Falamu: Difference between revisions
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**Comes before verb and any clitic object pronouns - e.g. ''kumîda kôski kôme Úmar.'' "[The one who] eats food [is] Omar." | **Comes before verb and any clitic object pronouns - e.g. ''kumîda kôski kôme Úmar.'' "[The one who] eats food [is] Omar." | ||
**''kôski'' is usually not used in negative sentences - e.g. ''kumîda ná li komê Úmar.'' "Omar does not eat food." <br /> However, it may be used for extra emphasis - e.g. ''kumîda kôski ná kôme Úmar.'' "[The one who] does not eat food [is] Omar." | **''kôski'' is usually not used in negative sentences - e.g. ''kumîda ná li komê Úmar.'' "Omar does not eat food." <br /> However, it may be used for extra emphasis - e.g. ''kumîda kôski ná kôme Úmar.'' "[The one who] does not eat food [is] Omar." | ||
====Interrogative clitic==== | ====Interrogative clitic==== |
Revision as of 08:54, 3 June 2022
Falamu (native: falámu [fɑlɑ́ˑmʊ]) is a Portuguese creole language with a high degree of Somali influence.
Falamu | |
---|---|
Boka Falamu | |
Pronunciation | [bɔ́ˑkɑ fɑlɑ́ˑmʊ] |
Created by | Shariifka |
Portuguese Creole
|
Introduction
Etymology
From Portuguese falamos "we speak".
Phonology
Orthography
Note: In this article, the regular phonetic script is used with accents added for clarity. These accents are normally omitted in writing.
Consonants
Letter | IPA | Remarks |
---|---|---|
' | ʔ | Not used word-initially since words written with an initial vowel always have a preceding glottal stop. |
b | b | May be pronounced /β/ between vowels. |
d | d ~ ð | /ð/ between vowels or after /h/. |
dh | ɖ | Somewhat implosive. |
f | f | |
g | ɡ | May be pronounced /ɣ/ between vowels. |
h | h | |
j | dʒ ~ tʃ | Free variation |
k | k | |
l | l | |
m | m | |
n | n ~ ŋ | /ŋ/ syllable finally, /n/ otherwise. |
nh | ɲ ~ j̃ | Free variation |
r | r | |
s | s | |
t | t | |
w | w | |
x | ʃ | |
y | j |
The consonants m, n, l, g, r, d, b can be geminated between vowels, which is indicated by doubling them.
The consonants dh and nh are always geminated when between vowels.
The voiceless stops t, k are always aspirated.
Vowels
Letter | IPA | Remarks | |
---|---|---|---|
"Front" | "Back" | ||
a | æ | ɑ | |
e | e | ɛ | |
i | i | ɪ | |
o | ɞ | ɔ | |
u | ʉ | ʊ |
Letter | IPA | Remarks | |
---|---|---|---|
"Front" | "Back" | ||
ay | æi | ɑɪ | |
aw | æʉ | ɑʊ | |
ey | ei | ɛɪ | |
oy | ɞi | — | No "back" variant. |
ow | ɞʉ | ɔʊ |
Accented vowels are often partially lengthened in the following situations:
- Monophthong vowels in open syllables;
- Monophthong vowels in word-final syllables;
- Word-final diphthong vowels.
There are also true long vowels indicated by doubling the vowel letter of a monophthong (e.g. aa) or the nucleus of a diphthong (e.g. aay). If a word contains a true long vowel, an other accented short vowel in the same word is not lengthened.
A word cannot begin in a vowel. Instead, a word written with an initial vowel is pronounced with a preceding glottal stop.
Each vowel has a "front" and "back" variety. This is the basis of vowel harmony.
In this article, a circumflex accent is used for accented "front" vowels, while an acute accent is used for accented "back" vowels. Accented vowels of indeterminate frontness/backness are represented with a grave accent.
Prosody
Accent
- Pitch accent
Intonation
Phonotactics
- Syllable structure: CV(C) - where V is a vowel or diphthong
- No consonant clusters except at syllable boundaries.
Morphophonology
Phonological history
Portuguese | Falamu | |
---|---|---|
Grapheme | Environment | |
ch | all | j |
j | initial | |
g | initial before e/i | |
di | unstressed before vowels | |
ti | ||
x | all as /ʃ/ | x |
j | non-initial | |
g | non-initial before e/i | |
gu | word-initial; between vowels | w |
v | initial before non-rounded vowel | |
non-initial; initial before rounded vowel | b | |
p | all | |
b | ||
s | all | s |
ss | ||
z | ||
ç | ||
sç | ||
c | before e/i | |
sc | ||
lh | all | dh |
-ão | from earlier -an or -ano | -an |
from earlier -on | -on |
Morphology
Pronouns
Person, Number | Independent | Clitic | Possessive | Remarks | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Strong | Weak | Strong | Weak | |||
1S | amî | mî | mi | kimî | mi | |
2S | abô | bô | bu | kibô | bu | |
3SM | êl | êl | li | kisû | su | |
3SF | él | él | li | kisú | su | |
1PI | anô | nô | nu | kinô | nu | |
1PE | anôs | nôs | nus | kinôs | nus | |
2P | abôs | bôs | bus | kibôs | bus | |
3P | êlis | êlis | lis | kisûs | sus | |
Reflexive/reciprocal | possessive + més | mes | — | — | When used independently, takes a possessive - e.g. mi més "myself" | |
Impersonal | — | — | si | — | — | Used to form pseudopassive. |
Nouns
Plural
The plural of nouns is regularly formed by adding -s (after a vowel or diphthong) or -is (after a consonant). Word-final -n becomes -nh- when -is is added.
Examples:
- ódhu "eye" -> ódhus "eyes"
- dêd "finger, toe" -> dêdis "fingers, toes"
- mán "hand, arm" -> mánhis "hands, arms"
Some nouns have irregular plurals.
Examples:
- beni'aâdan "human" -> aadâmi "humanity"
- This is a collective noun, meaning it takes singular agreement. Colloquially, it may instead take plural agreement.
- bisó "person" -> jênti "people"
- Collective (as aadâmi).
- mûslin "Muslim" -> muslimîn "Muslims"
Nouns are generally used in the singular when used with numerals.
Verbs
Verb stems
Form | Formation | Examples | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
Infinitive | Base stem with final accent | falá "(to) speak" | |
Present | Base stem with penultimate accent | fála "speak(s)" | The accent is final in monosyllabic verbs. |
Past | Infinitive + -ba | falába "spoke" | Some irregular verbs instead drop their final vowel and add -èra. |
Irregular verbs:
Infinitive | Present stem | Past stem | Meaning | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
sê | é ~ sê | éra | "to be" | When é is used as the present in main clauses, it falls before the complement and no clitic subject pronouns or focus particles are used. E.g. él é midhêr. ≈ midhêr éki li sê. ≈ kôs li sê midhêr. "she is a woman." When é is used adjectivally, it behaves as any other verb. E.g. midhêr awtór é "a woman who is an author |
Additionally, there are a class of verbs ending in -u that form their past in -èra. These generally correspond to adjectives in other languages - e.g. altú "to be tall"; áltu "(is) tall"; altéra "was tall".
Verb tenses
Form | Formation | Examples | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|
Present 1 | Present stem | é li fála "(s)he speaks"; fála! "speak!"; bisó fála "a person who speaks" | Used for present simple affirmative (which may have a habitual or stative meaning depending on the verb), adjectival present simple affirmative, and imperative affirmative. |
Present 2 | Infinitive | é mi falá "I'll speak"; ki mi falá "that I speak"; ná mi falá "I do not speak"; ná falá! "do not speak!" | Used for present prospective, present subordinate (but not adjectival), present negative and imperative negative. |
Present progressive | tá + infinitive | é bu tá falá "you (sg.) are speaking" | |
Past simple | Past stem | é nus falába "we (excl.) spoke" | |
Past progressive | tá + past | é nu tá falába "we (incl.) were speaking" | |
Past remote | já + past | é li já falába "(s)he spoke [a while ago]; (s)he used to speak; (s)he already spoke; (s)he had spoken" | |
Jussive | ád + Infinitive | mi ád falá "I should speak; let me speak", li ád falá "let him/her speak", li ád ná falá "let him/her not speak" |
Voice
Pseudopassive is formed with the impersonal subject pronoun si.
Derived verbs
- Middle: add -se to stem - e.g. labá "to wash" -> labasé "to wash oneself, to wash for oneself"
- Causative 1: add -fa to stem - e.g. durmî "to sleep" -> durmifâ "to put to sleep"
- Usually used with intransitive verbs.
- This can be combined with the middle to form -fase - e.g. kosê "to cook (intr.)" -> kosefâ "to cook (tr.)" -> kosefasê "to cook for oneself"
- Causitive 2: add -da to stem - e.g. komê "to eat" -> komedâ "to give to eat"
- Usually used with transitive verbs, and often when someone is being "caused" to do something.
- This can be combined with the middle to form -dase.
- Inchoative/Durative: add -eya to the stem (minus any final vowel).
- This is mostly used with verbs that form their past in -èra (other than sê, which instead becomes fiká) - e.g. altú "to be tall/long" (past: altéra) -> alteyá "to become tall/long". It may also be added directly to nouns - e.g. bôs "voice, vote" -> boseyâ "to vote".
- Other verbal suffixes can be added on top of it,in which case the final -a is dropped - e.g. alteyá "to become tall/long" -> alteyfá "to make tall/long". Note that adding the middle suffix on its own does not change the meaning - e.g. alteyá "to become tall/long" -> alteysé "to become tall/long"
Particles
Verbal focus particles
- é: used to form main clauses.
- Used when there is no independent object or emphasized subject.
- Comes before subject pronoun - e.g. é mi kôme. "I eat."
- "Independent object" refers to a direct or indirect object that is not a clitic pronoun, while "emphasized subject" refers to a subject that has extra emphasis placed upon it in such a way that English would use a copular phrase.
- é can contract with the subject pronoun, in which case it takes the frontness/backness of the verb - e.g. êmi kôme. "I eat."
- é is not used in negative sentences - e.g. ná mi komê.' "I do not eat.".
- Note that any explicit subject (i.e. any subject other than a clitic pronoun) is placed before the focus particle - e.g. amî é mi komêba. "[As for] me, I ate."; Úmar é li komêba. "Omar ate."
- éki: used to form main clauses.
- Used when the independent object or emphasized subject is placed before the verb.
- Comes after the relevant object/subject. Note that when used with a subject, it places the verb into its subordinate form - e.g. kumîda éki mi kôme. "I eat food./Food [is what] I eat."; Úmar éki kumîda komê. "[It is] Omar [who] eats food."
- éki can contract with a following subject pronoun (if applicable), in which case the -ki- is dropped and e- takes the frontness/backness of the verb - e.g. kumîda émi kôme. "I eat food."
Note that this is identical to the contraction of é. - éki is usually not used in negative sentences - e.g. kumîda ná mi komê. "I do not eat food.".
However, it may be used for extra emphasis - e.g. Úmar éki kumîda ná komê. "[It is] Omar [who] does not eat food."
- kôs: used to form main clauses.
- Used when the independent object is placed after the verb.
- Comes before subject pronoun - e.g. Úmar kôs li kôme kumîda. "Omar eats food."
- kôs is usually not used in negative sentences - e.g. Úmar ná li komê kumîda. "Omar does not eat food."
However, it may be used for extra emphasis - e.g. Úmar kôs li ná komê kumîda. "[That which] Omar does not eat [is] food."
- kôski: used to form main clauses.
- Used when the emphasized subject is placed after the verb.
- Comes before verb and any clitic object pronouns - e.g. kumîda kôski kôme Úmar. "[The one who] eats food [is] Omar."
- kôski is usually not used in negative sentences - e.g. kumîda ná li komê Úmar. "Omar does not eat food."
However, it may be used for extra emphasis - e.g. kumîda kôski ná kôme Úmar. "[The one who] does not eat food [is] Omar."
Interrogative clitic
- -kè: "which/what"
- Attaches to the word being modified (without affecting its accent).
- -kàl: "which"
- Attaches to the word being modified (without affecting its accent).
- Similar in meaning to kè, but implies a more limited set of options.
Negation particles
- ná: negation.
- Comes before the clitic subject pronoun of the negated verb (if any), except when used with focus particles, in which case it comes after the clitic subject pronoun (if any). In both cases, it comes before any clitic object pronouns.
- In summary:
- No focus particle: ná + (clitic subject) + (clitic object) + verb
- Focus particle: (clitic subject) + ná + (clitic object) + verb
Prepositions
Prepositions may be used before the modified noun phrases or, more commonly, attached to clitic pronouns after the noun phrase.
- na: "in"
- ku: "with"
- da: "from"
- ba: "to, for"
- módi: "like"
Conjunctions
- i: "and" (within a clause)
- mas: "and" (connects clauses)
- o: "or"
- nón: "or" (in questions)
- kán: "while, when"
- barén: "but"
Syntax
Constituent order
Can be almost any order with the help of focus particles.
Noun phrase
Modifiers follow the noun they modify except for cardinal numbers, which precede the noun.
Verb phrase
Sentence phrase
Dependent clauses
Sample Texts
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (Article 1)
Regular: Aadami su tod kos li nase el o hor e mas nibradu na orra i deretis. Kos si daba menti i damir, mas e ba biso otu biso kuli li axi modi irman.
Phonetic: Aadâmi su tôd kôs li náse êl ô hór é mas nibrádu na órra i derêtis. Kôs si dába mênti i damír, mas é ba bisó ôtu bisó kûli li âxi môdi irmán.
Portuguese-based: Aadâmi su tôd côs li násce êl ô hór é mas nibrádu na órra i derêtis. Côs si dába mênti i damír, mas é pa pissó ôtu pissó cûli li âji môdi irmã.
IPA: /æːðǽmi sʉ tɞ́d kɞ́s lɪ nɑ́sɛ él ɞ́ hɔ́r ɛ́ mɑs nɪbrɑ́dʊ nɑ ʔɔ́rːɑ i derétis || kɞ́s si dɑ́bɑ ménti ɪ dɑmɪ́r | mɑs ʔɛ́ bɑ bɪsɔ́ ɞ́tʉ bɪsɔ́ kʉ́li li ʔǽʃi mɞ́dɪ ʔɪrmɑ́ŋ/
Gloss: humanity 3S.POSS all FOC 3S.SUBJ be_born 3S.SUBJ ADJ free being and being_equal in dignity and rights. FOC IMPRS give-PST reason and conscience, and is that person other person with 3S.SUBJ act like brother.
Translation: Humanity is born free and equal in dignity and rights. They are given reason and conscience, and a person must behave towards another person like a brother.