Yaqobian: Difference between revisions
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| ethnicity = Yaqobians | | ethnicity = Yaqobians | ||
| nativename = Shot'un; Yak'uvat shot'usa | | nativename = Shot'un; Yak'uvat shot'usa | ||
| pronunciation = | | pronunciation = ˈʃoːt'un, jaːk'əvət ʃoːt'usə | ||
| creator = MalvagiaMelanzana | | creator = MalvagiaMelanzana | ||
| setting = Fictional Country | | setting = Fictional Country | ||
| | | state = Yaqobia and bordering nations. | ||
| speakers = ~8 Million | | speakers = ~8 Million | ||
| familycolor = Afro-Asiatic | | familycolor = Afro-Asiatic | ||
| fam2 = Harkhus | | fam2 = Harkhus | ||
| ancestor = Old Harkhu | | ancestor = Old Harkhu | ||
| | | scripts = Latin Script, Arabic Script, Ancient Yaqobian Script | ||
| nation = Yaqobia | | nation = Yaqobia | ||
| notice = ipa | |||
}} | }} | ||
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==Morphology== | ==Morphology== | ||
===Consonantal Roots=== | ===Consonantal Roots=== | ||
Roots in the Yaqobian language consist of a sequence of consonants, called radicals. Words are formed from the addition of vowels and suffixes, and reduplication of root consonants. The vast majority of Yaqobian roots are biradical (2 consonants) or triradical (3 consonants), though quadriradical and monoradical roots are also common, the latter overwhelmingly being common verbs and their derivatives, or determiners. | Roots in the Yaqobian language consist of a sequence of consonants, called radicals. Words are formed from the addition of vowels and suffixes, and reduplication of root consonants. The vast majority of Yaqobian roots are biradical (2 consonants) or triradical (3 consonants), though quadriradical and monoradical roots are also common, the former mostly formed from combining two biradical roots, and the latter overwhelmingly being common verbs and their derivatives, or determiners. | ||
===Nominal Morphology=== | ===Nominal Morphology=== | ||
====Case and Number==== | ====Case and Number==== | ||
Case has mostly dissapeared from Orrovian, but its vestiges can be seen in possessive contructions as well as certain patterns of pluralization. | Case has mostly dissapeared from Orrovian, but its vestiges can be seen in possessive contructions as well as certain patterns of pluralization. | ||
[[Category:Languages]] | |||
[[Category:Conlangs]] | |||
[[Category:Afroasiatic languages]] | |||
[[Category:A posteriori]] |
Latest revision as of 01:46, 19 November 2023
Yaqobian | |
---|---|
Shot'un; Yak'uvat shot'usa | |
Pronunciation | [ˈʃoːt'un, jaːk'əvət ʃoːt'usə] |
Created by | MalvagiaMelanzana |
Setting | Fictional Country |
Native to | Yaqobia and bordering nations. |
Ethnicity | Yaqobians |
Native speakers | ~8 Million ({{{date}}}) |
Afroasiatic
| |
Early form | Old Harkhu
|
Latin Script, Arabic Script, Ancient Yaqobian Script | |
Official status | |
Official language in | Yaqobia |
The Yaqobian language, called __ in Yaqobian, is the national language of Yaqobia.
Phonology
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Pharyngeal | Glottal | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Plain | Labial | ||||||||||||||
Nasal | m | م | n | ن | |||||||||||
Plosive | lenis | b | ب | d | د | ||||||||||
fortis | p | پ | t | ت | k | ك | kʷ | ڮ | ʔ | ا | |||||
ejective | t' | ط | k' | ق | kʷ' | ڨ | |||||||||
Fricative | plain | f | ف | s | س | ʃ | ش | x | خ | xʷ | څ | ħ | ح | h | ه |
ejective | (t)s' | ص | (t)ʃ' | ض | |||||||||||
Approximant | w | و | l | ل | j | ی | ʕ | ع | |||||||
Trill | r | ر | ʀ | غ |
Phonotactics
Yaqobian is fairly restrictive in the type of allowed syllables. The maximum syllable is CV(ː)(C). Only the following syllable structures, however, are allowed in Yaqobian:
- ˈCVC
- CVC
- ˈCVː
- ˈCVːC#
- #Cə
- Cə#
Morphology
Consonantal Roots
Roots in the Yaqobian language consist of a sequence of consonants, called radicals. Words are formed from the addition of vowels and suffixes, and reduplication of root consonants. The vast majority of Yaqobian roots are biradical (2 consonants) or triradical (3 consonants), though quadriradical and monoradical roots are also common, the former mostly formed from combining two biradical roots, and the latter overwhelmingly being common verbs and their derivatives, or determiners.
Nominal Morphology
Case and Number
Case has mostly dissapeared from Orrovian, but its vestiges can be seen in possessive contructions as well as certain patterns of pluralization.