Verse:Mwail/Ditab: Difference between revisions

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There is a three way length distinction as well, in both consonants and vowels.
There is a three way length distinction as well, in both consonants and vowels.


All five stops have continuant allophones (roughly [β{{nas}} ð̠ θ̠ j {{ayin}}]) after vowels, unless they're geminated.
All five stops have continuant allophones (roughly [β{{nas}} {{zh}} θ̠ j {{ayin}}]) after vowels, unless they're geminated.


=== Word structure ===
=== Word structure ===

Revision as of 05:07, 13 February 2022

Mwail/Ditab /diθ̠aβ̃/ is a language of Verse:Méich Bhaonnáiqh (Bech Baddochaqh?) inspired by Iau, Proto-Lakes Plain, Formor's avian conlang C’ą̂ą́r and Semitic languages (particularly chanted Tiberian Hebrew). It's the ceremonial language of uplifted birds of the space colony Bădháchôth.

Todo

A reading tradition of Ditab with a Modern Hebrew accent: no tones or vowel or consonant length (so there will be a lot of ambiguity; Ditab isn't actually spoken that way)

  • odhubh cabhechoth (fill in tones and vowel lengths) -> oduv kvekhot

Phonology

Mwail/Ditab has

  • 5 consonants:
    • rostral (beak) nasalized fricative: m̞ (written b)
    • voiced apico-palatal stop: d
    • voiceless apico-palatal stop: t
    • voiceless lamino-palatal stop: c (written c)
    • voiceless choanal stop: ʡ (written q)
  • 21 vowels: i ị e ẹ a ạ ọ o ụ u /i ɪ e ɛ æ ɑ ɔ o ʊ u/ + nasalized counterparts + ă (shva na3, by default /ä/); /ɔ o ʊ u/ are really their unrounded counterparts
  • diphthongs i:a u:a
  • 6 pitch accent patterns (level, rising, falling, falling-rising, rising-falling, one like Swedish tone 2) (they should be loosely modeled after tropes) (long and overlone tones should be different; some tones have two nuclei like pashtayim and qadma v'azla)

There is a three way length distinction as well, in both consonants and vowels.

All five stops have continuant allophones (roughly [β̃ ɻ θ̠ j ʕ]) after vowels, unless they're geminated.

Word structure

Final stress like Tiberian Hebrew

Most words are underlyingly either open syllable -V: (e.g. o), or "closed syllable" with nucleus -V: and allowed "codas" -C, -V, -VC, -CC, -(unstressed syllable) (e.g. och, o.o, o.och, o.chebh, o.c)

Extrametrical elements occur too: ô.c-co [ô:.c:-cò:] (like -k in TibH vattėbh-k 'and she wept')

Orthography

Mwail/Ditab has an ASCII friendly orthography in addition to the 'default' one, where some vowels are written with consonant letters. It also has a Hebrew orthography with cantillation marks for tones and weird matres lectionis (like nun, mem, samekh, ayin etc.)

Morphology

Mwail/Ditab morphology is entirely suffixing except for adjectives. Adjectives are a small closed class and work by infixing and/or changing the vowels in the noun according to a predictable umlaut pattern.

There is no grammatical gender, and two declension classes:

  • Class one nouns mark the construct state with the suffix -bẽ́.
  • Class two nouns mark the absolute state with -bẽ́.

Verbs inflect by aspect but not tense. Curiously, the imperfective and perfective forms are interchanged when the verb follows the interrogative particle củ-, the negative particle bách- or the conjunctive particle ădhùbh-, or other preverbs/conjunctions, reminiscent of Old Irish verb allomorphy.

Ditab has Slavic-style verbs of motion: walk, run, fly, soar, fly by flapping wings, travel by a vehicle, swim, ... each with a unidirectional and a multidirectional counterpart.

Mwail/Ditab is borderline polysynthetic in that some verbs have to incorporate their objects. Mwail/Ditab also uses bipersonal inflections (like both Old Irish and Biblical Hebrew, but bipersonal forms are always used when the object is definite)

Syntax

Mwail/Ditab is strictly OVS. Cleft constructions are common.