Hadda: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(→Verbs) |
(→Verbs) |
||
| Line 263: | Line 263: | ||
--> | --> | ||
===Verbs=== | ===Verbs=== | ||
'''All of this is subject to change | '''All of this is subject to change <!-- (and of this sentence) -->''' | ||
<!-- | |||
(Example verbs are ''gaa'wa'' "to throw", ''maara'' 'to lead", and ''ħaɗɗa'' "to be ħaɗɗa") | (Example verbs are ''gaa'wa'' "to throw", ''maara'' 'to lead", and ''ħaɗɗa'' "to be ħaɗɗa") | ||
The infinitive | The infinitive of native verbs is of the form ''XCaaCa'' or ''XCaCCa'', where X can be anything. Only the final portion (after X) changes. Therefore, "initial" consonant below refers to the initial consonant in the penultimate syllable. | ||
Mood: affects final vowel. | Mood: affects final vowel. | ||
| Line 287: | Line 286: | ||
*Past progressive: stem vowel becomes ''i'' (palatalizing initial velars) - e.g. ''jii'wa'' "was throwing", ''miira'' "was leading", ''ħiɗɗa'' "was hadda" | *Past progressive: stem vowel becomes ''i'' (palatalizing initial velars) - e.g. ''jii'wa'' "was throwing", ''miira'' "was leading", ''ħiɗɗa'' "was hadda" | ||
*Past habitual: like present habitual, but with stem vowel changing to ''i'' - e.g. ''giɓɓa'' "used to throw", ''ħiɍiɗɗa'' "used to regularly become hadda" | *Past habitual: like present habitual, but with stem vowel changing to ''i'' - e.g. ''giɓɓa'' "used to throw", ''ħiɍiɗɗa'' "used to regularly become hadda" | ||
*Theoretically, a future habitual could be formed by combining the future with the present habitual - e.g. ''gwaɓɓa'' "will throw regularly", ''molla'' "will lead regularly", ''ħoɍoɗɗa'' "will regularly become hadda" | *Theoretically, a future habitual could be formed by combining the future with the present habitual - e.g. ''gwaɓɓa'' "will throw regularly", ''molla'' "will lead regularly", ''ħoɍoɗɗa'' "will regularly become hadda". Normally, this would be formed with a ''gaara'' construction - e.g. ''gaɓɓa gwaara'' "will throw regularly" (literally: will say throwing regularly) | ||
*The auxiliary verb ''gaara'' "to say" is ubiquitous in Hadda verbal morphology. Its functions include: | |||
**Forming compound tenses, which can either form new tenses or disambiguate existing forms - e.g. ''gaa'wa gwaara'' "will be throwing", ''gaa'wa jiira'' "was throwing" (equivalent to ''jii'wa''; might be used if another verb has the same past form), ''gwaa'wa jiira'' "was going to throw" | |||
**Deriving verbs from nouns, interjections, loanwords, etc - e.g. ''ħiʔ gaara'' "to hiccup" (literally: to say "ħiʔ"), ''telefoona gaara'' "to telephone" (literally: to say telephone). | |||
Originally, there were two tenses (past and non-past), each with three aspects (perfective, progressive/stative, and habitual). The future tense comes from the present perfective. | <!-- Originally, there were two tenses (past and non-past), each with three aspects (perfective, progressive/stative, and habitual). The future tense comes from the present perfective. --> | ||
Secondary verbs can be derived from primary or other secondary verbs. For example: | Secondary verbs can be derived from primary or other secondary verbs. For example: | ||
*Intensive: Formed by reduplicating | *Intensive: Formed by reduplicating ''CV-'' or ''CVCa-'' - e.g. ''gaǥaa'wa'', ''ga'waǥaa'wa'' "is throwing repeatedly/intensely" | ||
==Syntax== | ==Syntax== | ||
Revision as of 02:26, 10 March 2017
Hadda (Native: ħaɗɗa) is an a priori language inspired by various African languages.
Introduction
Phonology
Orthography
| IPA | Latin | Simplified Latin | Marasa | Arabic | Ge'ez | Hebrew | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| a | A a | A a | ـَ | አ | סַ | ||
| aː | Aa aa | Aa aa | ـَا | ኣ | סַא | ||
| b | B b | B b | ب | በ | ּב | ||
| β̞ | Ƀ ƀ | B b | ب | ቨ | ב | allophone of /b/ between vowels | |
| ɓ | Ɓ ɓ | B' b' | ڀ | ጰ | קּו | ||
| c | C c | Ch ch | چ | ቸ | כ׳ | ||
| d | D d | D d | د | ደ | ּד | ||
| ð̞ | Đ đ | D d | ذ | ደ | ך | allophone of /d/ between vowels | |
| ð | Dh dh | ዘ, ደ | ךֿ | occurs in loanwords; nativized as /d ~ ð̞/ | |||
| ɗ | Ɗ ɗ | D' d' | ڟ | ጠ | טּ | ||
| ɛ | E e | E e | ـٖ | ኤ | סֵ | ||
| ɛː | Ee ee | Ee ee | ـٖي | סֵי | |||
| f | F f | F f | ف | ፈ | פ | ||
| g | G g | G g | ݣ | ገ | גּ | ||
| ɣ̞ | Ǥ ǥ | G g | ڠ | ገ | ג | allophone of /g/ between vowels | |
| ʁ | Ɣ ɣ | Gh gh | غ | ገ | גֿ | occurs in loanwords; nativized as /g ~ ɣ̞/ | |
| ɠ | Ɠ ɠ | G' g' | ڨ | ቀ | קּ | ||
| gʷ | Gw gw | Gw gw | ڭو | ጐ | גּו | ||
| h | H h | H h | ھ | ኸ, ሀ | ה | allophone of /k/ between vowels in non-guttural environment; phonemic in loanwords (nativized as /ħ/ or /k ~ h/) | |
| hʷ | Hw hw | Hw hw | هو | ዀ | הו | allophone of /kʷ/ between vowels in non-guttural environment | |
| ħ | Ħ ħ | X x | ح | ሐ | ח | ||
| χ | X x | Kh kh | خ | ኀ | כֿ | occurs in loanwords; nativized as /k ~ h/ or /ħ/ | |
| i | I i | I i | ـِ | ኢ | סִ | ||
| iː | Ii ii | Ii ii | ـِي | סִי | |||
| ɟ | J j | J j | ج | ጀ | גּ׳ | ||
| ʄ | Ɉ ɉ | J' j' | ݘ | ጨ | קּ׳ | ||
| k | K k | K k | ک | ከ | כ | ||
| kʷ | Kw kw | Kw kw | کو | ኰ | כו | ||
| l | L l | L l | ل | ለ | ל | ||
| m | M m | M m | م | መ | מ | ||
| n | N n | N n | ن | ነ | נ | ֹ | |
| ɲ | Ɲ ɲ | Ny ny | ݧ | ኘ | נ׳ | ||
| ŋ | Ŋ ŋ | Ng ng | ݢ | ጘ | נ״ | ||
| ŋʷ | Ŋw ŋw | Ngw ngw | ڬو | ⶓ | נ״ו | ||
| ɔ | O o | O o | ـٗ | ኦ | סֹ | ||
| ɔː | O o | O o | ـٗو | סוֹ | |||
| p | P p | P p | پ | ፐ | פּ | occurs in loanwords; nativized as /f/ or /b/ | |
| q | Q q | Q q | ق | ቀ | קּ | occurs in loanwords; nativized as /ɠ ~ ʔ/ or /k/ | |
| ʔ | Ɂ ɂ | ' | ٯٔ ، ء | ቐ | ק | allophone of /ɠ/ between vowels | |
| ʕ | Ҁ ҁ | C c | ع | ዐ | ע | ||
| ɾ | R r | R r | ر | ረ | ר | allophone of /l/ between vowels; occurs phonemically in loanwords (nativized as /l ~ ɾ/) | |
| rˀ | Ɍ ɍ | R' r' | ݬ | [ጠ] | ט | allophone of /ɗ/ between vowels | |
| s | S s | S s | س | ሰ | ס | ||
| ʃ | Σ ʃ | Sh sh | ش | ሸ | ש | ||
| t | T t | T t | ت | ተ | ת | ||
| θ | Ŧ ŧ | Th th | ث | ሠ | תֿ | occurs in loanwords; nativized as /t/ or /s/ | |
| u | U u | U u | ـُ | ኡ | סֻ | ||
| uː | Uu uu | Uu uu | ـُو | סוּ | |||
| v | V v | V v | ۋ | ቨ | בֿ | occurs in loanwords; nativized as /b ~ β̞ /, /f/, or /w/ | |
| w | W w | W w | و | ወ | ו | allophone of /gʷ/ between vowels; phonemic word-initially | |
| ʔʷ | Ⱳ ⱳ | 'W 'w | ؤ | ቘ | קו | allophone of /ɓ/ between vowels | |
| j | Y y | Y y | ي | የ | י | allophone of /ɟ/ between vowels; phonemic word-initially | |
| ʔʲ | Ƴ ƴ | 'Y 'y | ئ | [ጨ] | ק׳ | allophone of /ʄ/ between vowels | |
| z | Z z | Z z | ز | ዘ | ז | occurs in loanwords; nativized as /s/ or /d ~ ð̞/ | |
| ʒ | ʒ | Zh zh | ژ | ዠ | ז׳ | occurs rarely in loanwords; nativized as /ɟ ~ j/ or /ʃ/ |
Consonants
Allophones and loanword-exclusive phonemes are enclosed in brackets.
| Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Labiovelar | Uvular | Pharyngeal | Glottal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m | n | ɲ | ŋ | ŋʷ | |||||
| Plosive | voiceless | (p) | t | c | k | kʷ | (q) | (ʔ) | ||
| voiced | b | d | ɟ | g | gʷ | |||||
| glottalized | ɓ | ɗ | ʄ | ɠ | ||||||
| Fricative | voiceless | f | (θ) | s | (ʃ) | (hʷ) | (χ) | ħ | (h) | |
| voiced | (v) | (ð) | (z) | (ʁ) | ʕ | |||||
| Approximant | plain | (β̞) | (ð̞) | (ɾ) l | j | (ɣ̞) | w | |||
| glottalized | (rˀ) | (ʔʲ) | (ʔʷ) | |||||||
Vowels
Prosody
Stress
Intonation
Phonotactics
Morphophonology
Morphology
Verbs
All of this is subject to change
(Example verbs are gaa'wa "to throw", maara 'to lead", and ħaɗɗa "to be ħaɗɗa")
The infinitive of native verbs is of the form XCaaCa or XCaCCa, where X can be anything. Only the final portion (after X) changes. Therefore, "initial" consonant below refers to the initial consonant in the penultimate syllable.
Mood: affects final vowel.
- Indicative: -a
- Other moods: TBD
Tense + aspect: affects stem
- Future:
- Initial velar: change to labiovelar (/ɠ/ becomes /ɓ/) - e.g. gwaa'wa "will throw"
- Other: stem vowel becomes o - e.g. moora "will lead", ħoɗɗa "will be/become hadda"
- Present progressive: Identical to infinitive - e.g. gaa'wa "is throwing", maara "is leading", ħaɗɗa "is hadda"
- Present habitual:
- CaaCa verbs become CaCCa - e.g. gaɓɓa "throws", malla "leads"
- CaCCa verbs become CaCaCCa - e.g. ħaɍaɗɗa "regularly becomes hadda"
- Simple past:
- Initial velar: change to labiovelar + stem vowel becomes i - e.g. gwii'wa "threw"
- Other: stem vowel becomes u - e.g. muura "lead (past)", ħuɗɗa "became hadda"
- Past progressive: stem vowel becomes i (palatalizing initial velars) - e.g. jii'wa "was throwing", miira "was leading", ħiɗɗa "was hadda"
- Past habitual: like present habitual, but with stem vowel changing to i - e.g. giɓɓa "used to throw", ħiɍiɗɗa "used to regularly become hadda"
- Theoretically, a future habitual could be formed by combining the future with the present habitual - e.g. gwaɓɓa "will throw regularly", molla "will lead regularly", ħoɍoɗɗa "will regularly become hadda". Normally, this would be formed with a gaara construction - e.g. gaɓɓa gwaara "will throw regularly" (literally: will say throwing regularly)
- The auxiliary verb gaara "to say" is ubiquitous in Hadda verbal morphology. Its functions include:
- Forming compound tenses, which can either form new tenses or disambiguate existing forms - e.g. gaa'wa gwaara "will be throwing", gaa'wa jiira "was throwing" (equivalent to jii'wa; might be used if another verb has the same past form), gwaa'wa jiira "was going to throw"
- Deriving verbs from nouns, interjections, loanwords, etc - e.g. ħiʔ gaara "to hiccup" (literally: to say "ħiʔ"), telefoona gaara "to telephone" (literally: to say telephone).
Secondary verbs can be derived from primary or other secondary verbs. For example:
- Intensive: Formed by reduplicating CV- or CVCa- - e.g. gaǥaa'wa, ga'waǥaa'wa "is throwing repeatedly/intensely"