User:Praimhín/Condialects: Difference between revisions

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''Ancient Tzaloxian'' (''Fiüssu Iaini'' natively; ''huēziz tzaloxiniz'' in Naquian) is one of the two main languages of the Naquian civilization in [[Tricin]].
==Irish reading tradition for an Indic language==
-h's interpreted as lenition


retroflexes are ignored but Th and Dh become dental fricatives


==Introduction==
should be for a middle Prakrit (a liturgical form of Sauraseni)
==Classification==


Tzaloxian is the proto-language of the Tzaloxic language family. Most Trician scholars believe it's a language isolate, though there are pseudolinguistic theories connecting it to languages of Bjeheond.
==Jamaican/Finnish Latin==


==Mythology==
*Ecclesiastical Latin ti -> tsi gone wild: in this dialect it becomes si
**Reflexive pronouns disappear (since tibi and sibi merge)
*ē, ō -> ie, uo (the opposite of Romance languages)
**could create interesting false friends with Romance languages like "bacon"/"beer can"


==Phonology==
==Tonal Latin==
===Orthography===
===Consonants===


Tzaloxian has a simple consonant inventory with only 12 consonants:
*louksnā -> lū̀ˀna


*the stops ''p t c q h'', pronounced /p t ts k ʔ/
==Traditional English pronunciation of Sanskrit==
*the nasals ''m n ŋ'', pronounced as in IPA
Idea: "What if Sanskrit had a reading tradition from Medieval England"
*the fricatives ''f s ħ'', pronounced /f s x~ħ~h/
*the liquid ''l'', which is /ɾ/ when single and /l:/ when geminated


''F'', ''s'' and ''c'' before ''i'' are commonly pronounced /ç/, /ʃ/ and /tʃ/ respectively.
*"Cerebrals" merge with dentals as in southeast Asian languages
*Word-final nasal -ṃ merges with -m as in the traditional reading of Latin
*Miraculously final -aḥ and -o merge into /-oʊ/, the former is an independent development from Prakrit languages -- it comes from the usual assimilation of "silent gh"


===Vowels===
===Rigveda===


Tzaloxian has 45 different vowels, perhaps the most of any major Trician language. There are:
/ægnɪmaɪli pəroʊhitəm jædʒnəsjə diwəm əɹtwɪdʒəm hoʊteɪɹəm ɹætnəðeɪtəməm/
* the simple vowels ''a i u'' /ɐ ɪ ʊ/
== Arabic ==
* the double vowels ''aa ai au ia ii iu ua ui uu'' /a:~ar: ɛi ɔu ɪɛ i: ɪʊ ʊɔ ʏɪ u:~y:/
=== "Culturally Indian Arabic" ===
* the triple vowels ''aä iï uü äa ïi üu'' /ɐɑ: ɨi: ɨu: ɒ:ə i:e u:o/
q k g {{gh}} {{ng}}
* the overlong diphthongs ''äi aï äu aü ïa iä ïu iü üa uä üi uï'' /ɑ:ɪ əi: ɑ:ʊ əu: ijə~iʝ:ə jɑ: ijo~iʝ:o ju: uwə~uɣʷ:ə wɑ: uwe~uɣʷ:e wi:/
ts{{phar}} t{{sh}} j {{ž}} nj
* the tripthongs ''aia aiu aua aui iai iau iua iui uai uia uau uiu'' /ɛjə~ɛʝ:ə ɛjʏ~ɛʝ:ʏ ɔwə~ɔɣʷ:ə ɔwɪ~ɔɣʷ:ɪ jɛɪ jɔʊ~jœʏ jʊə~ʏ:ə jʏi~jʏ:~ʏ: wɛɪ wɪə wɔʊ wɪw~wɯ:~ʷɯ:/
t{{phar}} t d ð n
p{{phar}} f b b m
y r l w š s{{phar}} s h


===Prosody===
Skt CiCāCa gets borrowed as Stem III
====Stress====
====Intonation====


A typical Tzaloxian root looks like CV(C(:)S), where C is a consonant; V is one of the 45 vowels; and S is a simple vowel (a, i or u).
=== Non-Persianized Indian reading tradition ===
2 b Th t j h(phar) kh(emph) D d r z~jh s š s(emph) d(emph) t(emph) d(emph) 2(phar) gh(emph) f k(emph) kh l m n h v y


There is vowel harmony in Tzaloxian; if V ends in ''i'' or ''ï'', S can't be ''u'', and vice versa (S can't be ''i'' if V ends in ''u'' or ''ü''). So for example:
# [besmeˈl{{den}}:a:he r:ɐh{{phar}}ˈma:n{{den}}e r:ɐˈh{{phar}}ɐi:m]
# [ʔəl{{den}} ˈh{{phar}}ɐmɖo l{{den}}eˈl{{den}}:a:he ˈrəb:el{{den}} ʔ{{phar}}a:l{{den}}əˈmi:n{{den}}]
# [ʔər:ɑh{{phar}}ˈma:n{{den}}e r:ɐˈh{{phar}}ɐi:m]
# [ˈma:l{{den}}ekʰe ˈjəwme ˈɖ:i:n{{den}}]
# [ʔi:ˈja:kʰə ˈn{{den}}ɐʔ{{phar}}boɖo ʋə ˈʔi:ˈja:kʰə n{{den}}əʂʈʰɐˈʔ{{phar}}ɐi:n{{den}}]
# [ˈʔehɖen{{den}}a: s{{uvu}}:ɛˈra:t{{den}}{{uvu}}ʌl{{den}} moʂʈʰəˈqi:m]
# [s{{uvu}}ɛˈra:t{{den}}{{uvu}}ə l{{den}}:əˈd{{den}}i:n{{den}}ə ʔən{{den}}ˈʔ{{phar}}ɐmʈʰə ʔ{{phar}}ɐˈl{{den}}əjhem ˈgʰəjrel{{den}} məgʰˈz{{uvu}}u:be ʔ{{phar}}ɐˈləjhem ʋəl{{den}}a: ˈd{{den}}{{uvu}}:ɑ:l{{den}}:i:n{{den}}]


* ''fiüssu'' and ''fiüssa'' are valid words, but *''fiüssi'' isn't;
=== Irish reading of Arabic ===
{{aleph}}+ b+ t+~θ+ t+~θ+ d{{ž}}+ h{{phar}} x d+ d+ r{{vel}} z+ s+ {{sh}}+ s{{vel}} z{{vel}} d{{vel}} z{{vel}} {{aleph}}{{phar}} {{gh}} f+ g c+ l+ m+ n+ h+ v+ j+


* ''ciuana'', ''ciuani'' and ''ciuanu'' are all valid words.
(+ = causes following a u ā ū to become ɛ ʊ̈ e:~æ: ü:)


===Morphophonology===
# [bɪsmɪˈl:ɛ:hɪ r{{vel}}:ɑh{{phar}}ˈmɛ:nɪ r:{{vel}}:ɑˈh{{phar}}ɐi:m]
==Morphology==
# [ʔəl ˈh{{phar}}ɑmdʊ̈ lɪl:ˈlɛ:hɪ ˈr{{vel}}ɑb:ɪl ʔ{{phar}}a:ləˈmi:n]
<!-- How do the words in your language look? How do you derive words from others? Do you have cases? Are verbs inflected? Do nouns differ from adjectives? Do adjectives differ from verbs? Etc. -->
# [ʔər{{vel}}:ɑh{{phar}}ˈmɛ:nɪ r:{{vel}}:ɑˈh{{phar}}ɐi:m]
 
# [ˈmɛ:lɪcʰɪ ˈjɛ̈wmɪ ˈd:i:n]
<!-- Here are some example subcategories:
# [ʔi:ˈjɛ:cʰə ˈnæʔ{{phar}}p⁼ʊ̈dʊ̈ və ʔi:ˈjɛ:cʰə nəstʰæˈʔ{{phar}}ɐi:n]
 
# [ˈʔɪht⁼ɪnɛ: s{{vel}}:ëˈr{{vel}}ɑ:d{{den}}{{vel}}əl mʊ̈stʰəˈgi:m]
Nouns
# [s{{vel}}ëˈr{{vel}}ɑ:d{{den}}{{vel}}ə l:əˈdi:nə ʔənˈʔ{{phar}}æmtʰə ʔ{{phar}}æˈlɛ̈ɪhɪm ˈɣɐjrɪl məɣˈz{{vel}}u:bɪ ʔ{{phar}}æˈlɛ̈ɪhɪm vəlɛ: ˈz{{vel}}:ɑ:l:i:n]
Adjectives
Verbs
Adverbs
Particles
Derivational morphology
 
-->
 
==Syntax==
===Constituent order===
===Noun phrase===
===Verb phrase===
===Sentence phrase===
===Dependent clauses===
<!-- etc. etc. -->
 
==Example texts==
==Other resources==
<!-- Example: Word order, qualifiers, determinatives, branching, etc. -->
 
<!-- Template area -->
 
 
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Languages]]

Latest revision as of 14:07, 30 July 2022

Irish reading tradition for an Indic language

-h's interpreted as lenition

retroflexes are ignored but Th and Dh become dental fricatives

should be for a middle Prakrit (a liturgical form of Sauraseni)

Jamaican/Finnish Latin

  • Ecclesiastical Latin ti -> tsi gone wild: in this dialect it becomes si
    • Reflexive pronouns disappear (since tibi and sibi merge)
  • ē, ō -> ie, uo (the opposite of Romance languages)
    • could create interesting false friends with Romance languages like "bacon"/"beer can"

Tonal Latin

  • louksnā -> lū̀ˀna

Traditional English pronunciation of Sanskrit

Idea: "What if Sanskrit had a reading tradition from Medieval England"

  • "Cerebrals" merge with dentals as in southeast Asian languages
  • Word-final nasal -ṃ merges with -m as in the traditional reading of Latin
  • Miraculously final -aḥ and -o merge into /-oʊ/, the former is an independent development from Prakrit languages -- it comes from the usual assimilation of "silent gh"

Rigveda

/ægnɪmaɪli pəroʊhitəm jædʒnəsjə diwəm əɹtwɪdʒəm hoʊteɪɹəm ɹætnəðeɪtəməm/

Arabic

"Culturally Indian Arabic"

q k g ɣ ŋ tsˁ tʃ j ʒ nj tˁ t d ð n pˁ f b b m y r l w š sˁ s h

Skt CiCāCa gets borrowed as Stem III

Non-Persianized Indian reading tradition

2 b Th t j h(phar) kh(emph) D d r z~jh s š s(emph) d(emph) t(emph) d(emph) 2(phar) gh(emph) f k(emph) kh l m n h v y

  1. [besmeˈl̪:a:he r:ɐhˁˈma:n̪e r:ɐˈhˁɐi:m]
  2. [ʔəl̪ ˈhˁɐmɖo l̪eˈl̪:a:he ˈrəb:el̪ ʔˁa:l̪əˈmi:n̪]
  3. [ʔər:ɑhˁˈma:n̪e r:ɐˈhˁɐi:m]
  4. [ˈma:l̪ekʰe ˈjəwme ˈɖ:i:n̪]
  5. [ʔi:ˈja:kʰə ˈn̪ɐʔˁboɖo ʋə ˈʔi:ˈja:kʰə n̪əʂʈʰɐˈʔˁɐi:n̪]
  6. [ˈʔehɖen̪a: sʶ:ɛˈra:t̪ʶʌl̪ moʂʈʰəˈqi:m]
  7. [sʶɛˈra:t̪ʶə l̪:əˈd̪i:n̪ə ʔən̪ˈʔˁɐmʈʰə ʔˁɐˈl̪əjhem ˈgʰəjrel̪ məgʰˈzʶu:be ʔˁɐˈləjhem ʋəl̪a: ˈd̪ʶ:ɑ:l̪:i:n̪]

Irish reading of Arabic

ʔ+ b+ t+~θ+ t+~θ+ dʒ+ hˁ x d+ d+ rˠ z+ s+ ʃ+ sˠ zˠ dˠ zˠ ʔˁ ɣ f+ g c+ l+ m+ n+ h+ v+ j+

(+ = causes following a u ā ū to become ɛ ʊ̈ e:~æ: ü:)

  1. [bɪsmɪˈl:ɛ:hɪ rˠ:ɑhˁˈmɛ:nɪ r:ˠ:ɑˈhˁɐi:m]
  2. [ʔəl ˈhˁɑmdʊ̈ lɪl:ˈlɛ:hɪ ˈrˠɑb:ɪl ʔˁa:ləˈmi:n]
  3. [ʔərˠ:ɑhˁˈmɛ:nɪ r:ˠ:ɑˈhˁɐi:m]
  4. [ˈmɛ:lɪcʰɪ ˈjɛ̈wmɪ ˈd:i:n]
  5. [ʔi:ˈjɛ:cʰə ˈnæʔˁp⁼ʊ̈dʊ̈ və ʔi:ˈjɛ:cʰə nəstʰæˈʔˁɐi:n]
  6. [ˈʔɪht⁼ɪnɛ: sˠ:ëˈrˠɑ:d̪ˠəl mʊ̈stʰəˈgi:m]
  7. [sˠëˈrˠɑ:d̪ˠə l:əˈdi:nə ʔənˈʔˁæmtʰə ʔˁæˈlɛ̈ɪhɪm ˈɣɐjrɪl məɣˈzˠu:bɪ ʔˁæˈlɛ̈ɪhɪm vəlɛ: ˈzˠ:ɑ:l:i:n]