Naeng/Literature: Difference between revisions

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*''‹ăl›'' = Locative trigger
*''‹ăl›'' = Locative trigger
*''‹ăng›'' = Instrumental trigger
*''‹ăng›'' = Instrumental trigger
*''‹ăfam›'' = Destination trigger
*''‹ăfang›'' = Destination trigger
*''‹ăm›'' = Source trigger [also causative]
*''‹ăm›'' = Source trigger [also causative]
*''‹ăchem›'' = Benefactive trigger [also purposive]
*''‹ăchem›'' = Benefactive trigger [also purposive]

Revision as of 13:32, 9 December 2017

Windermere/Lexicon

Windermere/Swadesh list

Naeng/Literature
Created byIlL, Praimhín
SettingVerse:Tricin
  • Naeng/Literature
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Windermere is a conlang based on similarities between Hebrew and Mon-Khmer languages, such as final stress, minor syllables and overall head-initial syntax.

In-universe, Windermere was used as a classical language in Talma.

Introduction

Windermere was originally created by Praimhín for the Fifth Linguifex Relay. It is currently being revived and adapted for Verse:Tricin as a classical language in Talma (perhaps replacing Netagin) - this version will also be more synthetic than the original creator envisioned.

Todo

  • Weird grammatical categories that aren't so Celtic or Semitic - so it makes Eevo really analytic
    • something Austronesian?

Phonology

Orthography

Consonants

  • Ϫϫ Շչ Ɑᶑ Ѡϙ Ғғ Ѵѵ Ƌժ Ƨƨ ſʗ = p b f t d th c g ch
  • Ɨɟ ʢє Ϯ₼ = m n ng
  • Ϟɥ Ɔɔ Պɱ Ҕҕ Ʌʎ = s ł ts tł ș
  • Էէ Ӿӿ Գƪ Քƍ Ֆⱷ Пп = r w y h l ʔ

Vowels

The vowel signs are placed to the right of the consonant letter.

  • · : ; ı › ˫ ⸗ = ă u ü i o e a; :ƍ ;ƍ ıƍ ›ƍ ˫ƍ ›ƪ = ua üe ie oa ea oy

Consonants

Labial Alveolar Lateral Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal m /m/ n /n/ ng /ŋ/
Plosive tenuis b /p~b/ d /t~d/ g /k~g/ ' /ʔ/
aspirated p /pʰ~bʰ/ t /tʰ~dʰ/ c /kʰ~gʰ/
Affricate ts /ts̻/ /tɬ/
Fricative spirant f /f~v/ th /θ~ð/ ch /x~ɣ/
nonspirant s /s̻/ ł /ɬ/ ș /s̺~ʃ/ h /h/
Resonant w /w/ r /r/ y /j/ l /ʟ/

In Eevo, pʰ p f tʰ t θ kʰ k x ts̻ s̻ tɬ ɬ s̺ m n ŋ ʟ r w j h ʔ are borrowed as p b f/v t d þ/ð c g ç ts s tx x z m n ŋ l r v j h ∅

[cf. OHG /s̺/ > Modern German /z/ ]

Mutations

Vowels

a e i o u y a e i o u oy ü

iə eə uə oə oj yə ie ea uo oa oy üe

ə ă (in unstressed syllables)

In Eevo these are borrowed as:

a e i o w u

ia ee wa oo øø ua

y

Stress

Stress is invariably final.

Phonotactics

Zero and C are the only permitted word-final codas.

Morphology

Windermere morphology is exclusively prefixing and infixing.

Nouns

im- is used for the plural prefix.

The case markers are the following:

  • și-: direct case marker
  • wa-: indirect case marker
  • mi-: locative
  • ya-: comitative
  • șa-: allative

Pronouns

  • 1sg: rie
  • 2sg: łen (masculine), łes (feminine)
  • 3sg: in (masculine), is (feminine), tan (inanimate)
  • 1pl: tsal (exclusive), bang (inclusive)
  • 2pl: ngeab
  • 3pl: uob (animate), tuob (inanimate)

Verbs

Personal inflection

The personal affixes are prefixes, and they index the direct case argument. For example:

rie łen łes in is tan tsal bang ngeab uob tuob
dur 'sit' dur łedur łedur dur dur dur tsadur badur ngidur dur dur
plang 'stand' plang łeplang łeplang plang plang plang tsaplang baplang ngiplang plang plang

Mood

There is only the imperative mood which is marked with da- in place of the personal prefix.

Aspect

Used derivationally in descendants

Trigger

Windermere verbs employ an Austronesian-style trigger system, which are marked with prefixes or infixes.

These triggers are most similar to active and passive voices:

  • ‹ăn› = Patient trigger [telic]
  • ‹ră› = Patient trigger [atelic]
  • ‹ăs› = Agent trigger [= a weird way of syntacticizing passive voice/ergativity]

These triggers are most similar to applicatives:

  • ‹ăl› = Locative trigger
  • ‹ăng› = Instrumental trigger
  • ‹ăfang› = Destination trigger
  • ‹ăm› = Source trigger [also causative]
  • ‹ăchem› = Benefactive trigger [also purposive]
  • ‹ărea› = Malefactive trigger [also "lest"]
  • ‹ăbro› = Comitative trigger

[Netagin could use this actually]

Derivational morphology

  • Head-initial concatenation
  • hăl- = nominalizer

Syntax

Constituent order

Word order is VSO, like Celtic, Semitic and Tagalog. [S = the constituent that the verb agrees with]

Noun phrase

Verb phrase

Sentence phrase

Dependent clauses

Complement clauses

nga is the complementizer

Relative clauses

mo- = relativizer

  • often combined with the complementizer: mong

Triggered verbal noun clauses

Example texts

Other resources