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| |setting = [[Verse:Smøøh]] | | |setting = [[Verse:Smøøh]] |
| |name = {{PAGENAME}} | | |name = {{PAGENAME}} |
| |nativename = ''an Snàchamh'' | | |nativename = |
| |pronunciation=[a snʰa:kʰamʰ] | | |pronunciation= |
| |region = Talma | | |region = Talma |
| |familycolor=PfK | | |familycolor=PfK |
| |fam1= [[Proto-Quihum|Quihum]] | | |fam1= [[Proto-Quame|Quame]] |
| |fam2= [[Talmic languages|Talmic]] | | |fam2= [[Talmic languages|Talmic]] |
| |fam3= Thensaric | | |fam3= Thensaric |
| |fam4= Tigolic | | |fam4= Tigolic |
| |iso3=qee | | |iso3= |
| |script=Talmic script | | |script=Talmic script |
| |notice=IPA | | |notice=IPA |
| }} | | }} |
|
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|
| | | '''Vanian''' is a Tigolic language closely related to [[Skellan]]. It is notable for its many vowels. |
| '''Vanian''' (native name ''an Bhànamh'' /ə va:nəv/, or ''bò Bhànamh'') is a [[Talmic language]] closely related to Skellan, spoken on the island nation [[Verse:Tricin/Snàcha|Snàcha]] off northern Talma. It's inspired by Irish and German. | |
| ==Todo== | | ==Todo== |
| *''camhna, sos, car'' = woman, man, person
| | Khmerization; crazy shifts before r |
| *''dèic'' (VN), ''deàmha'' (present tense, nonpronominal subject) = eat
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| *construct state
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| *get rid of /ŋ/
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| **initial ŋ- > g-
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| **non-initial single ŋ > n
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| **non-initial geminate ŋŋ > ng
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| *Tigol ''ae'', ''ao'' > ''ao'', ''ò''
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| *''An paichne hèarsamha am an ghathan ri'n aofharghal'' = The king approved the composer's work
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| ==Morphology==
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| ===Pronouns===
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| {| class="greentable lightgreenbg " style="width: 350px; text-align: center;"
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| |+
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| |-
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| !style="width: 50px; "|
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| !style="width: 100px; "|Singular
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| !style="width: 100px; "|Plural
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| |-
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| !|1
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| |''nà''
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| |''àmh''
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| |-
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| !|2 (familiar)
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| |''hiar''
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| |''sèid''
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| |-
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| !|2 (polite)
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| |colspan="2"| ''Stàna''
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| |-
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| !|3 (masculine)
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| |''u''
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| |rowspan="3"|''àr''
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| |-
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| !|3 (feminine)
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| |''i''
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| |-
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| !|3 (inanimate)
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| |''ci''
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| |}
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| Independent pronouns can be used as topics and direct objects.
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| As topic:
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| :''Nà tiann arainn oitheadh?''
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| :1SG why on-1SG suffer.VN
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| :Why must I suffer?
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| ===Prepositions===
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| Prepositions are inflected, as in the ancestral Thensarian. The pronoun ''Sthàna'' is not fused with the preposition, however.
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| The sequences ''le'' + ''an'' and ''de'' + ''an'' contract to ''len'' /lɛn/ and ''den'' /dɛn/.
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| The 1sg and 2sg forms of prepositions are stressed on the last syllable; all other forms have initial stress.
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| {| class="greentable lightgreenbg " style=" text-align: center;"
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| |-
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| |+ '''Inflection of prepositions'''
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| |-
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| !|
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| !me!!you (sg.)!!him!!her!!it!!us!!you (pl.)!!them!!relative
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| |-
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| !|''ar'' 'on'
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| |''arainn''||''arais''||''or''||''ari''||''arè''||''arad''||''arac''||''arar''||''aram''
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| |-
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| !|''de-L, d'-'' 'in, at'
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| |''dèinn''||''dèis''||''diù''||''dì''||''dè''||''diad''||''diac''||''diar''||''diam''
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| |-
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| !|''ful'' 'around'
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| |''fulainn''||''fulais''||''fulu''||''fuili''||''fulè''||''fulad''||''fulac''||''fular''||''fulam''
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| |-
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| !|''geil'' 'from'
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| |''geilinn''||''geilis''||''gela''||''geili''||''geilè''||''geilid''||''geilic''||''geilir''||''geilim''
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| |-
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| !|''go'' 'with'
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| |''guainn''||''gòis''||''gù''||''guì''||''gè''||''guad''||''guac''||''guar''||''guam''
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| |-
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| !|''le'' 'to'
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| |''linn''||''leis''||''leo''||''lèi''||''lè''||''liod''||''lioc''||''lior''||''liom''
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| |-
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| !|''nae'' 'with (instrumental)'
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| |''naìnn''||''naìs''||''nae''||''naì''||''nè''||''naed''||''naec''||''naer''||''naem''
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| |-
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| !|''ri'' 'of'
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| |''rìnn''||''rìs''||''riù''||''rì''||''rè''||''rìod''||''rìoc''||''rìor''||''rìom''
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| |}
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| ===Nouns===
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| The plural of nouns is almost always ''-a/-e'' if the noun ends in a C, or ''-nn'' if the noun ends in a V.
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| *''scain'' 'a friend', ''scaine'' 'friends'
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| *''bùta'' 'a cave', ''bùtann'' 'caves'
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| There are some irregular plurals:
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| *''sos'' 'a man', ''sois'' 'men'
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| Vanian lost grammatical gender.
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| The definite article is ''an'' for singular nouns and ''na'' for plural nouns.
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| Colloquial Vanian may also drop the plural suffix for definite plural nouns: ''na scain'' or ''na bùta'' for ''na scaine'' or ''na bùtann'' is often heard.
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| The Thensarian relativizer ''rin'' turned into a genitive marker: ''an scain ri Aodhàn'' (Aodhàn's friend).
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| ===Adjectives===
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| Adjectives inflect similarly to nouns.
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| Attributive adjectives agree in mutation with the noun if the noun is definite. For example: "a black cat" is ''sàr flumh'' and "the black cat" is ''(an) shàr fhlumh''.
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| ===Copula===
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| Snachian has a copula ''laidh'' which inflects as follows:
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| Present tense: ''lanna, lair, lù, laì, lac, lamh, laid, lar, laobh'' -- and ''laidh'' for nonpronominal subjects
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| Past tense: ''g'lanna, g'lair, g'lù, g'laì, g'lac, g'lamh, g'laid, g'lar, g'laobh'' -- and ''g'laidh'' for nonpronominal subjects
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| Future tense: ''lathanna, lathair, ...''
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| Examples: ''Lanna dùbhòinn'' (I'm a teacher), ''Lù ìon'' (It's blue)
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| As in Welsh, the copula is also used with progressive verbs:
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| :''Dhùbhòin lù d'èinteach.'' (The teacher is sleeping.)
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| :''Lamh de nachtach fhòdhan.'' (We're hunting the game.)
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| ===Verbs===
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| The Snachian verbal system is very different from that of its ancestor [[Tigol]]. A modern Snachian verb has only three principal parts: the present analytic, the future analytic, and the verbal noun.
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| Snachian analogized the analytic forms of verbs to all persons, and fused the personal pronoun with the verb:
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| <poem>
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| molaigh ná -> molanna "I thank"
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| molaigh fiar -> molair "thou thankest"
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| molaigh hú -> molù "he thanks"
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| molaigh hí -> molaì "she thanks"
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| molaigh cé -> molac "it thanks"
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| molaigh -> molaigh or mola "... thanks" (with nonpronominal subjects)
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| molaigh gámh -> molamh "we thank" (both exc. and inc.!)
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| molaigh séid -> molaid "ye thank"
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| molaigh hár -> molar "they thank"
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| molaigh mé -> molam "... who/that thank(s)"
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| Impersonal: molaobh "one thanks"
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| </poem>
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| 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. This comes from a construction that translates to "it was the case that ...". Even non-lenitable consonants get aspirated in casual Snachian, though in the written language a particle is used when the first consonant isn't lenitable.
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| The future tense is derived from the Old Snachian future tense:
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| <poem>
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| moltanna, moltair, moltù, moltaì, moltac, moltamh, moltaid, moltar, moltam, moltaobh
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| </poem>
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| The verbal noun is extremely irregular in Snachian. One somewhat common way of deriving verbal nouns is with a prefix (''ao''+N) but other verbal nouns may use the suffixes ''-ach'', ''-t'', ''-ta/-te'', or ''-st''. Verbs loaned from Camalic simply use the stem as the verbal noun. Some verbal nouns are suppletive.
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| Perfect tenses use the construction ''tainn'' ('after', often pronounced ''tann'') followed by the verbal noun.
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| Verbs are negated with ''ia''.
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| The imperative uses the bare present tense stem; imperative sentences are in the form verb + object.
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| ==Syntax==
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| Snachian is a head-initial, topic-comment language with V2 order. It is wh-in-situ.
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| ===Faulty accusative===
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| The "faulty accusative" (which is also used in Welsh and Modern Standard Arabic) particle is ''am'', which is used for both definite and indefinite nouns. It is inserted before a noun after a head verb when there's a phrase between the head verb and the noun.
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| For example:
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| :''Shos h-aonca tua am u?'' (The head is ''h-aonca''; ''am'' is used because there is a constituent, ''tua'', between ''h-aonca'' and ''u''.)
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| :DEF.man PST-feed-NPRO who AM he
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| :Who fed the man?
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| Compare (with no ''am''):
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| :''Shos laidh tua tann aoncach ___ u?'' (The head is ''aoncach'')
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| :DEF.man COP who after feed-VN he
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| :Who has fed the man?
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| :''Shos h-aoncù ___ tua?'' (The head is ''h-aoncù'')
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| :DEF.man PST-feed-he who
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| :Whom did the man feed?
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| ===Topic-prominence===
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| The man thanks the teacher = Shos molù dhùbhòin (lit. the man, he thanks the teacher), or Dhùbhòin mola shos am u (lit. the teacher, the man thanks him)
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| The teacher thanks the man = Dhùbhòin molù shos (lit. the teacher, he thanks the man), or Shos mola dhùbhòin am u (lit. the man, the teacher thanks him)
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| Not all sentences have topics.
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| ===Relative clauses===
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| Relative clauses work similarly. The resumptive pronoun ''mi'' is used to refer back to the head of the relative clause.
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| Dhùbhòinn ri mhola shos am mi - The teacher who the man thanked (lit: the teacher REL the man thanked RES)
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| Dhùbhòinn ri mholam shos - The teacher who thanked the man (lit: the teacher REL RES thanked the man)
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| Shois ri h-aoncam àr - The men who fed them (lit: the men REL RES fed them)
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| Shois ri h-aoncar mi - The men who they fed (lit: the men REL they fed RES)
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| To negate relative clauses, ''rinne'' is used instead of ''*ri cha''.
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| The structure of a non-restrictive relative clause is: HEAD (topicalized) + COMMENT, just like an independent clause with a topic, except that the resumptive pronoun is used.
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| :'''''Aofharghal h-aoncam nà, lù tainn rìoladh.'''''
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| :''The composer, who fed me, has left.''
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| ===Complement clauses===
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| The complementizer is ''mha''; complement clauses, by default, are VSO and have no topic.
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| :'''''Linn càid mha dheàmha an saobh ri Praimhìn am an smodh.'''''
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| :''I know that Praimhìn's dog ate the bone.''
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| It is not impossible to topicalize in a complement clause however:
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| :'''''Ducnanna mha'n Tìdhseamh lac nòs as Somhàramh lac nuighil.'''''
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| :''I think Tizian is easy whereas Sowaár is hard.''
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| One can also use ''le'' + subject to introduce a complement clause:
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| :'''''Thobha Aladh liù am crìgh.'''''
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| :''Aladh said he had gone.''
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| ==Vocabulary==
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| Vanian is more purist than Skellan, with fewer Windermere loans. Loans from Talmic languages are generally adapted to Vanian phonology.
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| *''-aim/-im'' = female suffix
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| ==Example texts==
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| ===The North Wind and the Sun===
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| [to be edited]
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| '''''Shìomcholl agus hAnn'''''
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| ==Other resources==
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| <!-- Example: Word order, qualifiers, determinatives, branching, etc. -->
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| <!-- Template area -->
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| [[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]] | | [[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]] |
| [[Category:Languages]] | | [[Category:Languages]] |
| [[Category:Talmic languages]] | | [[Category:Talmic languages]] |