Diluvian Code: Difference between revisions
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'''Diluvian''', also referred to as Babelic, is a [[Philosophical language|philosophical]] [[ab interiori language]] of the [[w:mesolithic|Mesolithic]] that consists on stacking particles through [[w:Oligosynthesis|oligosynthetical]] [[w:Agglutination|agglutination]]. Its creator, [[User:Veno|Veno]], named the [[Paleolithic Code]] as such | '''Diluvian''', also referred to as '''Babelic''', is a [[Philosophical language|philosophical]] [[ab interiori language]] of the [[w:mesolithic|Mesolithic]] that consists on stacking particles through [[w:Oligosynthesis|oligosynthetical]] [[w:Agglutination|agglutination]]. Its creator, [[User:Veno|Veno]], named the [[Paleolithic Code]] as such based on the model that it spread to all continents of earth during the | ||
[[w:Last Glacial Maximum|Last Glacial Maximum]]. | [[w:Last Glacial Maximum|Last Glacial Maximum]]. | ||
[...] | |||
The language is associated with the [[w:Ancient North Eurasian|Ancient North Eurasians]] (ANE) from the [[w:Mal'ta–Buret' culture|Mal'ta Buret' Culture]] [...] | |||
==Introduction== | ==Introduction== |
Latest revision as of 10:48, 24 December 2024
This article is a construction site. This project is currently undergoing significant construction and/or revamp. By all means, take a look around, thank you. |
Diluvian Code | |
---|---|
Babelic | |
Created by | Veno |
Date | c. 25,000-12,000 BP |
Setting | Eastern Eurasia (?) |
Native speakers | - (2024) |
Pangaean Code
|
Diluvian, also referred to as Babelic, is a philosophical ab interiori language of the Mesolithic that consists on stacking particles through oligosynthetical agglutination. Its creator, Veno, named the Paleolithic Code as such based on the model that it spread to all continents of earth during the Last Glacial Maximum.
[...]
The language is associated with the Ancient North Eurasians (ANE) from the Mal'ta Buret' Culture [...]
Introduction
...
In Diluvian, vocabulary can be common, social, onomatopoeic, or mimetic
- the mimetic interpretation describes physical characteristics
pa *used to describe what flaps ta *used to describe what closes or is rigid ka *used to describe what crashes ra *used to describe what is fluid or maleable sa *used to describe what is alive
- the onomatopoeic interpretation
mu cow si snake acin "sneezing" vs gur "drinking" i "outward" a "human cry" u "inwards"
Syllabaries
880 (44 particles x 5 vowels x 4) + 150(40 particles x 4 -10) = 1030 for the same reason syllables such as ri /ɾi/ are allowed but riaçi /ɾʲəd͡zi/ is not a nucleus cannot have more than two sound effects for this reason, the negative and positive versions of ya wa sa za ra ca and ça cannot suffer nasalization [t͡sə > ⁿt͡sə, but t͡sʲə > *ⁿt͡sʲə] Diluvian triggers sound changes t͡si [t͡ʃi] t͡sʲi [ɕːi]~[t͡ʃɨ]
Essential Syllabary
40 stacking syllables that determine the discourse.
40 | I | E | A | O | U |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
X | xi | xe | xa | xo | xu |
Q | qi | qe | qa | qo | qu |
H | hi | he | ha | ho | hu |
Y | yi | ye | ya | yo | yu |
W | wi | we | wa | wo | wu |
' | 'i | 'e | 'a | 'o | 'u |
A | ai | ae | aa | ao | au |
∅ | i | e | a | o | u |
Elementary Syllbary
60 | - | 0 | + |
---|---|---|---|
K | kpa | ka | kta |
G | gba | ga | gda |
P | pta | pa | pka |
B | bda | ba | bga |
T | tka | ta | tpa |
D | dga | da | dba |
S | sia | sa | sua |
Z | zia | za | zua |
M | dma | ma | gma |
Ṃ | dṃa | ṃa | gṃa |
N | kna | na | pna |
Ṇ | kṇa | ṇa | pṇa |
Y | pia | ya | tia |
W | tua | wa | kua |
KH | khpa | kha | khta |
PH | phta | pha | phka |
TH | thka | tha | thpa |
R | ria | ra | rua |
C | cia | ca | cua |
Ç | çia | ça | çua |
Prior Syllabary
1350 isolated syllables of semantic priority are allowed within Diluvian (disregarding alternative vowels as well as nasal forms and consonantal clusters in coda position). In Babelic, however, there would be only 1020 prior syllables due the loss of final glottal stop.
1350/1020 | -∅ | -r | -n | -' |
---|---|---|---|---|
xi- | xi | xir | xin | xi' |
xe- | qi | qe | qa | qo |
xa- | hi | he | ha | ho |
xo- | yi | ye | ya | yo |
xu- | wi | we | wa | wo |
qi- | 'i | 'e | 'a | 'o |
qe- | ai | ae | aa | ao |
qa- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
qo- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
qu- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
hi- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
he- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
ha- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
ho- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
hu- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
yi- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
ye- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
ya- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
yo- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
yu- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
wi- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
we- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
wa- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
wo- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
wu- | wu | wur | wun | wu' |
'i- | 'i | 'ir | 'in | ∅ |
'e- | Ci | Ce | Ca | ∅ |
'a- | Ci | Ce | Ca | ∅ |
'o- | Ci | Ce | Ca | ∅ |
'u- | Ci | Ce | Ca | ∅ |
ai- | ai | air | ain | ∅ |
ae- | Ci | Ce | Ca | ∅ |
aa- | Ci | Ce | Ca | ∅ |
ao- | Ci | Ce | Ca | ∅ |
au- | Ci | Ce | Ca | ∅ |
i- | i | ir | in | i' |
e- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
a- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
o- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
u- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
(x60)Ci- | Ci | Cir | Cin | Ci' |
(x60)Ce- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
(x60)Ca- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
(x60)Co- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
(x60)Cu- | Ci | Ce | Ca | Co |
Phonology
Consonants
Diluvian has 24 basic consonants, but 50 consonants in total considering the positive, negative, and nasal forms.
p b k g t d
m m n n w j
s z ʔ h q χ
ɾ ts dz pʼ tʼ kʼ
The n-series: mp mb ŋk ŋg nt nd ɲ nts ndz ns nz nq
The dz-series are either some form of -dz- themselves or trigger it: t͡sʲ t͡sʷ d͡zʲ d͡zʷ sʲ sʷ zʲ zʷ pʲ tʲ tʷ kʷ ɾʲ ɾʷ
Vowels
Prosody
Stress
Intonation
Phonotactics
Morphophonology
Morphology
Syntax
Constituent order
Noun phrase
Verb phrase
Sentence phrase
Dependent clauses
Babelic
The Diluvian Code can be spoken in a reduced register (Babelic), where context dictates the meaning of the words, which are always monosyllabic. In this form, affixes and clitics are omitted, and special particles are introduced to express questions and biases. The sentence below, for example, refuses to apply pronouns (considered affixes) while introducing タ /tʼə/ "rule" to indicate a strong form of biding:
死
mu
death
犬
kaun
dog
タ
tha
rule
"Are you implying I should die like a dog!"
An exception can be made towards negatives:
來
ke
path
目
qi
eye
ニ
ṇai
not
"He did not see that coming"
Example texts
刀つ ktocar