Aarlaansc: Difference between revisions

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Line 1,392: Line 1,392:
!December
!December
|Dekkemmer
|Dekkemmer
|}
The ''an'' is divided also into 4 ''statjoens'' (sg. ''statjon'', "season"):
{| {{Table/bluetable}} style="text-align:center; vertical-align:middle"
!'''Season'''
!'''Statjoen'''
!'''From... to...'''
|-
!Winter
|Hïem
|22 dec. - 21 mar.
|-
!Spring
|Weer
|22 mar. - 21 giu.
|-
!Summer
|Astijf
|22 giu. - 22 sep.
|-
!Autumn
|Otuin
|23 sep. - 21 dec.
|}
|}


[[Category:Languages]] [[Category:Conlangs]] [[Category:Romance]]
[[Category:Languages]] [[Category:Conlangs]] [[Category:Romance]]

Revision as of 01:15, 19 November 2012

Aarlaansk
Aarlaansk
Pronunciation[[Help:IPA|'ɑ:rlɑ:nsk]]
Created by
Native toThe Aarlaans
Native speakers80 millions (2012)
Official status
Official language in
The Aarlaans
Regulated byIkkeddemie ies Aarlaansk Leng (Aarlaansk Language Accademy)
Language codes
ISO 639-1aa
ISO 639-2aak
ISO 639-3aak
Aarlaans.gif
The Aarlaans

General informations

Aarlaansk is a language spoken in Hies Aarlaans (= The Aarlaans), a country that, in a different reality, inclues The Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, a part of our Germany and our Denmark. The term Aarlaansk means "(the language) of the Aarlaans". The origin of the ethnonym hasn't been completely explained yet: the most probable hypothesis explains that "Aarlaans" is a contraction of "Aarvers plaans", that is "plains of the tree", aarvers is an archaic genitive case of the term aarf, "tree", and plaans is the plural form of the term plaan, "plain". The fact that in old documents, the ethnonym Aarlane is also found and that the word plaan has got an archaic plural form plane, supports this hypothesis. But why should the Romans have given this place the name of "plains of the tree"? The explanation was found only in 2609 ab U.c. (that is circa 1856 of our era): during an archaeological excavation it was found a table that dates back to 867 ab U.c. (circa 114 of our era), on this table was written the anecdote of the defeat of Germanic Tribes in a Northern territory by the Roman army of Trajan. According to this narration, the emperor had a prophetic dream: the Roman army would have won, only if it had attacked the Germanic tribes far from the forest, in an endless plain. The sign that would have shown the right place would have been a solitary tree, the only one within this immense plain. History teaches us that in the Battle of Vloerijgen (866 ab U.c., that is 113 d.C.) the future country of Aarlaans became a part of Roman Empire.

Aarlaansk is a Romance language that descends from Vulgar Latin, even if, in spite of other languages of the same family, in Aarlaansk many common terms derive from Classical latin. The lexicon is almost completely of Latin origin (99% of Aarlaansk words derive from Latin).

Phonology

Alphabet

The Aarlaansk alphabet contains 23 letters and 1 digraph that is considered a distinct letter:

Letters Pronunciation Further informations
a short [a] - long [ɑ:] -
b [b] -
c [k] it is used only in digraphs and trigraphs
d [d] -
e short [ɛ] - long [e:] -
f [f] -
g [g] -
h [h] -
i [ɪ] always short
j [j] a palatal approximant
ij [ɛi̯] when unstressed it is a schwa [ə]
k [k] -
l [l] -
m [m] -
n [n] -
o short [ɔ] - long [o:] -
p [p] -
r [r] trilled as in Italian
s [s] -
t [t] -
u short [œ] - long [y:] -
v [v] -
w [v] -
z [z] -

When voiced consonants are found in final position, they are devoiced and become voiceless. The g, z and v can be pronounced respectively [χ], [s] and [f] when at the beginning of a word, this pronounciation is not compulsory and is rather dialectal.

Vowels

The vocalic phonemes of Aarlaansk are the following:

Phonemes Short Long
Front Back Front Back
Closed ɪ ʊ i: y: u:
Mid-closed e: ø: o:
Mid-open ɛ œ ɔ
Open a ɑ:

The [a] and the [ɑ:] are rather centralised.

Diphthongs, false diphthongs and vowel length

In Aarlaansk there are only three diphthongs:

  • ei [ɛi̯];
  • ou [au̯];
  • ui [œy].

There are also other "vocalic combinations" that represent a long vowel instead, thus they are called false diphthongs or just long vowels:

  • eu [ø:];
  • ie [i:];
  • oe [u:].

A diaeresis divides two vowels that, otherwise, would form a diphthong, ex.: ïe [‘ie], "they"; zoüüt [zo'y:t], "greeting". The diphthongs, the false diphthongs and the letter ij (that really indicates the same diphthong as ei) are always long in Aarlaansk, while the letters i and y are always short. The letters a, e, o, and u can be both short and long, instead. To indicate the vowel length of these four vowels, this language uses a special system that is based on the kind of syllables.

There are two kind of syllables: they can be both open and closed. A syllable is open when it ends with a vowel (so ma, te, ko, su are all open syllables); a syllable is closed when it ends with a consonant (so mat, tek, kos, sum are all closed syllables).

The rules to indicate the length of a, e, o, and u says that:

«When a long vowel is found in an open syllable, it is written once, whereas if it is found in a closed syllable, it is written twice.»

That is to say that short vowels are never found in open syllables, but only in closed ones. In both these cases (short vowel in closed syllable and long vowel in open syllable) the vowels are written once. When a long vowel occurs in a closed syllable, then it is written twice,ex.:

  • in ma and maat the a's are long; in mat the a is short;
  • in te and teek the e's are long; in tek the e is short;
  • in ko and koos the o's are long; in kos the o is short;
  • in su and suum the u's are long; in sum the u is short.

This rule has got one last implication: if the syllabic division changes, then there could be grafic changes, ex.:

  • maat (a is long) > mate (a remains long, but it is now found in an open syllable, so it is written once);
  • mat (a is short) > matte (a remains short, but a short vowel occurs never in an open syllable, so we need to double the following consonant to maintain the syllable closed).

Digraphs and trigraphs

Aarlaansk has got two digraphs, that are ch, that is read [χ], and ck, that is read [k] and represents the double k. There is only a trigraph, sch that is read [ʃ].

Stress

The stress usually falls on the last syllable, this is particularly true for the infinitive and for the simple past of the verbs, for the feminine nouns that end in -el, for the nouns that end in -ie. Generally the nouns and the adjective ending in e-, -em, -en, -el (except for the feminine nouns) and -er are stressed on the last but one syllable. However it is advisable to learn the pronunciation of every word as you learn them.

Grammar

Nouns, gender and number

Nouns in Aarlaansk can be either common or neuter: the previously masculine and feminine genders have merged into the common one, whereas the neuter has remained the same. Nouns have got two forms: singular, that indicates one object, person, animal, concept, and so forth, and plural, that indicates more than one object, person, animal, concept, and so on.

Generally the plural is formed with the terminations:

1) -s, if the noun ends with a vowel or -l, -n, -r;

2) -e, if the noun ends with a consonant (except -l, -n, -r).

The substantives that end with -f or -s mutate f into v and s into z, ex.: zilf, "wood, forest", has got a plural zilve, "woods, forests"; tens, "time", has got a plural tenze, "times".

Here are some nouns with their gender, their plural and their meaning:

Singular Plural Gender Meaning
vloer vloers common flower
luin luins common moon
lup luppe common wolf
zoel zoels common sun
nocht nochte common night
rikel rikels neuter ear
koul kouls common horse
stiel stiels common star
zilf zilve common wood, forest
vijl vijls common son
vijlel vijlels common daughter
tens tenze neuter time
zier ziers common lord
zierel zierels common lady
masie masies common home, house
taat tate common father
mam mamme common mother
baas baze neuter kiss
vraat vrate common brother
zoer zoers common sister
oor oors neuter gold
keel keels common sky
kor kors neuter heart
ouw ouwe common bird
mijster mijsters common master, male teacher
meistrel meistrels common mistress, female teacher

Some nouns show some changes in their structure:

  • zilf > zilve;
  • baas > baze.

This is due to the phonetic rules: in the word zilf, the f becomes voiced due to its position between a voiced consonant and a vowel, so zilf becomes zilve. The last word, baas, shows a change in the written form of the long vowel and at the same time a voicing of the last consonant.

Articles

In Aarlaansk there are two kinds of article: definite article and indefinite article. The first is used to talk about things, people, concepts that are already known by both the speaker and the listener, whereas the indefinite article introduces concepts, things, people that are new. The indefinite article is just one: uin and it is used with both common and neuter nouns, it hasn't got a plural form, so the only way to make an indefinite plural is to omit it, ex.: uin masie, "a house", masies, "houses", but also "some houses".

The definite article has got a gender differentiation in the singular but a common form in the plural:

Gender Singular Plural
Common hij hies
Neuter hoe hies

The articles always precede the noun they are referred to.

Adjectives

The adjectives always precede the noun they are referred to and they don't change according to gender nor number, ex.:

  • Hij kat est magen - The cat is big.
  • Uin magen kat - A big cat;
  • Hij magen kat - The big cat;
  • Nuin magen kat - No big cat;
  • Gouvin oor - Yellow gold;
  • Hoe gouvin oor - The yellow gold.

Comparative and superlative

The lower degree comparative is formed with the pattern min + adjective + de + 2nd term (in the same case of the first, if it is a pronoun), ex.:

  • Noes zunt min vackiet de toe - We are less beautiful than you.

The same degree comparative is formed with the pattern tam + adjective + kant + 2nd term (in the same case of the first, if it is a pronoun), ex.:

  • Noes zunt tam vackiet kant toe - We are as beautiful as you.

The higher degree comparative is formed with the pattern pluis + adjective + de + 2nd term (in the same case of the first, if it is a pronouns), ex.:

  • Noes zunt pluis vackiet de toe - We are more beautiful than you.

The superlative is formed with the pattern wou(d) + adjective, ex.:

  • Toe est wou vackiet - You are most beautiful.

If it is used as a relative superlative, wou(d) is substituted for hij/hoe pluis + adjective + de, ex.:

  • Toe est hij pluis vackiet de hij uurf - You are the most beautiful in the world.

Some adjectives: koud (hot), vrijcht (cold), zimplek (simple), vackel (easy), veed (ugly), zacker (sacred), verroek (fierce), kruidiel (cruel).

There are also adjectives that have got irregular higher degree comparative and superlative:

Normal degree Comparative Superlative Meaning
bon mellier / pluis bon optem / wou bon good
emprof peier / pluis emprof pessem / woud emprof bad
magen maier / pluis magen massem / wou magen big, great
parf minoer / pluis parf minem / wou parf little
out pluis out zupriem / woud out high, tall
kurt pluis kurt infem / wou kurt low, short

The higher degree comparatives are always used with de, ex.:

  • Toe est mellier de eg - You are better than I.

The synthetic forms are more used in the written language, whereas the analytical ones are found mostly in the spoken language.

Pronouns and other kinds of adjectives

Personal pronouns

Personal pronouns are the only words that inflect according to case. They have a nominative case, that is the case of the subject, and two kinds of accusative case, the case of the object - both direct and indirect. The accusative case has an unstressed form and a stressed one. The reflexive pronouns are used when the subject and the object of the action are the same, as in "I wash (myself)":

Pronouns Nominative Unstressed accusative Stressed accusative Reflexive Comitative
I eg me mie me miek
thou toe te tie te tiek
he is im iem ze ziek
she ëe em eem ze ziek
it id id id ze ziek
we noes ne noes ne nuusk
you woes we woes we wuusk
they ïe es ees ze ziek

The unstressed accusative form precedes the verb, while the stressed one follows it. The stressed forms are used after prepositions or to emphasize complements. The comitative forms represent the locution with + pronouns.

Some examples:

  • Me oodt toe? - Do you hear me?
  • Toe widt ym - You see him.
  • Eg ood im, nek tie - I hear him, not you.
  • Eg zom tiek - I am with you.
  • Is dijkt id ar noes - He says it to us.
  • Noes ne laen - We wash (ourselves).
  • Eg me klaam Toen - My name is Tony.
  • Went toe nuusk? - Do you come with us?

Possessives

Possessive adjectives are never preceded by article and they always precede the noun they are referred to:

Possessive Adjective Pronouns
my mies hij / hoe mies
thy tuis hij / hoe tuis
his / its zuis hij / hoe zuis
her ijs hij / hoe ijs
our noost hij / hoe noost
your weest hij / hoe weest
their zuis hij / hoe zuis

Possessive pronouns are always preceded by article, ex.:

  • Is est mies mijk, nek hij tuis - He's my friend, not yours.

Sometimes the possessor is specified with de + pronoun to avoid ambiguity, above all in the case of the 3rd person, ex.:

  • Zuis mijk de iem or Hij mijk de iem - His friend (of him);
  • Zuis mijks de ees or Hies mijks de ees - Their friends (of them).

In the speech the possessive pronouns are usually formed without using the article, but using the pronouns uin after the possessive, ex.:

  • Is est mies mijk, nek tuis uin - He's my friend, not your one.

Demonstratives

In this language, demonstratives always follow the name they are referred to when they are used as adjectives. Demonstratives are never preceded by article, not even if they are used as pronouns. There are three kinds of demonstratives:

  • those that show proximity to the speaker;
  • those that show proximity to the hearer;
  • those that show distance from both the speaker and the hearer.
Proximity to the speaker
Common singular Neuter singular Plural
heik huuk hieske
Proximity to the hearer
Common singular Neuter singular Plural
ist stud sties
Proximity to the hearer
Common singular Neuter singular Plural
ill lud lies

Ex.:

  • Ill kat est nit - That cat is cute;
  • Ist liver est hij tuis - That book (near you) is yours;
  • Eg wol huuk maal - I want this apple.

Indefinites

These pronouns and adjectives neither determine nor specify the substantives, that is they don't tell us anything about their quantity or identity:

Singular pronoun Plural pronoun Meaning Adjective Meaning
nuin - nobody nuin no
ries - nothing - -
kiduin - everyone om every
oukuin - anyone ouk any
oukries - anything - -
kwaal kwaals which one(s) kwaal which / what
- - - taal such
pook pooks a little / few pook a little / few
muut mute much / many muut much / many
tant tante so much / so many tant so much / so many
kuucht / toet kuuchte / toete all / everybody kuucht / toet all

Some pronominal forms have got both a singular and a plural voice, but adjective forms have got ONLY one voice, that is both singular and plural. Except for nuin / ries and oukuin / oukries, indefinites don't have a gender distinction.

Verbs

Simple present

The present tense, or 'prezent in Aarlaansk, expresses an action that happens regularly, that is habitual or that happens around the moment of the speech.

Present of zer ("to be") and haar ("to have")

The verbs zer and haar are two of the main verbs in Aarlaansk and they are irregular as in most other languages. Here it is the conjugation of these two verbs in the present tense:

Person Zer Haar
eg zom haf
toe / is est haft
noes / woes / ïe zunt haan

In Aarlaansk the subject is always expressed, with impersonal verbs it is used the dummy subject id, ex.:

  • Id pluft - It rains.

Present of regular verbs

The infinitive form of almost all verbs ends with -er. The regular verbs are formed adding particular endings to the root form. The root form of a verb is obtained just dropping the infinitive ending and adding the personal endings. Of course to obtain the root form is necessary to pay attention to the vowel length, that must be maintained (unless the verb is irregular). Moreover if the verb root ends with -v or -z, these letters become unvoiced in the three singular persons voices.

Here are four verbs: wider (to see), rjalizer (to realize), diever (to have to), oder (to hear):

Person Wider Rjalizer Diever Oder
eg wid rjalis dief ood
toe / is widt rjalist dieft oodt
noes / woes / ïe widen rjalizen dieven oden

The endings of the present tense of indicative are thus:

Person Ending
eg -
toe / is -t
noes / woes / ïe -en

Pay attention the the verbs whose root form ends with a long vowel or a diphthong followed by -d: in the 1st and 2nd singular persons of the present of indicative the -d(t) ending is often omitted in the speech, ex.: toe rij(dt), "you laugh".

Present of some irregular verbs

Aarlaansk has got some irregular verbs too. Often the infinitive of these verbs doesn't end with -er, but with slightly different endings. Some other verbs have got the regular infinitive ending -er, but are irregular. Here it can be seen the present tense of the verbs vaar (to do), ijr (to go), daar (to give), duir (to lead) and vluer (to flow, to slip by):

Person Vaar Ijr Daar Duir Vluer
eg vach wa(ad) doe duich vluf
toe / is vacht wa(adt) doet duicht vluft
noes / woes / ïe vaan waan daan duin vluen

The irregularities are not systematic: how it can be seen, both vaar and daar have got an infinitive in -aar, but the former has got a root form vach- in the three singular persons, whereas the latter has got a root form doe-. More systematic (but not ever) are the verbs whose infinitive ends in -Ver: in the three singular persons the root form ends in -Vf, ex.: id pluft, "it rains", from pluer, eg me laf, "I wash (myself)", from laer-ze, and so on. However it is best to control in the dictionary how the root form of the irregular verbs changes.

Simple past

The past tense, preterrit in Aarlaansk, is used to express an action that has happened in the past, independently on when it has happened, if it is ended or not, if it affects the present and so on. It corresponds to English past simple and present perfect.

Past tense of zer and haar

The past of these two irregular verbs is, obviously, quite irregular:

Person Zer Haar
eg veu hu
toe / is veut huut
noes / woes / ïe veurn huurn

In this tense, the 2nd and the 3rd singular persons share the same ending, as in the present tense.

Past simple of regular verbs

The past tense of regular verbs is formed by deleting the ending of the infinitive and by adding -ed for the singular first person and -edt for the other two singular persons. The plural persons voices are formed by adding -n to the infinitive form:

Person Wider Rjalizer Diever Oder
eg wided / wijd (!) rjalized dieved oded
toe / is wideudt / wijdt (!) rjalizeudt dieveudt odeudt
noes / woes / ïe widern / wijdern (!) rjalizern dievern odern

The verb wider has got two forms of this tense: a regular one, that is the most spread, and an irregular one, that is archaic and it is found mostly in books.

Past of some irregular verbs

Irregular verbs have, of course, irregular forms for the past of indicative. It is important to remember that neither the singular forms nor the plural ones are made starting from the infinitive:

Person Vaar Ijr Daar Duir Vluer
eg vech euw ded duis vlus
toe / is vecht euft dedt duist vlust
noes / woes / ïe vechern (!) iern deddern duisern vlussern

Please, note that the radical -e- of the form vech/t is short, whereas in the form vechern it becomes long.

Present perfect and past perfect

Beside the preterrit there is another verbal form that expresses an action that has happened in the past: the pervecht. This form is similar to the English present perfect, because it is formed with the present of the verb haar and the past participle of the main verb. In Aarlaansk, however, this form is completely interchangeable with the preterrit form: it is just a matter of style and of formality, because the pervecht is more used among friends and in colloquial speech, whereas the preterrit is more used in written language and in formal meetings. When the auxiliary haar is in its past tense, then we obtain the past perfect or pluispervecht. This tense refers to actions that happened in the past before other actions that happened in the past too.

Present perfect of zer and haar

The auxiliary verb is always haar:

Person Zer Haar
eg haf zit haf heit
toe / is haft zit haft heit
noes / woes / ïe haan zit haan heit

Present perfect of regular verbs

Even for the regular verbs the auxiliary verb is always haar:

Person Wider Rjalizer Diever Oder
eg haf wijst (!) haf rjalizit haf dievit haf odit
toe / is haft wijst (!) haft rjalizit haft dievit haft odit
noes / woes / ïe haan wijst (!) haan rjalizit haan dievit haan odit

As it can be seen, the past participle of the regular verbs is formed by adding the ending -it to the root form. It is also true that not all the regular verbs have got a regular past participle (cf. wider > wijst), in these cases it is always best to use the dictionary.

Present perfect of irregular verbs

The irregular verbs maintain their irregularity in the form of the past participle used with the auxiliary:

Person Vaar Ijr Daar Duir Vluer
eg haf vacht haf ijt haf daat haf duicht haf vlust
toe / is haft vacht haft ijt haft daat haft duicht haft vlust
noes / woes / ïe haan vacht haan ijt haan daat haan duicht haan vlust

Past perfect

This tense is called pluispervecht in Aarlaansk and it corresponds to the English past perfect: it is used to express a past action that happened before another one. The pluispervecht is formed with the past of the verb haar and the past participle of the main verb, ex.:

Person Zer Haar
eg hu zit hu heit
toe / is huut zit huut heit
noes / woes / ïe huurn zit huurn heit
  • Diepst eg hu spechtit uin plikel, eg ised - After I had watched a film, I went out.

Future

The future, vuttuur in Aarlaansk, is used to speak about actions that have not happened yet and that will happen in the future. English has got three forms of future with three different functions, Aarlaansk has got just one that expresses these funcions. With the future it can be spoken about:

  • events that will happen in the future (but that are not planned);
  • events that are happening because they are planned and organised;
  • events that are going to happen because there is an intention.

Moreover the future can be used to express assumptions.

This tense is analytical and it is formed by the present tense of the verb ijr and the infinitive of the main verb. It exists also a synthetic form of this tense, but it is not used anymore in the speech and it is found only in poetry and in old books. We add it for completeness' sake.

Future of zer and haar

The analytical form is:

Person Zer Haar
eg wa(ad) zer wa(ad) haar
toe / is wa(adt) zer wa(adt) haar
noes / woes / ïe waan zer waan haar

The 1st and 2nd singular persons can use the more colloquial and informal form wa instead of waad and waadt, because the root has got a long vowel before the -d-.

The synthetic form is:

Person Zer Haar
eg zerraf haraf
toe / is zerraft haraft
noes / woes / ïe zerraan haraan

These forms can be found with all the verbs and they are formed with infinitive and the endings of the present of the verb haar without initial h-, ex.:

  • Eg rjalizerraf - I will realize;
  • Toe oderraft - You will hear.

There are also irregularities, ex.:

  • Is widraft em - He will see her;
  • Ïe dievraan kerer ne - They will have to love us.

The future tense of regular and irregular verbs is formed the same way. In Aarlaansk doesn't exist a future perfect tense, instead of it it is used the future simple.

Subjunctive

The subjunctive mood is no longer used in Aarlaansk, it is no more productive. Both present and past of subjunctive are found in crystallized expressions, such as:

  • Dijw te zouwe - God save you;
  • Hij keel te proetëe - Heaven protect you.

The present subjunctive of the verbs zer and haar is irregular:

Person Zer Haar
eg / toe / is zij have
noes / woes / ïe zijn haven

The regular verbs form this tense by adding the suffix -e(n):

Person Wider Rjalizer Diever Oder
eg / toe / is wide rjalize dieve ode
noes / woes / ïe widen rjalizen dieven oden

All the singular persons share the same ending. This is true also for the irregular verbs:

Person Vaar Ijr Daar Duir Vluer
eg / toe / is vache vaje du duiche vluve
noes / woes / ïe vachen vajen duun duichen vluven

The past of subjunctive is formed with the same radical of the simple past by adding the endings -es and -essen. Obviously there are irregular verbs, such as zer, haar and others:

Person Zer Haar Vaar Ijr Daar Duir Vluer
eg / toe / is vuus huus veches eus dies duises vluses
noes / woes / ïe vusen husen vechessen eusen diesen duisessen vlusessen

The regular verbs add simply -es and -essen:

Person Wider Rjalizer Diever Oder
eg / toe / is wides rjalizes dieves odes
noes / woes / ïe widessen rjalizessen dievessen odessen

Conditional

The conditional, konditjonaal in Aarlaansk, is used fast as in English, f.ex. to be polite or to express probability. As for the future, the conditional is formed with the verb ijr, but it is used its past form:

Person Zer Haar
eg euw zer euw haar
toe / is euft zer euft haar
noes / woes / ïe iern zer iern haar

It exists also a synthetic form that is no longer used in the speech and that can be found only in poetry and old books. This form is obtained by adding to the infinitive the endings of the past of the verb haar without h-:

Person Zer Haar
eg zerru haru
toe / is zerruut haruut
noes / woes / ïe zerruun haruun

This is true for all verbs. The conditional can be found in conditional clauses of 2nd and 3rd type:

  • Se eg euw zer rijch, eg euw pretjer uin magen masie - If I were rich, I'd buy a big house;
  • Se eg euw haar zit rijch, eg euw haar pretit uin magen masie - If I had been rich, I'd have bought a big house.

Please note that the conditional is used in the protasis also instead of the subjunctive. In conditional clauses of 1st type it is used the present in the protasis and the future in the apodosis:

  • Se hij nijf est dors hij zoel, ëe waadt vunder-ze - If the snow is under the sun, it will melt.

The conditional is also used to express the "future in the past", ex.:

  • Is sched pas ke id euw vijr - He didn't know that it would happen.

Greetings

The main zoüte ("greetings") in Aarlaansk are:

  • Zaaf matijn - Good morning (used in the first hours of the morning, till 10.00 am);
  • Zaaf juir - Good morning (used till 01.00 pm);
  • Zaaf wertijn / Zaaf merrijd - Good afternoon! (used till 07.00 pm);
  • Zaaf tard - Good evening (used till 22.00 pm);
  • Zaaf nocht - Good night (used after 22.00 pm and in the evening to say goodbye);
  • Zouw / Zu - Hello / Hi;
  • Wal - Bye;
  • Iriwiderne - Good bye;
  • Koem te waadt? / Koem we waadt? - How art thou? / How are you?;
  • Recht, graat / graties, ak te / we? - Fine, thanks, and thou / you?;
  • Mou / eger - Bad.

Calendar

In the Aarlaans they use a klendaar, a "calendar", that is virtually the same that we use: the an, the "year", is splitted into 12 mienze (sg. miens, "month") that can last 31 or 30 dierns (sg. diern, "day"). Just one month, Vebraars, "February", has got 28 days, but every 4 years it has got 29 days and the year is a long an, a "leap year".

Months Mienze
January Janaars
February Vebraars
March Marts
April Apprijls
May Maais
June Juins
July Iels
August Ogosts
September Zeptemmer
October Ochtoever
November Nowemmer
December Dekkemmer

The an is divided also into 4 statjoens (sg. statjon, "season"):


Season Statjoen From... to...
Winter Hïem 22 dec. - 21 mar.
Spring Weer 22 mar. - 21 giu.
Summer Astijf 22 giu. - 22 sep.
Autumn Otuin 23 sep. - 21 dec.