berăþy, beras
- Past tense (suppletive, from *eḱs + imti, also split ergative): hymt es, hymte es
Sample text
UDHR
make vocab less slavic
Wyþe llawðe sy răðis sobyne i arwyne yn sne gădynaþi i 'n snăn tiestwăn. Saws se yndărote su arrumi i săwesti i saws winyne păstămpoþ nopăr inin yn dawsi broþărtwa.
/wɨˈθɛ ɬəwˈðɛ sɨ rəˈðis sobɨˈnɛ i arʊɨˈnɛ ɨn snɛ gədɨnaˈθi i‿n snən tiəstˈwən. səws sɛ ɨndərɔˈtɛ su ar̥ʊˈmi i səwɛsˈti i səws winɨˈnɛ pəstəmˈpɔθ ˈnɔpər inˈin ɨn dəwˈsi broθərˈtwa./