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:''{{SUBPAGENAME}} is highly diglossic; this page describes the modern "High Sjowaázh" register. For the other varieties, see the subpages devoted to individual varieties.
'''Suwáá''' (''Suwáá tahyeq'') is a language isolate of Hmøøh, spoken on the island country and archipelago of [[Verse:Hmøøh/Suwáábyíq|Suwáábyíq]]. It is mainly inspired aesthetically by Burmese, Japanese, Navajo, and Ancient Greek, and its grammar is meant to be "Navajo-lite" (agglutinative, strongly prefixing, strongly head-final, and head-marking, though not fully polysynthetic; noun incorporation is limited to certain formal styles).


:[[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/Classical]]
The Suwáá dialect continuum is not known to be related to any other Hmøøhian language, but some have proposed a relation to the [[Quame languages]] based on lexical coincidences.
:[[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/'Onáp'aañ]]
== Lexicon ==
:[[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/Jighoó'ii]]
* Nyu-Mɛ Kɛ{{acute}}q: inventor of  Kite guitar-type guitars
:[[{{FULLPAGENAME}}/Cyamányeñh]]
* su- = ''frozen derivation''
:[[{{PAGENAME}}/Wordlist]]
* wáá = person
:[[{{PAGENAME}}/Swadesh list]]
* khywen = house
:[[{{PAGENAME}}/Names]]
* weé = name
* maa = tree
* yań = water
* lwɛ = to do, to make
* mɔ́ = blood
* zoo = to look
* mé = to be (copula)
** ''Upwe namé.'' 'I am a boy.'
** ''Suwáá imé.'' 'He is a Suwáá.'
* ze = to eat
* zé = to stack


{{Infobox language
== Phonology ==
|image =  
=== Initials ===
|imagesize =  
Suwáá has a large number of initials; however, prefixes do not allow aspirated or voiced initials.
|creator = [[User:IlL|IlL]]
* Historical velar stops: k kh g ŋ ky khy gy ŋy kw khw gw ŋw kyw khyw gyw ŋyw /k kʰ g ŋ tɕ tɕʰ dʑ ɲ kw kʰw ŋw tɕɥ tɕʰɥ dʑɥ ɲɥ/
|name = {{PAGENAME}}
* Historical alveolar stops: t th d n s sh z ny tw thw dw nw sw shw zw nyw /t tʰ d n s sʰ z ɲ tw tʰw dw nw sw sʰw zw ɲɥ/
|nativename = Sjowaázh dashég
* Historical labial stops: p ph b m py phy by my pw phw bw mw /p pʰ b m pj pʰj bj mj pw pʰw bw mw/
|pronunciation= /stsʊwɑ̌ːʐ̊ tɑʂˑɛ́k/
* y r w h ry hy rw hw ryw yw hyw /j r w h rj ɕ rw hw lɥ ɥ ɕɥ/
|setting= Tricin
|region = Sjowaázh daZóol, in Txapoalli
|familycolor=Isolate
|fam1= [[Proto-Sjowaazhic|Sjowaazhic]]
|script={{PAGENAME}} script
|iso3=
|notice=IPA
}}


Forms of '''{{PAGENAME}}''' (English: ''soo-WAHZH''; High Sj. ''Sjowaázh da·shég'' /stsʊwɑ̌ːʐ̊ tɑʂˑɛ́k/, gloss: Sjowaázh {{sc|3pl}}-language) are the dominant languages in [[Verse:Tricin/Zóol|Sjowaázh daZóol]] in [[Verse:Tricin/Txapoalli]]. Sjowaázh is a polysynthetic language with a complex verbal morphology. It is primarily inspired by Navajo, Polish, and Hungarian.
Usually, /r/ is realized much like Standard Japanese ''r''; it is [l] before /i j/.


{{PAGENAME}} forms a single dialect continuum and is otherwise an isolate, though some speculate that {{PAGENAME}} is related to the [[Quame languages]].
=== Rimes ===
==Diglossia==
* Monomoraic: i e ɛ a ɔ o u n /i e ɛ a ɔ o u ɯ̃/
Sjowaázh is strongly diglossic, with the diglossia influenced by social class. High Sjowaázh, the prestige variety, is a mixture of 'Onáp'aañ Sjowaázh and [[Sjowaázh/Classical|Classical Sjowaázh]] and is the standard language used in literature, formal writing, newsreading, public announcements. High Sjowaázh plays a similar role to the RP accent in British English: it is natively spoken mostly by people from highly educated and wealthy families. On the other end of the spectrum, the lower class speak local lects which are sometimes mutually unintelligible. The diglossia is also influenced by gender: urban women are more likely than other groups to use more neutral forms and accents (i.e. closer to an abstract pseudo-High Sjowaázh "women's lect"). Since the 1340s (fT), a greater permissiveness towards regional and "nonstandard" varieties of Sjowaázh has taken hold in education; however, due to greater travel and the mass media, marked features in Sjowaázh varieties have also begun to disappear.
* Bimoraic, but q cannot bear tone: iq eq ɛq aq ɔq oq uq /ɪʔ eɪ̯ʔ aɪ̯ʔ aʔ aʊ̯ʔ oʊ̯ʔ ʊʔ/
* Bimoraic, both morae tone-bearing: ii ee ɛɛ aa ɔɔ oo uu in en ɛn an ɔn on un /iː eː ɛː aː ɔː oː uː ɪɰ̃ eɪ̯ɰ̃ aɪ̯ɰ̃ aɰ̃ aʊ̯ɰ̃ oʊ̯ɰ̃ uɰ̃/


The hierarchy of lects is roughly as follows:
/ʔ/ is realized as gemination before obstruents; /ɯ̃ ɰ̃/ are realized as homorganic nasals before nasal and stop initials.
*Upper class: High Sjowaázh
*Professional class: accented High Sjowaázh
*Middle class: local vernacular + High Sjowaázh
*Working/lower class: broad local vernacular


High Sjowaázh is the variety taught in Sjowaázh schools and also the variety that is often first taught to non-natives. Though most natives are able to speak the proper language to some extent, they only choose to use it in certain situations, like greeting a customer, or talking to a stranger over the phone.
=== Tone ===
High (acute) and low (unmarked)
== Morphology ==
=== Nouns ===
Suwáá nouns are often, though not always, monosyllabic, like ''mɔ́'' 'blood'. Here is an example of a noun inflected for possession:
* ''namɔ́'' = my blood
* ''himɔ́'' = thy blood
* ''tamɔ́'' = his/her/their blood (proximate, like Navajo bi-)
* ''wamɔ́'' = his/her/their blood (obviative‚ like Navajo yi-)
* ''amɔ́'' = one's blood
* ''kyamɔ́'' = our (exc.) blood
* ''yemɔ́'' = our (inc.) blood
* ''erimɔ́'' = your (pl.) blood


The language encountered in Sjowaázh pop culture can be much less posh, depending on the region and social class of the characters, and the target audience. The most frequently used Sjowaázh varieties in pop culture are the urban middle-class lects (most creators live in or near one of the major urban centers, e.g. 'Onápaañ, Jighoó'ii, Cyamányeñh). Using more unusual lects mark certain types of characters (e.g. rural lects for country hicks, broad urban lects for hypermasculine bros, a caricatured "women's lect" for ditzy teenage girls, High Sjowaázh for posh villains, ...)
Possession is indicated by using the appropriate possessive form after the possessor: ''Eqsiq tamɔ́'' (E. 3-blood) 'Eqsiq's blood'.
=== Verbs ===
Suwáá verb roots are always monosyllabic.


==Todo==
== Syntax ==
<!--blacklist: zoob -->
=== Obviation ===
*Wackernagel, "magna cum laude" order
Like Navajo, Suwáá shows various levels of animacy in its grammar, with certain nouns taking specific verb forms according to their rank in this animacy hierarchy. For instance, Suwáá nouns can be ranked by animacy on a continuum from most animate (a human or lightning) to least animate (an abstraction):
*Head-marking
*Badly irregular ablaut like Navajo
*Should be different from Navajo and [[Roshterian]] but still polysynthetic
*Numbers: chiíñ, shjhed, naájy, hoók', shaáb, k'al, ghoól, lagh, pijh, lóoh (change some of these numbers)
*Some Quame-ish words
*Pluractional prefix
*Should Modern High Sjowaázh be different from Classical Sjowaázh?
*expressive/discourse verb forms, not using them will make you sound stilted (High Sjowaázh has less of these, except in poetic Classical/High Sjowaázh)
*Some dialects have Meeussen's rule to turn some instances of HH to HL
*páañgy = person


<poem>
humans > infants/big animals > midsize animals > small animals > insects > natural forces > inanimate objects/plants > abstractions
i fall in love with you (active counterpart) = shelisjhaágy
do you want reduplication?
sounds ok
how is -in for an attributive clause
or relative clause
verb+in
so it's a nominalizer
clofab intensifies
yeah
shiilyohookh+in = that piles up
😍1
and that could ablaut to -iin or -iín?
in some forms like intransitive attributive
most C(C)oC verbs should inflect like sjhogy
maybe
sjowaazh should be non-config
noun phrases are head-final and they use relational nouns
shiilyohookh would inflect like


khashiilyohookh
Generally, the most animate noun in a sentence must occur first while the noun with lesser animacy occurs second. If both nouns are equal in animacy, then either noun can occur in the first position. So, both example sentences (1) and (2) are correct. The ''n-'' prefix on the verb indicates that the 1st noun is the subject and ''i-'' indicates that the 2nd noun is the subject.
akheshiiñlyohookh
khóoshigyoñhookh?
inceptive should use t
yeah
or d
because of quame future
quihumists would relate that to thensarian -tē-
yeah
that "let us soar party" 😀
and for the fun of it...
the t should be an infix!
sjhodagy-
😍1
should mean to fall in love
</poem>


==Phonology==
: ''Upwe unɛń nzoo.'' (1)
===Consonants===
: boy girl OBV-look
{{PAGENAME}} has a large consonant inventory:
: 'The boy is looking at the girl.'
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" class="bluetable lightbluebg" style=" text-align:center;"
|+ '''Consonant phonemes in {{PAGENAME}}'''
|-
!  colspan="2" style="width: 136px; "|
!  style="width: 68px; " |Labial
!  style="width: 68px; " |Dental
!  style="width: 68px; " |Retroflex
!  style="width: 68px; " |Alveolo-palatal
!  style="width: 68px; " |Palatal
!  style="width: 68px; " |Velar
!  style="width: 68px; " |Glottal
|-
!colspan="2"| Nasal
| '''m''' /m/
| '''n''' /n/
|
|
| '''ny''' /ɲ/
|
|
|-
! rowspan="3" style=""  |Plosive
! |<small>tenuis</small>
| '''b''' /p/
| '''d''' /t/
|
|
| '''gy''' /c/
| '''g''' /k/
| '''' ''' /ʔ/
|-
! |<small>aspirated</small>
| '''p''' /pʰ/
| '''t''' /tʰ/
|
|
| '''ky''' /cʰ/
| '''k''' /kʰ/
|
|-
! |<small>ejective</small>
| '''p'''' /pʼ/
| '''t'''' /tʼ/
|
|
| '''ky'''' /cʼ/
| '''k'''' /kʼ/
|
|-
! rowspan="2" style="" |Fricative
! |<small>lenis</small>
|
| '''z''' /z̊/
| '''zh''' /ʐ̊/
| '''zy''' /ʑ̊/
|
| '''gh''' /ɣ̊/
|
|-
! |<small>fortis</small>
|
| '''s''' /sˑ/
| '''sh''' /ʂˑ/
| '''sy''' /ɕˑ/
|
| '''kh''' /xˑ/
| '''h''' /h/
|-
! rowspan="3" style="" |Affricate
! |<small>tenuis</small>
|
| '''j''' /ts/
| '''jh''' /tʂ/
| '''jy''' /tɕ/
|
|
|
|-
! |<small>aspirated</small>
|
| '''c''' /tsʰ/
| '''ch''' /tʂʰ/
| '''cy''' /tɕʰ/
|
|
|
|-
! |<small>ejective</small>
|
| '''c'''' /tsʼ/
| '''ch'''' /tʂʼ/
| '''cy'''' /tɕʼ/
|
|
|
|-
! colspan="2" style="" |Approximant
| '''w''' /w/
| '''l''' /l/
|
| '''ly''' /ʎ/
| '''y''' /j/
|
|
|}


All consonants are long, compared to English: with plain stops the hold is longer, with aspirated stops the aspiration is longer, and with affricates the frication is longer. The voice onset time of the aspirated and ejective stops is twice as long as that found in most other languages.
: ''Upwe unɛń izoo.'' (2)
: boy girl PROX-look
: 'The girl is being looked at by the boy.'


;Stops and affricates
But example sentence (3) sounds wrong to most Suwáá speakers because the less animate noun occurs before the more animate noun:
All stops and affricates, except for the bilabial and glottal, have a three-way laryngeal contrast between unaspirated, aspirated, and ejective. The labials /p, pʰ, m/ are found mainly in grammatical affixes and loanwords. Most of the contrasts in the inventory lie within coronal territory at the alveolar and palatoalveolar places of articulation.
: ''*Hipyii unɛń hyenkywáq.''
: bird girl PST-OBV-peck
: 'The bird pecked the girl.'


The aspirated stops /tʰ, kʰ/ (orthographic {{angbr|{{spell-nv|t}}}}, {{angbr|{{spell-nv|k}}}}) are typically aspirated with velar frication [tx, kx] (they are phonetically affricates — homorganic in the case of [kx], heterorganic in the case of [tx]). The acoustic difference between an affricate and a stop + fricative consonant cluster is the rate of increase in the amplitude of the frication noise (i.e. the ''rise time''); affricates have a short rise time, consonant clusters have a longer rise time between the stop and fricative. There is variation within {{PAGENAME}}, however, in this respect: some speakers lack strong velar frication having instead a period of aspiration.
To express this idea requires that the more animate noun occur first, as in sentence (4):
: ''Unɛń hipyii hyeekywáq.''
: girl bird PST-PROX-peck
: 'The girl was pecked by the bird.'


Similarly the unaspirated velar /k/ (orthographic {{angbr|{{spell-nv|g}}}}) is realized as with optional voiced velar frication following the stop burst: [k] ~ [kɣ].
== Vocabulary ==
 
Purist
While the aspiration of stops is markedly long compared to most other languages, the aspiration of the affricates is quite short: the main feature distinguishing /ts/, /tʂ/ and /tɕ/ from /tsʰ/, /tʂʰ/ and /tɕʰ/ is that the frication is half again as long in the latter: [tsʰˑ], [tʂʰˑ], [tɕʰˑ]. The ejectives /ts'/, /tʂ'/, /tɕ'/, on the other hand, have short frication, presumably due to the lack of pulmonic airflow. There is a period of near silence before the glottalized onset of the vowel.
 
;Continuants
{{PAGENAME}} fricatives are noisier than the fricatives that occur in English.
 
{{PAGENAME}} also does not have consistent phonetic voicing in the "voiced" fricative members: /z, ʐ, ʑ, ɣ/ may be partially devoiced during the constriction. In stem-initial position, /ʐ/ has a slight tendency to be voiceless near the offset, /z/ and /ʑ/ are often mostly voiceless with phonetic voicing only at the onset, /ɣ/ is also only partially voiced with voicing at onset. A more consistent acoustic correlate of the "voicing" is the duration of the consonant: "voiceless" consonants have longer durations than "voiced" consonants.
 
;Glottal(ized) consonants
Consonants involving a glottal closure — the glottal stop, ejective stops, and the glottalized sonorants — may have optional creaky voice on voiced sounds adjacent to the glottal gesture. Glottal stops may also be realized entirely as creaky voice instead of single glottal closure.
 
===Vowels===
{{PAGENAME}} has only 4 vowel qualities, although there is phonemic vowel length and nasalization.
{{col-begin}}
{{col-break}}
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" class="bluetable lightbluebg" style="text-align:center;"
|+ '''{{PAGENAME}} oral vowels'''
! rowspan="2" style=""|
! colspan="2" style="" |Front
! colspan="2" style="" |Back
|-
!style="width: 45px; "|<small>short</small>
!style="width: 45px; "|<small>long</small>
!style="width: 45px; "|<small>short</small>
!style="width: 45px; "|<small>long</small>
|-
! style="" |Close
| {{spell-nv|'''i'''}} /ɪ/
| {{spell-nv|'''ii'''}} /iː/
| {{spell-nv|'''o'''}} /ʊ/
| {{spell-nv|'''oo'''}} /uː/
|-
! style="" |Open
| {{spell-nv|'''e'''}} /ɛ/
| {{spell-nv|'''ee'''}} /ɛː/
| {{spell-nv|'''a'''}} /ɑ/
| {{spell-nv|'''aa'''}} /ɑː/
|}
 
{{col-break}}
{| border="1" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" class="bluetable lightbluebg" style="text-align:center;"
|+ '''{{PAGENAME}} nasal vowels'''
! rowspan="2" style=""|
! colspan="2" style="width: 90px; " |Front
! colspan="2" style="width: 90px; " |Back
|-
!style="width: 45px; "|<small>short</small>
!style="width: 45px; "|<small>long</small>
!style="width: 45px; "|<small>short</small>
!style="width: 45px; "|<small>long</small>
|-
! style="" |Close
| {{spell-nv|'''iñ'''}} /ĩ/
| {{spell-nv|'''iiñ'''}} /ĩː/
| {{spell-nv|'''oñ'''}} /õ/
| {{spell-nv|'''ooñ'''}} /õː/
|-
! style="" |Open
| {{spell-nv|'''eñ'''}} /ɛ̃/
| {{spell-nv|'''eeñ'''}} /ɛ̃ː/
| {{spell-nv|'''añ'''}} /ɑ̃/
| {{spell-nv|'''aañ'''}} /ɑ̃ː/
|}
{{col-end}}
 
===Pitch accent===
Standard High {{PAGENAME}} has a pitch accent system - every word will have at least one high pitched mora but may have more than one, especially in longer words. A mora with high pitch is marked with an acute accent.
 
Other Sjowaázh lects have different tonal systems or none. For example, the Cyamányeh topolect has a simple pitch accent system like that of Ancient Greek – namely, only one mora per word receives high pitch.
 
==Orthography==
All varieties of Sjowaázh are written in the Sjowaázh alphabet, which was originally developed as a phonetic notation system like the IPA.
 
Sjowaázh uses two letters for /pʰ/ ''p'' and two letters for /h/ ''h''. This reflects the merger of Old Sjowaázh /pʰ/ with /v/ and Old Sjowaázh /h/ with /f/ respectively.
===Writing vernaculars===
 
==Sandhi==
All Sjowaázh lects have extensive sandhi systems. The following describes High Sjowaázh sandhi.
===Consonants and vowels===
===Tone===
 
==Morphology==
Sjowaázh is strongly head-marking, like many indigenous languages of North and Central America.
===Nouns===
====Number====
High Sjowaázh has singular, dual and plural numbers. Outside of High and Classical Sjowaázh, the dual is only found in some isolated dialects.
 
Grammatical number is not marked on nouns, rather verbs index the number of their argument nouns.
 
====Possessive prefixes====
{| class="bluetable lightbluebg"
|-
! Person !! Singular !! Dual !! Plural
|-
! 1
|| ''kha-'' || ''gyeé-'' || ''jhé-''
|-
! 2
|| ''mé-'' || ''ze-'' || ''ólo-''
|-
! 3 (an.)
|| ''wa-'' || ''boñ-'' || ''da-''
|-
!3 (inan.)
|colspan=3| ''éñ-''
|-
!Impersonal
|colspan=3| '' 'a'- ''
|}
 
====Relational nouns====
Sjowaázh uses relational nouns instead of adpositions.
*''c'áañh'' 'next to, near'
**''syíij wac'áañh'' 'next to the man'
 
====Noun clitics====
*''='ah'': focus ("it is X that...")
 
====Obligatory possession====
Obligatory possession is used for family members.
 
Examples:
*'mother': kheemáñ, méemáñ, weemáñ, gyeemán, zemáñ, boñmáñ, cheemáñ, óleemáñ, deemáñ, 'a'eemáñ
*'father': khány, mány, wány, gyeény, zány, baány, chány, ólany, dány, 'a'ány
*'son': kha'ízh, mé'izh, wa'ízh, gyeé'izh, ze'ízh, boñ'ízh, ché'izh, ólo'ízh, da'ízh, 'a'ízh
*'daughter': kháziil, méziil, wáziil, gyeéziil, zéziil, boziil, chéziil, ólosyiil, dáziil, 'áziil
 
===Emphatic pronouns===
*''khabóoh'' 'I'
*''mé'aj'' 'you (sg)'
*''wojhá' '' 'he/she'
*''jhée'i'' 'we'
*''ólosdo'' 'you (pl)'
*''bajaá' '' 'they'
 
===Verbs===
The number of the subject and object is indexed on the verb if the noun is animate.
====Verb template====
*mood/adverbial
*global directional/shape
*local directional
*personal affix
*inverse person marker
*'''STEM'''/(TAM & voice ablaut)
*causative
*reflexive
*TAM
*negative
*discourse marker/nominalizer
 
====Adverbial preverbs====
*''shii-'': again and again, one after another
*gladly
*unwillingly
*all of a sudden
 
====Directional preverbs====
Directionals fall into two types:
*Global directionals describe movement towards a final destination or describes a global shape.
*Local directionals describe movement from the speaker's point of view or from a small-scale perspective. These directionals are used especially for fluids and for individual behavior in groups of people or animals. Ex: "locally inwards", "locally outwards", "shearing", "with turbulent motion", "with some local movement opposite to the global direction", etc.
 
Some directional preverbs:
*''lyo-'': 'forming a line'
 
====TAM inflection====
A characteristic feature of Sjowaázh is verb stems taking different ablaut grades for various TAMS. These patterns tend to be quite complex.
 
Most Sjowaázh lects have a fixed (large) number of regular ablaut patterns. The number of ablaut patterns, and the assignment of verb stems to ablaut patterns, depends on the lect.
 
Example:
*I love you = ''lisjhógy''
*I loved you = ''alisjhégy''
*I will love you = ''lóosjheyáñ'' (li-óo-sjheyáñ)
*I fall in love with you (inceptive) = ''lisjhódagy''
 
====Personal affixes====
Grammatical number is not marked on nouns, rather verbs index the number of their argument nouns.
=====Unipersonal=====
These prefixes are used with intransitive verbs or transitive verbs where the subject, or the object, or both are 3rd person.
{| class="bluetable lightbluebg"
|-
! Person !! Singular !! Dual !! Plural
|-
! 1
|| ''kha-'' || ''gyeé-'' || ''jhé-''
|-
! 2
|| ''mé-'' || ''ze-'' || ''ólo-''
|-
! 3 (an.)
|| ''wa-'' || ''boñ-'' || ''be-''
|-
!3 (inan.)
|colspan=3| ''éñ-''
|-
!Impersonal
|colspan=3| '' 'a'- ''
|}
 
=====Bipersonal=====
These prefixes are used with transitive verbs only.
*''li-'': 2 > 1
*''zyi-'': 1 > 2
*''gi-'': inverse marker for verbs with a third person; comes between the personal suffix and the stem. Usage follows the animacy hierarchy 2 = 1 > 3; 3AN > 3INAN; PROX > OBV. By default the direction of the action is assumed to go down from the "more animate" constituent to the "less animate" one. The inverse marker is used when the action goes up the hierarchy.
**Example: ''khasjhógy'' = I love him/her; ''kha'''gi'''sjhógy'' = s/he loves me
 
====Voice====
*Transitivizer/Causative
*Detransitivizer/Passive
 
====Discourse affixes====
Sjowaázh lects use discourse verbal affixes to reflect the speaker's attitude, degree of surprise, or other things; not using them may come across as clinical, stilted, or overly posh. High Sjowaázh normally uses discourse affixes less often than do other Sjowaázh lects, and uses "degree of surprise" affixes more frequently than attitudinal affixes. On average, female High Sjowaázh speakers use attitudinal affixes more frequently than male speakers.
 
Poetic High Sjowaázh may use archaic discourse affixes used in Classical Sjowaázh.
====Incorporation====
Incorporation is no longer productive in High Sjowaázh and is considered a poetic device.
 
===Numerals===
Numerals are really verbs: "one", "two", etc. are verbs meaning "to be one", "to be two", etc.
 
==Syntax==
===Word order===
Sjowaázh is non-configurational. Noun phrases are head-final.
===Relative and complement clauses===
Relative and complement clauses are formed by attaching the nominalizing clitic ''=in'' after the clause. On the other hand, verbal nouns are not used.
 
Examples:
*''lisjhógy'' /lɪ̀ʂtʂʊ́c/ = 'I love you' > ''lisjhógyin'' /lɪ̀ʂtʂʊ́cɪ̀n/ =  'the fact that I love you'
*''shiilyohóokh'' = 'they pile up forming a line' > ''shiilyohóokhin'' = (a type of scale used in Sjowaázh music)
 
===Animacy hierarchy===
 
==Vocabulary==
Sjowaázh, in addition to native words, uses many loans from Naquic and Tsimulh languages. Borrowed words are almost all nouns.
 
To abbreviate words, Sjowaázh almost always uses clipping.
 
==Study by non-native speakers==
Due to the popularity of Sjowaázh pop culture across the globe, Sjowaázh is commonly learned by Sjowaázhophile otakus. Sjowaázh is considered one of the most daunting languages for speakers of most Talman, Etalocian and Bjeheondian languages, due to its morphological complexity and high degree of diglossia.
==Poetry==
Sjowaázh poetry uses quantitative meters, like Sanskrit meters
 
(LLLLSLLSSSSSSLLSLLSLL)
 
(LLLSSLSLSSSLLLSLLSL)
 
<poem>
Lyoóshaañt’ ólo·sjecyida'eech’ óna' da·sk’onyáad shéb (LLSSSSSLSSSSLS)
Gáadeéñcyok’ ooñ·táshojyekaad wehacóozh bijháalyin (LLSLSSSLSSLSLS)
</poem>
 
==Phrasebook==
*''Lisjhógy'' /lìʂtʂʊ́c/ = I love you.
*''Nóch'ahgalyá be'zaañbójy. Ghoñh 'ésjol be'zaañbocyáyee'.'' = "All animals are equal. But some animals are more equal than others."
 
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]][[Category:Quihum languages]][[Category:Tricin]]

Latest revision as of 20:53, 8 May 2023

Suwáá (Suwáá tahyeq) is a language isolate of Hmøøh, spoken on the island country and archipelago of Suwáábyíq. It is mainly inspired aesthetically by Burmese, Japanese, Navajo, and Ancient Greek, and its grammar is meant to be "Navajo-lite" (agglutinative, strongly prefixing, strongly head-final, and head-marking, though not fully polysynthetic; noun incorporation is limited to certain formal styles).

The Suwáá dialect continuum is not known to be related to any other Hmøøhian language, but some have proposed a relation to the Quame languages based on lexical coincidences.

Lexicon

  • Nyu-Mɛ Kɛ́q: inventor of Kite guitar-type guitars
  • su- = frozen derivation
  • wáá = person
  • khywen = house
  • weé = name
  • maa = tree
  • yań = water
  • lwɛ = to do, to make
  • mɔ́ = blood
  • zoo = to look
  • mé = to be (copula)
    • Upwe namé. 'I am a boy.'
    • Suwáá imé. 'He is a Suwáá.'
  • ze = to eat
  • zé = to stack

Phonology

Initials

Suwáá has a large number of initials; however, prefixes do not allow aspirated or voiced initials.

  • Historical velar stops: k kh g ŋ ky khy gy ŋy kw khw gw ŋw kyw khyw gyw ŋyw /k kʰ g ŋ tɕ tɕʰ dʑ ɲ kw kʰw ŋw tɕɥ tɕʰɥ dʑɥ ɲɥ/
  • Historical alveolar stops: t th d n s sh z ny tw thw dw nw sw shw zw nyw /t tʰ d n s sʰ z ɲ tw tʰw dw nw sw sʰw zw ɲɥ/
  • Historical labial stops: p ph b m py phy by my pw phw bw mw /p pʰ b m pj pʰj bj mj pw pʰw bw mw/
  • y r w h ry hy rw hw ryw yw hyw /j r w h rj ɕ rw hw lɥ ɥ ɕɥ/

Usually, /r/ is realized much like Standard Japanese r; it is [l] before /i j/.

Rimes

  • Monomoraic: i e ɛ a ɔ o u n /i e ɛ a ɔ o u ɯ̃/
  • Bimoraic, but q cannot bear tone: iq eq ɛq aq ɔq oq uq /ɪʔ eɪ̯ʔ aɪ̯ʔ aʔ aʊ̯ʔ oʊ̯ʔ ʊʔ/
  • Bimoraic, both morae tone-bearing: ii ee ɛɛ aa ɔɔ oo uu in en ɛn an ɔn on un /iː eː ɛː aː ɔː oː uː ɪɰ̃ eɪ̯ɰ̃ aɪ̯ɰ̃ aɰ̃ aʊ̯ɰ̃ oʊ̯ɰ̃ uɰ̃/

/ʔ/ is realized as gemination before obstruents; /ɯ̃ ɰ̃/ are realized as homorganic nasals before nasal and stop initials.

Tone

High (acute) and low (unmarked)

Morphology

Nouns

Suwáá nouns are often, though not always, monosyllabic, like mɔ́ 'blood'. Here is an example of a noun inflected for possession:

  • namɔ́ = my blood
  • himɔ́ = thy blood
  • tamɔ́ = his/her/their blood (proximate, like Navajo bi-)
  • wamɔ́ = his/her/their blood (obviative‚ like Navajo yi-)
  • amɔ́ = one's blood
  • kyamɔ́ = our (exc.) blood
  • yemɔ́ = our (inc.) blood
  • erimɔ́ = your (pl.) blood

Possession is indicated by using the appropriate possessive form after the possessor: Eqsiq tamɔ́ (E. 3-blood) 'Eqsiq's blood'.

Verbs

Suwáá verb roots are always monosyllabic.

Syntax

Obviation

Like Navajo, Suwáá shows various levels of animacy in its grammar, with certain nouns taking specific verb forms according to their rank in this animacy hierarchy. For instance, Suwáá nouns can be ranked by animacy on a continuum from most animate (a human or lightning) to least animate (an abstraction):

humans > infants/big animals > midsize animals > small animals > insects > natural forces > inanimate objects/plants > abstractions

Generally, the most animate noun in a sentence must occur first while the noun with lesser animacy occurs second. If both nouns are equal in animacy, then either noun can occur in the first position. So, both example sentences (1) and (2) are correct. The n- prefix on the verb indicates that the 1st noun is the subject and i- indicates that the 2nd noun is the subject.

Upwe unɛń nzoo. (1)
boy girl OBV-look
'The boy is looking at the girl.'
Upwe unɛń izoo. (2)
boy girl PROX-look
'The girl is being looked at by the boy.'

But example sentence (3) sounds wrong to most Suwáá speakers because the less animate noun occurs before the more animate noun:

*Hipyii unɛń hyenkywáq.
bird girl PST-OBV-peck
'The bird pecked the girl.'

To express this idea requires that the more animate noun occur first, as in sentence (4):

Unɛń hipyii hyeekywáq.
girl bird PST-PROX-peck
'The girl was pecked by the bird.'

Vocabulary

Purist