Saxuma: Difference between revisions

73 bytes added ,  4 October 2024
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* If stressed or directly preceding a stressed syllable, long vowels and diphthongs receive contour tones. For stressed vowels, this is a peaking contour of tone MHM, e.g. ''enâ'' [ɛ̀ˈna᷈ː] ("passion"). When directly preceding a stressed syllable, the long vowel bears a falling contour ML, e.g. ''mābá'' [mâːˈbá] ("various").  
* If stressed or directly preceding a stressed syllable, long vowels and diphthongs receive contour tones. For stressed vowels, this is a peaking contour of tone MHM, e.g. ''enâ'' [ɛ̀ˈna᷈ː] ("passion"). When directly preceding a stressed syllable, the long vowel bears a falling contour ML, e.g. ''mābá'' [mâːˈbá] ("various").  
** When long vowels are pronounced as identical vowels in hiatus, each vowel carries its own tone. If stressed, they follow the pattern of HM. If preceding a stressed syllable, then ML. Using the examples above, ''enâ'' would be pronounced as [ɛ̀ˈnáˌa] and ''mābá'' as [ma.àˈbá].
** When long vowels are pronounced as identical vowels in hiatus, each vowel carries its own tone. If stressed, they follow the pattern of HM. If preceding a stressed syllable, then ML. Using the examples above, ''enâ'' would be pronounced as [ɛ̀ˈnáˌa] and ''mābá'' as [ma.àˈbá].
===W Ablaut===
The W Ablaut is a morpho-phonological process that appears throughout Saxuma inflections. It performs the following vowel transformations:
* a → aw if stressed, → o if unstressed
* i → yu
* u → ū
* e → yo
* o → ō


==Orthography==
==Orthography==
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===Script===
===Script===


==Verbal Morphology==
==Morphology==
 
===Pronouns===
 
===Nominal Morphology===


===W Ablaut===
====Construct Case====


The W Ablaut is a morpho-phonological process that appears throughout Saxuma verb inflections. It performs the following vowel transformations:
====Gender====
* a → aw if stressed, → o if unstressed
* i → yu
* u → ū
* e → yo
* o → ō


===Verb Classes===
===Verb Morphology===


There are nine verb classes in modern Saxuma, most of which can be immediately determined by looking at the word itself, though some must be learned.  
There are nine verb classes in modern Saxuma, most of which can be immediately determined by looking at the word itself, though some must be learned.