Fuano: Difference between revisions

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''iel'' is a more modern pronoun borrowed from French to act as a gender neutral singular pronoun, similar to [[w:Singular they|singular they]] in English. However, unlike its country of origin of France, ''iel'' has been widely embraced in common speech in Fuano, even by older native speakers.
''iel'' is a more modern pronoun borrowed from French to act as a gender neutral singular pronoun, similar to [[w:Singular they|singular they]] in English. However, unlike its country of origin of France, ''iel'' has been widely embraced in common speech in Fuano, even by older native speakers.
The accusative forms are also used as vocative forms, as in ''Y '''lue''', k'el pansa?'' "And '''him''', what does he think?"
The genitive forms can also be used as dative forms when placed after the noun, e.g. ''don la '''luere''' mesa'' "give '''their''' table" vs ''don la mesa '''luere''''' "give the table '''to them'''"
==References==
==References==
[[Category:fuano]] [[Category:Languages]] [[Category:Conlangs]]
[[Category:fuano]] [[Category:Languages]] [[Category:Conlangs]]

Revision as of 10:02, 1 January 2025

Fuano
fuano, lan fuan
Pronunciationfweno
Created byJukethatbox
Date2024
Native toFuano Island
EthnicityFuano Creole people
Native speakers600,000 (2024)
French-Spanish Creole
  • Fuano
Official status
Official language in
Democratic Republic of Fuinoa

Fuano[1] is a French and Spanish mixed language spoken natively on Fuano Island[2] by around 600,000 Fuanos.

Phonology

Consonants

Bilabial/
Labiodental
Alveolar Postalveolar Velar Palatal
Plosive p b t d k g
Nasal m n ŋ ɲ
Fricative f v s z ʃ ʒ x
Approximant w l j

Vowels

Front Central Back
Close i u
Close-mid e o
Open a

Sound changes

From French

/ʁ/ after a consonant becomes /w/ (borrowed from Haitian Creole)

  • (fromage > fuomaj)

intervocalic /ʁ/ becomes /r/

  • (fréro > fuero)

(applies to both spanish and french) /ʁ/ before a consonant is often deleted

  • (barbu > babu)

/ʁ/ in any other position is usually deleted (apart from rue which becomes ru)

  • (racine > asin)

/ə/ and /ø/ become /e/

  • (feuilleté > feyte, œuf > efe)

/ɛ/ and /ɔ/ merɡe with /e/ and /o/, /wa/ becomes /we/

  • (forêt > fore, soirée > suere)

From Spanish

/oj/ becomes /uj/

  • (estoy > estuy, doy > duy, soy is an exception and remains the same)

/tra/ becomes /ta/ (trabajo > tabaho > baho)

/v/ and /b/ merge, /θjon~sjon/ becomes /son/ (revolución > reboluson)

/ks/ becomes /ʃ/, /ʃs/ becomes /ʃ/ (contradicción > kontadixon)

(applies to both spanish and french) /r/ before a consonant is often deleted (barba > baba)

Grammar

Pronouns

Personal

Person Singular Plural
nom. acc. gen. nom. acc. gen.
1. yo me ma nos nu notue
2. tu tue ta vos vu votue
Masc. el lue su os luere
Neut. iel
Fem. ea eya (as) (luare)

as and luare are bracketed to show that they are rarely used even in appropriate context. For example, though it would be grammatically correct to refer to a group of women or girls as as, a native speaker is realistically more likely to still refer them to as os out of convention.

vos holds the same purpose as French vous, in which it simultaneously acts as a plural and a formal second-person pronoun.

iel is a more modern pronoun borrowed from French to act as a gender neutral singular pronoun, similar to singular they in English. However, unlike its country of origin of France, iel has been widely embraced in common speech in Fuano, even by older native speakers.

The accusative forms are also used as vocative forms, as in Y lue, k'el pansa? "And him, what does he think?"

The genitive forms can also be used as dative forms when placed after the noun, e.g. don la luere mesa "give their table" vs don la mesa luere "give the table to them"

References

  1. ^ fuano: fuano, lan fuan; French: langue fouan; Spanish: idioma fuana
  2. ^ fuano: il fuan; French: Île-de-Fouan; Spanish: Isla del Fuano