User:Frrurtu/Sandbox: Difference between revisions

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* Falling: '''ǎ ǎǎ ě ěě ǐ ǐǐ ǒ ǔ ǔǔ'''
* Falling: '''ǎ ǎǎ ě ěě ǐ ǐǐ ǒ ǔ ǔǔ'''


The rising and falling tones are uncommon, being found only in loanwords and in a small number of native words where elision of ''VhV'' sequences has caused high-tone and low-tone syllables with the same vowel to occur adjacently to each other.
The rising and falling tones are uncommon, being found only in loanwords and in a small number of native words where elision of ''VCV'' sequences has caused high-tone and low-tone syllables with the same vowel to occur adjacently to each other.


==Grammar==
==Grammar==

Revision as of 21:37, 12 February 2017

Gaju
Gaju
Pronunciation[[Help:IPA|'gäɟu]]
Created by
SettingRttirria
Native toRtuha, Uya, eastern Tyami, eastern Manamuki
Rttirrian
  • South Rttirrian
    • Old Gaju
      • Gaju

Gaju (English: /'gɑːd͡ʒuː/, Gaju: ['gäɟu], Rttirri: [ˈkɑcu]) is a minority language in Rttirria, spoken by the Gaju people in the eastern part of the country. It is a member of the Rttirrian language family, descended from the Proto-South-Rttirrian langauge that is also the ancestor of modern Rttirri, the nation's official language.

Phonology

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal m /m/
hm /m̥/
n /n/
hn /n̥/
ny /ɲ/ ng /ŋ/
Plosive p /pʰ/
b /p/
t /tʰ/
d /t/
ty /cʰ/
j /c/
k /kʰ/
k /k/
Fricative f /f/ s /s/
sh /ʃ/
sy /ç/ kh /x/ h /h/
Affricate ts /t͡s/
ch /t͡ʃ/
Approximant w /w/
hw /ʍ/
l /l/
hl /l̥~ɬ/

In addition, the following consonants are allowed in loanwords: hng /ŋ̊/, hny /ɲ̥/, y /j/, hh /ʔ/.

Vowels

Front Central Back
High i /i/ u /u/
Near-high ii /ɪ/
Mid e /e/ uu /ə/ o /o/
Near-low ee /ɛ/ aa /ɔ/
Low a /ä/

Tones

Gaju distinguishes four tones: high, low, rising, and falling. They are distinguished in the Latin script as follows:

  • High: a aa e ee i ii o u uu
  • Low: à àà è èè ì ìì ò ù ùù
  • Rising: â ââ ê êê î îî ô û ûû
  • Falling: ǎ ǎǎ ě ěě ǐ ǐǐ ǒ ǔ ǔǔ

The rising and falling tones are uncommon, being found only in loanwords and in a small number of native words where elision of VCV sequences has caused high-tone and low-tone syllables with the same vowel to occur adjacently to each other.

Grammar

Gaju morphology is significantly more analytic than that of Rttirri.

Verbs

The following slots are allowed for affixes on the verb.

Verb Slot Allowable Inputs
Mood fa- (polite imperative)
nang- (subjunctive)
kan- (conditional)
khaa- (imperative)
Tense -bu-/-bo-/-du-/-do-/-ju-/-jo- (past)
-mi-/-me-/-ni-/-ne-/-nyi-/-nye- (future)
Verb Root any verb
Auxiliary Verb -(k)àng ("to be able to")
-(à)kà ("to need to")
-(d)èng ("to want to")
-(g)ùng ("to force to")
and others

Nouns

Nouns can take the following cases:

Case Suffix
nominative (none)
accusative -(g)e (singular)
-(d)i (plural)
dative -(ty)â
ablative -(d)a
locative -(l)î
comitative -(aa)daa
instrumental -(w)ǎm
vocative -(a)saa

Pronouns

The following pronouns are used. They were not affixed to the verb, but stood in the place of other nouns.

Singular Plural
Nominative Accusative Nominative Accusative
1st person na ni ma mi
2nd person kom kim tsa tsi
3rd person la ge daa di

Genitive pronouns follow the nouns they modify. The third-person singular plural is a recent innovation, derived from fòkom ("there").

English Old Gaju
my
your kòm
his/her/its fôm
our
all of your tsà
their dàà

Independent particles

The following particles can be used to express aspect and politeness; the default is imperfective.

Aspect Particle
Perfective nam
Polite perfective nyem
Habitual shu
Polite habitual tya

The following question words are used:

English Old Gaju
who/whom ta
what ti
when dìn
where dìtang
why dìtà
how dìtung

Syntax

Sample text