Hwnic: Difference between revisions
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{{Infobox language | {{Infobox language | ||
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| familycolor=Language isolate | | familycolor=Language isolate | ||
| image= | | image= | ||
| pronunciation= | | pronunciation=ɨ́sɫø̠xʋń̩ | ||
| creator=User:SN2rname | | creator=User:SN2rname | ||
| created=2024 | | created=2024 | ||
}} | }} | ||
'''Hwnic''' is an ''a priori'' semi-naturalistic agglutinative language. It attempts to broadly delineate what natural | '''Hwnic''' is an ''a priori'' semi-naturalistic agglutinative language. It attempts to broadly delineate what a future natural language might look like. | ||
Hwnic is a pitch-accent language. Connected speech is subject to a set of more complex rules involving use of non-modal phonation. | |||
Hwnic is written in the Latin alphabet. It can be written with no punctuations other than spaces, where particles and capitalization are employed to denote quotation, change of topic, intonation, and so on; however, an English-like pattern of punctuation is also possible. | |||
The | The grammar of Hwnic is quite complex. Nouns are not declined, but may take affixes that denote number, negation, state, or property. Verbs are conjugated to person, number, and sometimes mood; an auxiliary verb can show tense, aspect, and animacy/volition. | ||
== Phonology == | |||
=== Phonemes === | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
! !! Labial !! Coronal !! Dorsal !! Gutteral | |||
|- | |||
| Nasal || m || n || ɲ || | |||
|- | |||
| Plosive || p b || t d || k g || q | |||
|- | |||
| Fricative || f v || s z || c || x ɣ | |||
|- | |||
| Affricate || || t͡s || || | |||
|- | |||
| Liquid || (v) || ɾ || (j) || | |||
|- | |||
| Lateral || || l || || | |||
|} | |||
= | * Among the continuants, /n/, /r/, and /l/ are sometimes syllabic. /m/ and /z/ are syllabic in a handful of words and affixes. | ||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
! !! Front !! Center !! Back | |||
|- | |||
| Close || i || ʉ || ɯ | |||
|- | |||
| Close-mid || || o || | |||
|- | |||
| Open-mid || || ə || | |||
|- | |||
| Low || || a || | |||
|} | |||
* Vowels often lack front-back contrast, and vowels tend to assimilate to consonants and not the other way around. | |||
The orthography is based on the IPA. However, a key point is usually vowels assimilate to consonants and not the other way around: ''pe te ke qe'' would be [pE tE k@ qe3(-)]. The most common value for i is [i3] which is often realized as [i2(lower)], whereas the less common value [i] appears in some particles and palatalizes the preceding consonant. The values for y and u are the same in native words, although y can be [ai] in loanwords. Syllabic l has a schwa-onglide to distinguish it from /o/. | |||
=== Stress and prosody === | === Stress and prosody === | ||
Most words have initial stress. A syllable containing a syllabic /l/, most commonly ''bl'', ''ml'', and ''dl'', is stressed. For words that start with a syllabic /m/, /n/, or /r/, the stress may be on the second syllable. Particles have low pitch, and as such a few pairs of words are distinguished by pitch alone. Compound words retain the stress of their constituents, although consecutive stress causes pitch sandhi and the second stress takes on a low or falling pitch. In the future, Hwnic might become a tonal language. | |||
=== Phonotactics === | === Phonotactics === | ||
Syllable structure is (C)(C)V(C)(C), with most word roots taking the form of C(C)V. | |||
== Morphology == | == Morphology == | ||
=== Nouns === | === Nouns === | ||
Nouns are not declined based on grammatical roles. Nouns may be split into two categories, namely those singular by default, often solitary, unique, or abstract, and those plural by default, often gregarious or measured by amount (such as uncountable nouns in English). When the usage indicates a different number than the default or when specification is desired, a ''suffix of number'' may be attached to the noun to express a wide range of meanings, such as -''il'' "linear arrangement of", -''ij'' "grouping of", -''is'' "member of", -''ik'' "small amount of". | |||
A noun may be preceded by a particle that may express determinate/indeterminate, figurative/literal, and general/specific. Although the particle corresponds to the determiner in English, in Hwnic it is frequently seen as part of the noun, where certain combinations may have idiomatic meanings in certain contexts, such as ''ci ceqn'' "a specific pattern of excessive buying for the purpose of obtaining collectibles". | |||
=== Verbs === | === Verbs === | ||
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=== Adverbs === | === Adverbs === | ||
=== Numerals === | |||
Hwnic uses Arabic numerals. Previously the numbers 5, 6, 7 and 9 were made up by other numbers, but their names were shortened as inspired by East Asian counting systems. | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
| Number || 0 || 1 || 2 || 3 || 4 || 5 || 6 || 7 || 8 || 9 | |||
|- | |||
| Pronunciation || kul || xa || vu || bim || ces || gis || os || it || cu || den | |||
|} | |||
Numerals above 10 are formed with a special affix at the beginning, followed by an enumeration of the digits. Which prefix to use depends on how many digits the number has. Additionally, ''lei'' is inserted every three digits as the digit separator, written as a space. The numerical dot is ''rap''. | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
| Number of digits || 2 || 3 || 4 || 5 || 6 || 7 || 8 || 9 | |||
|- | |||
| Prefix || xoq || xem || rea || ran || osugo || itugo || cuugo || denugo | |||
|} | |||
Large numerals can have a scientific-notation-like system. The affix is added at the end instead, and digits are enumerated from least significant to most significant. Unspecified digits are zeros, but note that trailing zeros can be significant. | |||
577 014, osugogisititleikulxaces | |||
3.141 59, binrapxacesxaleigisden | |||
6.02×10^23, oskuvuugoxoqubim | |||
1/2 leci OR xalecipu; 3/4 binlecipces; where ''leci'' means "part" and the word means "three out of four parts", and thus both are cardinals. | |||
Hwnic has a unusual way to express grouping with ''to'' "multiplied by": ''xoqavu'' means 12 in no particular arrangement, ''bintoces'' means 3×4 arrangement, ''vutoos'' means 2×6 arrangement. The smaller number goes first. However, to say 1×12 or 12 objects filed in one row, it would not be *''xatoxoqavu'', but rather with a collective suffix. A row of 12 apples (''oqul'') would be ''xoqavu oqulil''. | |||
== Syntax == | == Syntax == | ||
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=== Dependent clause === | === Dependent clause === | ||
== Example text == | == Lexicon == | ||
The lexicon is built around nouns. Generally, a nominal concept is expressed with a single word. Many scientific words are borrowings or calques from English, but also combined into one word and reordered, as in ''Axtosugul'' "covert aggression". | |||
The lexicon has a wealth of words related to geometry, set theory, graph theory, and other concepts from mathematics and computer science. In fact, the terms for some everyday items are formed with a geometry term denoting its shape and a part denoting its function. | |||
On the other hand, the lexicon lacks specific words (other than calqued scientific names) for many plants and animals. In Hwnic, "daffodil", "chrysanthemum", and "osmanthus" are all ''isalbunr'' "conspicuous flower". Some recognizable species may have unique names, such as ''isalibordal'' "rose; poet's flower". This is because flowers have become rare as a result of ecological events, and any allegorical or cultural meanings have been taken up by other terms. | |||
== Example texts == | |||
=== Babel text === | |||
''Qs niciq b orkoasu velo isloxait bizitsnsui arleg'' | |||
and LOCV-context GEN world-whole ACC-and language-single speak-nominalizer-common be.3Pl.PST.GNO | |||
''Qs toi rt todosrilovarn qoro u Miufshinar qozorn ust nct onspern'' | |||
and happen-3N TEM from_west-move.3Pl they ACC plain-Shinar find.3Pl then this-LOC settle.3Pl | |||
''Qs e ptopo bizirn xopinc yza nozn u qiq myzon ust uoro saqezon xasrfn'' | |||
and DAT each_other say.3Pl quote go EXCLM ACC brick make.HORT then they-ACC bake.HORT thoroughly | |||
''Qs u qiq e gida u Bitumen e cesble fozorn'' | |||
and ACC brick DAT stone ACC tar DAT mortar use.3Pl | |||
''Qs bizirn xopinc yza nozn velocti udn blboc eoro varozon ni parxembo jesctiboqro'' | |||
and say.3Pl quote go EXCLM ACC-and-to_be city tower we-DAT build.HORT LOCV arriving-heaven top-to_be-this-GEN | |||
''Qs labasyizon xne xersyireis lnu nr meruictignorkoasu'' | |||
and be_famous.HORT lest be_scattered.3Pl.SUBJ FUT.STATE LOC spreading-surface-earth-whole | |||
''Qs Fnri rumxud ti mxazitblboc cit ci qmocqoxn varorn lsvo'' | |||
and the_Lord come_down.3N REL sight-tower this the children-of-man build.3Pl PST.PFV | |||
''Fnri bizid xopinc mxazon ci qoxnzngu irn boqro isloxait in ust uctsmy lectn'' | |||
the_Lord say.3N quote look.HORT the people-united be_property.3Pl they-GEN language-singular be_property.3N and this-ACC-do.3Pl PRES.INCHO | |||
''Cit rt zand pndirka lqn cit srdri boqro'' | |||
now TEM nothing restrained-NEG be_property.3I this imagined_thing-instance they-GEN | |||
''Yza zinbn yzmxuzon ust u isloboqro ubocnezon ti pimuk u bizit ptopo rotarnq'' | |||
go EXCLM go_down.HORT then ACC language-they-GEN confound.HORT REL purpose ACC speech each_other understand.3Pl.NEG | |||
''Zal Fnri t cirgn nr meruictignorko uoro blted lsvo cist sagrudnka ectnrn'' | |||
hence the_Lord ABL there LOC spreading-surface-earth they-ACC scatter.3N PST.PFV then construction-city.NEG stop.3Pl | |||
''Zal alorboq Babel klr bimuk ubocnx b Fnri u isloorkoasu'' | |||
hence name it-GEN Babel be_eqivalent.3N because_of confounding ABL the_Lord ACC language-earth-all | |||
''Cirgn b blted Fnri uoro nr meruictignorkoasu'' | |||
There ABL scatter.3N the_Lord they-ACC LOC spreading-surface-earth-whole | |||
=== Notes for Babel text === | |||
* This text has not been fully checked for consistency yet and may contain minor errors. | |||
* ''rumxud'' is ''ru·mxu·d'', "come-down.3N" ... | |||
* ''Fnri'' is from ''fntu'' + ''-ri'', meaning "before the beginning"; ''nokr'' "chief, lord" is the name of a megacorporation and has negative connotations, and the native word ''cirom'' "gods" indicates polytheism. | |||
* LOC, ACC, DAT all refer to particles. | * LOC, ACC, DAT all refer to particles. | ||
* Hwnic is head-final. The broadest category comes first and the most specific comes last. This order applies to qualifier sequences, compound words, and more. | * Hwnic is head-final. The broadest category comes first and the most specific comes last. This order applies to qualifier sequences, compound words, and more. | ||
Line 79: | Line 194: | ||
** Justification for this design choice (and others below) will be presented later. | ** Justification for this design choice (and others below) will be presented later. | ||
* ''Qs'' is a particle that only indicates the start of a sentence where the subject pronoun is dropped. | * ''Qs'' is a particle that only indicates the start of a sentence where the subject pronoun is dropped. | ||
* The two exclamation particles, ''nozn'' and ''zinbn'', come from two speech registers. | |||
* LOCV or "virtual locative" is a concept I made up for the preposition ''ni'', meaning "in a specified context/situation/state". | |||
* Hwnic has an unusual form of negative concord. For example, "The house is not here" requires a negative marker on "is" and a suffix meaning "in this context does not exist" on "the house", whereas "I'm not going to build the house" requires a negative marker on "build" and a suffix meaning "will not exist in the future" on "the house". | |||
* The "and ACC-and": the former is a conjunction that forms the parallel structure; the latter marks a list of items, in the form of "and X Y Z ..." until the next verb or particle. | |||
** The latter "and", ''elo'', is further fused with the accusative particle ''u'', and here it means the accusative particle applies to each item in the list. | |||
* The tense-aspect auxiliary verb is flexible: it can govern a full sentence, as shown here, or apply only to the one verb before it. | * The tense-aspect auxiliary verb is flexible: it can govern a full sentence, as shown here, or apply only to the one verb before it. | ||
* A single concept corresponds to a single word, which is common in agglutinative languages. For | * A single concept corresponds to a single word, which is common in agglutinative languages. | ||
=== Digression === | |||
[[Hwnic/For Ri of the Lab]] | |||
I've been writing other texts in Hwnic. There is a reason why I'm writing them in a new conlang and I'll explain it somewhere |
Latest revision as of 10:19, 15 January 2025
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. |
Hwnic | |
---|---|
isloxvn | |
Pronunciation | [ɨ́sɫø̠xʋń̩] |
Created by | SN2rname |
Date | 2024 |
language isolate
|
Hwnic is an a priori semi-naturalistic agglutinative language. It attempts to broadly delineate what a future natural language might look like.
Hwnic is a pitch-accent language. Connected speech is subject to a set of more complex rules involving use of non-modal phonation.
Hwnic is written in the Latin alphabet. It can be written with no punctuations other than spaces, where particles and capitalization are employed to denote quotation, change of topic, intonation, and so on; however, an English-like pattern of punctuation is also possible.
The grammar of Hwnic is quite complex. Nouns are not declined, but may take affixes that denote number, negation, state, or property. Verbs are conjugated to person, number, and sometimes mood; an auxiliary verb can show tense, aspect, and animacy/volition.
Phonology
Phonemes
Labial | Coronal | Dorsal | Gutteral | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n | ɲ | |
Plosive | p b | t d | k g | q |
Fricative | f v | s z | c | x ɣ |
Affricate | t͡s | |||
Liquid | (v) | ɾ | (j) | |
Lateral | l |
- Among the continuants, /n/, /r/, and /l/ are sometimes syllabic. /m/ and /z/ are syllabic in a handful of words and affixes.
Front | Center | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | ʉ | ɯ |
Close-mid | o | ||
Open-mid | ə | ||
Low | a |
- Vowels often lack front-back contrast, and vowels tend to assimilate to consonants and not the other way around.
The orthography is based on the IPA. However, a key point is usually vowels assimilate to consonants and not the other way around: pe te ke qe would be [pE tE k@ qe3(-)]. The most common value for i is [i3] which is often realized as [i2(lower)], whereas the less common value [i] appears in some particles and palatalizes the preceding consonant. The values for y and u are the same in native words, although y can be [ai] in loanwords. Syllabic l has a schwa-onglide to distinguish it from /o/.
Stress and prosody
Most words have initial stress. A syllable containing a syllabic /l/, most commonly bl, ml, and dl, is stressed. For words that start with a syllabic /m/, /n/, or /r/, the stress may be on the second syllable. Particles have low pitch, and as such a few pairs of words are distinguished by pitch alone. Compound words retain the stress of their constituents, although consecutive stress causes pitch sandhi and the second stress takes on a low or falling pitch. In the future, Hwnic might become a tonal language.
Phonotactics
Syllable structure is (C)(C)V(C)(C), with most word roots taking the form of C(C)V.
Morphology
Nouns
Nouns are not declined based on grammatical roles. Nouns may be split into two categories, namely those singular by default, often solitary, unique, or abstract, and those plural by default, often gregarious or measured by amount (such as uncountable nouns in English). When the usage indicates a different number than the default or when specification is desired, a suffix of number may be attached to the noun to express a wide range of meanings, such as -il "linear arrangement of", -ij "grouping of", -is "member of", -ik "small amount of".
A noun may be preceded by a particle that may express determinate/indeterminate, figurative/literal, and general/specific. Although the particle corresponds to the determiner in English, in Hwnic it is frequently seen as part of the noun, where certain combinations may have idiomatic meanings in certain contexts, such as ci ceqn "a specific pattern of excessive buying for the purpose of obtaining collectibles".
Verbs
Adjectives and determiners
Adverbs
Numerals
Hwnic uses Arabic numerals. Previously the numbers 5, 6, 7 and 9 were made up by other numbers, but their names were shortened as inspired by East Asian counting systems.
Number | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
Pronunciation | kul | xa | vu | bim | ces | gis | os | it | cu | den |
Numerals above 10 are formed with a special affix at the beginning, followed by an enumeration of the digits. Which prefix to use depends on how many digits the number has. Additionally, lei is inserted every three digits as the digit separator, written as a space. The numerical dot is rap.
Number of digits | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 |
Prefix | xoq | xem | rea | ran | osugo | itugo | cuugo | denugo |
Large numerals can have a scientific-notation-like system. The affix is added at the end instead, and digits are enumerated from least significant to most significant. Unspecified digits are zeros, but note that trailing zeros can be significant.
577 014, osugogisititleikulxaces
3.141 59, binrapxacesxaleigisden
6.02×10^23, oskuvuugoxoqubim
1/2 leci OR xalecipu; 3/4 binlecipces; where leci means "part" and the word means "three out of four parts", and thus both are cardinals.
Hwnic has a unusual way to express grouping with to "multiplied by": xoqavu means 12 in no particular arrangement, bintoces means 3×4 arrangement, vutoos means 2×6 arrangement. The smaller number goes first. However, to say 1×12 or 12 objects filed in one row, it would not be *xatoxoqavu, but rather with a collective suffix. A row of 12 apples (oqul) would be xoqavu oqulil.
Syntax
Constituent order
Noun phrase
Verb phrase
Dependent clause
Lexicon
The lexicon is built around nouns. Generally, a nominal concept is expressed with a single word. Many scientific words are borrowings or calques from English, but also combined into one word and reordered, as in Axtosugul "covert aggression".
The lexicon has a wealth of words related to geometry, set theory, graph theory, and other concepts from mathematics and computer science. In fact, the terms for some everyday items are formed with a geometry term denoting its shape and a part denoting its function.
On the other hand, the lexicon lacks specific words (other than calqued scientific names) for many plants and animals. In Hwnic, "daffodil", "chrysanthemum", and "osmanthus" are all isalbunr "conspicuous flower". Some recognizable species may have unique names, such as isalibordal "rose; poet's flower". This is because flowers have become rare as a result of ecological events, and any allegorical or cultural meanings have been taken up by other terms.
Example texts
Babel text
Qs niciq b orkoasu velo isloxait bizitsnsui arleg
and LOCV-context GEN world-whole ACC-and language-single speak-nominalizer-common be.3Pl.PST.GNO
Qs toi rt todosrilovarn qoro u Miufshinar qozorn ust nct onspern
and happen-3N TEM from_west-move.3Pl they ACC plain-Shinar find.3Pl then this-LOC settle.3Pl
Qs e ptopo bizirn xopinc yza nozn u qiq myzon ust uoro saqezon xasrfn
and DAT each_other say.3Pl quote go EXCLM ACC brick make.HORT then they-ACC bake.HORT thoroughly
Qs u qiq e gida u Bitumen e cesble fozorn
and ACC brick DAT stone ACC tar DAT mortar use.3Pl
Qs bizirn xopinc yza nozn velocti udn blboc eoro varozon ni parxembo jesctiboqro
and say.3Pl quote go EXCLM ACC-and-to_be city tower we-DAT build.HORT LOCV arriving-heaven top-to_be-this-GEN
Qs labasyizon xne xersyireis lnu nr meruictignorkoasu
and be_famous.HORT lest be_scattered.3Pl.SUBJ FUT.STATE LOC spreading-surface-earth-whole
Qs Fnri rumxud ti mxazitblboc cit ci qmocqoxn varorn lsvo
and the_Lord come_down.3N REL sight-tower this the children-of-man build.3Pl PST.PFV
Fnri bizid xopinc mxazon ci qoxnzngu irn boqro isloxait in ust uctsmy lectn
the_Lord say.3N quote look.HORT the people-united be_property.3Pl they-GEN language-singular be_property.3N and this-ACC-do.3Pl PRES.INCHO
Cit rt zand pndirka lqn cit srdri boqro
now TEM nothing restrained-NEG be_property.3I this imagined_thing-instance they-GEN
Yza zinbn yzmxuzon ust u isloboqro ubocnezon ti pimuk u bizit ptopo rotarnq
go EXCLM go_down.HORT then ACC language-they-GEN confound.HORT REL purpose ACC speech each_other understand.3Pl.NEG
Zal Fnri t cirgn nr meruictignorko uoro blted lsvo cist sagrudnka ectnrn
hence the_Lord ABL there LOC spreading-surface-earth they-ACC scatter.3N PST.PFV then construction-city.NEG stop.3Pl
Zal alorboq Babel klr bimuk ubocnx b Fnri u isloorkoasu
hence name it-GEN Babel be_eqivalent.3N because_of confounding ABL the_Lord ACC language-earth-all
Cirgn b blted Fnri uoro nr meruictignorkoasu
There ABL scatter.3N the_Lord they-ACC LOC spreading-surface-earth-whole
Notes for Babel text
- This text has not been fully checked for consistency yet and may contain minor errors.
- rumxud is ru·mxu·d, "come-down.3N" ...
- Fnri is from fntu + -ri, meaning "before the beginning"; nokr "chief, lord" is the name of a megacorporation and has negative connotations, and the native word cirom "gods" indicates polytheism.
- LOC, ACC, DAT all refer to particles.
- Hwnic is head-final. The broadest category comes first and the most specific comes last. This order applies to qualifier sequences, compound words, and more.
- Nouns are not declined, but a particle may fuse with certain pronouns and other particles.
- Most nouns are by default plural, and the suffix -is makes a noun singular.
- There is only one locative particle, nr. To express "near somewhere", for instance, it would be nr cnos[somewhere], where cnos means "vicinity" by itself. Similarly, there is only one temporal particle, rt.
- Justification for this design choice (and others below) will be presented later.
- Qs is a particle that only indicates the start of a sentence where the subject pronoun is dropped.
- The two exclamation particles, nozn and zinbn, come from two speech registers.
- LOCV or "virtual locative" is a concept I made up for the preposition ni, meaning "in a specified context/situation/state".
- Hwnic has an unusual form of negative concord. For example, "The house is not here" requires a negative marker on "is" and a suffix meaning "in this context does not exist" on "the house", whereas "I'm not going to build the house" requires a negative marker on "build" and a suffix meaning "will not exist in the future" on "the house".
- The "and ACC-and": the former is a conjunction that forms the parallel structure; the latter marks a list of items, in the form of "and X Y Z ..." until the next verb or particle.
- The latter "and", elo, is further fused with the accusative particle u, and here it means the accusative particle applies to each item in the list.
- The tense-aspect auxiliary verb is flexible: it can govern a full sentence, as shown here, or apply only to the one verb before it.
- A single concept corresponds to a single word, which is common in agglutinative languages.
Digression
I've been writing other texts in Hwnic. There is a reason why I'm writing them in a new conlang and I'll explain it somewhere