Amkrama: Difference between revisions

From Linguifex
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (Adding categories.)
m (spacing)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 97: Line 97:
|cacanana
|cacanana
|}
|}


{|class="wikitable"
{|class="wikitable"
Line 139: Line 138:
===Pronouns===
===Pronouns===
Pronouns are inflected in a manner similar to nouns, but often lacking a final vowel.
Pronouns are inflected in a manner similar to nouns, but often lacking a final vowel.


{|class="wikitable"
{|class="wikitable"

Latest revision as of 15:42, 20 November 2020

Amkrama is a language in the Cramarian family, though one that is considerably eccentric even from the point of view of that loose-knit group of languages. Although the development of its lexicon from Proto-Cramarian roots is transparent enough, at some point most or all original Cramarian morphology was lost and replaced with Amkrama's odd and possibly unique system of derivation. Creolization with an independent language (of which, however, no other trace now remains) cannot be ruled out.

Phonology

The phonology of Amkrama is simple, and largely derived from that of Proto-Cramarian by two simple sound-shifts: alveolar consonants became palatals, and retroflex consonants became alveolar.

Consonants

Bilabial Alveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Nasal Stop m n
Oral Stop p b t d c [ʧ] j [ʤ] k g q [ʔ]
Fricative f v s x [ʃ] r [ʒ] h
Approximant j
Lateral l

There is not much in the way of allophony. [z] exists as an allophone of /s/ in the environment of a voiced stop.

Morphology

All morphology in Amkrama is based on the elaboration of roots, almost all of the form CVC(C), by a series of reduplications or repetitions of sequences of sounds found within the root.

Nouns

Each noun is inflected in three cases (called Nominative, Accusative and Genitive) and two numbers, singular and plural.

The general pattern is as follows:

singular plural
Nom —V —VCʟV
Acc V—V V—VCʟV
Gen C₁V—V C₁V—VCʟV

Examples

can- "sister" singular plural
Nom cana canana
Acc acana acanana
Gen cacana cacanana
daij- "husband" singular plural
Nom daija daijaja
Acc adaija adaijaja
Gen dadaija dadaijaja

Note that the i in daij- was originally a consonant, and is still treated as such for the purposes of reduplication.

qulp- "king" singular plural
Nom qulpu qulpupu
Acc uqulpu uqulpupu
Gen ququlpu ququlpupu

Pronouns

Pronouns are inflected in a manner similar to nouns, but often lacking a final vowel.

1st person pronoun
yoh sg. pne pl.
singular plural
Nom yoh pne
Acc oyoh epne
Gen yoyoh pepne

Only the first-person forms use distinct stems; idental stems are used for the 2nd person (kaq informal, kas formal) and 3rd person (ri masculine, ra feminine).

Verbs

Verbs are inflected in first, second, and third person; singular and plural number; and for tense/aspect/mood forms including Stative, Imperative, Progressive, and Irrealis, as well as producing two participles (Present and Perfect) and a number of verbal nouns.

Each of the TAM forms is based on a different base derived from the root:

  1. Imperative: C₁VC₂
  2. Stative: C₁VVC₂
  3. Progressive: C₁VC₂C₂
  4. Irrealis: C₁VC₂C₁

From the verb stem √luk- "carry":

Imperative Active Passive
Singular Plural Singular Plural
2nd luk "carry" lukuk "carry" lukul "be carried" lukulul "be carried"

The imperative is used for commands, directions, instructions, and invitations; it does not imply any peremptoriness, and indeed carries the connotation of polite request.

Stative/Perfect Active Passive
Singular Plural Singular Plural
1st ulûku "I (have) carried" ulûkuku "we (have) carried" ulûkulu "I have been carried" ulûkululu "we have been carried"
2nd lulûku "you (have) carried" lulûkuku "you (have) carried" lulûkulu "you have been carried" lulûkululu "you have been carried"
3rd lûku "he/she/it (has) carried" lûkuku "they (have) carried" lûkulu "he/she/it has been carried" lûkululu "they have been carried"

Though translated above with past or perfect tenses, the stative is not necessarily a past tense; rather, it indicates that the agent or patient of a verb is in a fixed state, which requires some further action to change it. For a transitive verb like √luk-, the general implication is that the state results from a past action which affected the patient.