Scellan: Difference between revisions
m (→Nouns) |
m (→Morphology) |
||
Line 102: | Line 102: | ||
==Morphology== | ==Morphology== | ||
Äivö has no grammatical gender and no grammatical mutation. Äivö is also more agglutinative than its close relatives. | |||
===Nouns=== | ===Nouns=== |
Revision as of 01:36, 17 May 2017
Äivö (jaaþime-rin-äivö) is a close relative of Tíogall with mutations and vowel harmony.
Phonology
Consonants
Labial | Coronal | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m /m/ | n /n/ | ŋ /ŋ/ | |||
Stop | voiceless | p /p/ | t /t/ | k /k/ | ||
voiced | b /b/ | d /d/ | g /g/ | |||
Spirant | voiceless | f /f/ | þ /θ/ | x /x/ | ||
voiced | v /v/ | ð /ð/ | ||||
Sibilant | s /s/ | h /h/ | ||||
Liquid | r /r/ | |||||
Approximant | l /l/ | j /j/ |
Vowels
Front | Back | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
unrounded | rounded | |||||
short | long | short | long | short | long | |
Close | i /i/ | ii /iː/ | y /y/ | yy /yː/ | u /u/ | uu /uː/ |
Close-mid | e /e/ | ee /eː/ | ö /ø/ | öö /øː/ | o /o/ | oo /oː/ |
Open | ä /æ/ | ää /æː/ | a /ɑ/ | aa /ɑː/ |
There are also many diphthongs, among them äi äy au ie yö uo.
Morphology
Äivö has no grammatical gender and no grammatical mutation. Äivö is also more agglutinative than its close relatives.
Nouns
The definite article is -me for nouns ending in a V or a resonant and -ime otherwise. It's placed after the plural suffix: duuvooŋ 'a teacher', duuvooŋme 'the teacher', duuvooŋa 'teachers', duuvooŋame 'the teachers'.
Historically feminine nouns undergo lenition: xuuþ 'an animal', xuuþime 'the animal'.
The plural is marked as follows:
- -a/-ä for nouns ending in a C
- -n for nouns ending in a V
Äivö has possessive suffixes, unlike Tíogall or Bhadhagha: skänänä, skäner, skänyy (his), skänii (her), skänäk (its), skänäy, skänäner, skänäd, skänäär
In the plural, these suffixes are: skänäränä, skänärer, skänäryy, skänärii, skänäräk, skänäräy, skänäräner, skänäräd, skänäräär (if the plural uses n, the n is changed to r).
For "of (a noun)", the ezâfe construction is used, with the word ri (rin before V) between the nouns: xaunskänme-ri-Leemi = 'Leemi's girlfriend'.
My girlfriend = xaunskänme-ri-naa or xaunskänänä
My tall girlfriend = xaunskänme-rin-aared-ri-naa
Adjectives
Adjectives must inflect for number and gender. However, predicative vs. attributive is handled differently than in Tíogall: Textime aared means "The child is tall", while Textime-rin-aared means "the tall child".
Copula
Äivö has a copula lä- which inflects regularly in the present tense.
As in Welsh, the copula is also used with progressive verbs: Lää duuvooŋme de ientäx. "The teacher is sleeping."
Verbs
The Äivö verbal system is very different from Tíogall, and much closer to Bhadhagha.
Äivö analogized the analytic forms of verbs to all persons, and fused the personal pronoun with the verb.
Äivö is not split-ergative, unlike Tíogall.
Perfect tenses use the construction tänn followed by the verbal noun.
Present
molaigh ná -> molana "I thank"
molaigh fiar -> moler "thou thankest"
molaigh -> moluu/molii/molak "he/she/it thanks", mola (for non-pronominal subjects)
molaigh gámh -> molau "we (exc.) thank"
molaigh ná ag fiar -> molaner "we (inc.) thank"
molaigh séid -> molad "ye thank"
molaigh hár -> molaar "they thank"
Impersonal: molaav "one thanks"
Analogously for front-vowel verbs (the following example is synem 'tune'):
synmänä, synmer, synmyy/synmii/synmäk, synmä, synmäy, synmäner, synmäd, synmäär, synmääv.
Past
The past tense is marked by a séimhiú on the verb as in Irish, except that the suffixes are the same as in the present tense. If the initial consonant of the verb is not lenitable, then the particle go or g' is used before it. This comes from a construction that translates to "it was the case that ...", which also survives in Bhadhagha.
Future
The future tense is derived from the Old Tíogall future tense:
moltana, molter, molta, moltaner, moltad, moltar, moltav
Verbal noun
The verbal noun is much more regular than in Tíogall, and is consistently marked with -ax/-äx.
Vocabulary
Äivö vocabulary is much more purely Talmic than that of either Tíogall or Bhadhagha; however, a handful of words are from an unknown substrate language, such as önsvä 'knot'.