Verse:Lõis/Harappan: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
m (→Phonology) |
(A purely artistic exercise; not part of a conworld anymore) |
||
(31 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''{{SUBPAGENAME}}''' is | '''{{SUBPAGENAME}}''' is a language isolate of northwestern India in a parallel Earth. | ||
== | Loanwords in Harappan are mostly from Persian, Hindi, Gujarati, Arabic, and in modern times, English. | ||
==Old Harappan== | |||
Old Harappan had a phoneme which could be realized as a retroflex flap, a retroflex lateral flap or even a retroflex glissando liquid /ɭ͢d̪/. In addition, Old Harappan had some other grammatical features in common with other languages in the Indus Sprachbund: | |||
*heavy agglutination and a dual number | |||
*a few commonly calqued expressions (including "śravaḥ akṣitaṃ"?) | |||
a | *Hungarian-style transitive conjugation in verbs | ||
*"verb-second-to-last" order with the topic placed at the end of the sentence | |||
*a two-way evidentiality system like Turkish |
Latest revision as of 14:08, 28 August 2021
Harappan is a language isolate of northwestern India in a parallel Earth.
Loanwords in Harappan are mostly from Persian, Hindi, Gujarati, Arabic, and in modern times, English.
Old Harappan
Old Harappan had a phoneme which could be realized as a retroflex flap, a retroflex lateral flap or even a retroflex glissando liquid /ɭ͢d̪/. In addition, Old Harappan had some other grammatical features in common with other languages in the Indus Sprachbund:
- heavy agglutination and a dual number
- a few commonly calqued expressions (including "śravaḥ akṣitaṃ"?)
- Hungarian-style transitive conjugation in verbs
- "verb-second-to-last" order with the topic placed at the end of the sentence
- a two-way evidentiality system like Turkish