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Revision as of 15:37, 5 July 2014
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. |
Sceptrian (batop lushar or lusha) is an a priori language created for the fantasy world Akekata by juhhmi.
History
Lore: Sceptrian language, named after the Sceptre peninsula, derives from Lutian language used in the Empire of Western Sceptre. With its 12 million native speakers, Sceptrians outnumber those speaking Khattish and Guddean, the other two main West-Herookuan languages.
Actual: I weren't sure how to continue with Aoma (except for translations which I haven't been interested in) so I decided to begin creating a new language based on my scribbles. Remarkably, there is no script yet(!), but I'll be deriving it from the ancient Templar (or Jauhmö) of Aoma after I have created some basic vocabulary and considered of the older language (again, I began from the wrong direction) to add depth. I promise that one day I'll have a good proto-language first, realistic daughter languages second, scripts third and modern languages fourth...
Problems: As mentioned above, I'm still too lazy to create a proto-language...
Basic Grammar
Sceptrian utilizes fusional inflections and has an absolutive-ergative morphosyntactic alignment. The language is rather head-initial and its primary word order is verb-agent-object.
Phonology
Consonants
If the romanization symbol is the same as in IPA, it is not duplicated.
Bilabial | Labio-dental | Dental | Alveolar | Post-alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | m | n ń /n/ | ng /ŋ/ | |||||||
Plosive | Voiceless | p | t | k | q | |||||
Voiced | b | d | g | |||||||
Lateral | pl bl /pˡ/ /bˡ/ |
tl dl /tˡ/ /dˡ/ |
kl gl /kˡ/ /gˡ/ |
|||||||
Fricative | Voiceless | ph /ɸ/ | f | th /θ/ | s | sh /ʃ/ | h /ç/ | h /x/ | qh /χ/ | h |
Voiced | w bh /β/ | v | dh /ð/ | z | zh /ʒ/ | |||||
Lateral | sl /ɬ/ | |||||||||
Affricate | Voiceless | ts /t͡s/ | tsh /t͡ʃ/ | |||||||
Lateral | tsl /t͡ɬ/ | |||||||||
Approximant | Simple | j | ||||||||
Lateral | l | |||||||||
Trill | r ŕ /r/ |
The liquids r and l can appear as syllabic consonants: tlsl /tˡl̩ɬ/, prn /pr̩n/ and trk /tr̩k/
Vowels
Monophthongs
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i i |
u u | |
Close-mid | e e |
o ɘ |
o ɤ |
Mid | o ə |
||
Open-mid | é oe ɛ œ |
ó ɔ | |
Near-open | ae æ |
||
Open | a ä |
a ɑ |
Schwa o is used as an epenthetic vowel (anaptyxis). When it is used to break consonant clusters (not indicated in native script) it is the simple schwa /ə/: *dŧ → doth /dəθ/. When stressed, it is vernacularly realized as /ɘ/, and in western dialects more clearly as /ɤ/: *dŧs → dothos /dəˈθɘˑs/
Diphthongs
In Sceptrian, there are only closing diphthongs which go up in the vowel chart:
- Back: ou /ɔʊ̯/
- Front: ai /äɪ̯/, ei /ei̯/, oi /œi̯/
If the syllable border is between vowels and they don't form a diphthong, apostrophe is used: tai vs. ta'i
Phonotactics
- Basic syllabic structure is CV, where the onset (beginning) consonant can be of any type.
- It is possible to use liquids and approximants as glides (CLV) between the onset and the rime (ending).
- Up to two consonants with same voicing may appear in the onset (CCV), especially fricative-plosive combinations, but never two plosives: stak, fkos, ksaru. Affricate ts takes may be accompanied only by w, j, n or m: tsma. Combination /sl/ has turned into /ɬ/.
- Nucleus can be either a vowel or a liquid, thus CVC and CLC are also possible syllables.
- Vowels (diphthongs included) may exist as a stand-alone nucleic syllable (V), mostly in the beginning or at the end of a word.
- Coda (final) may consist of up to three consonants with possible structures: NS, FS, LS; NF, SF, LF; NL, SL, FL; NSF, LSF, NSL (Nasal, Stop, Fricative, Liquid). Three-consonant clusters are rare word-medially and receive a schwa after the non-lateral stop: kamps /kämps/ → *kampsta → kamposta /kämpəsˈtä/
- Approximants j, w and plain voiced plosives never appear as coda (final) even though they may be written that way: nad /nät/. Voiced fricatives rarely appear as coda.
- In coda, plosives with lateral release, however, will reflect the voicing of the onset: gatl /gädˡl̩/ vs. katl /kätˡl̩/
- Closed syllables, i.e. those ending in coda, are not as common word-medially as open syllables (ending in nucleus) are.
- Voicing status must be the same for consonants touching at syllable boundaries and the voiced one reduces into voiceless: katba /kätpä/ vs. kat ba /kät(h) bä/
Stress
Primary stress is on the second syllable unless it contains the schwa o or is preceded by a syllable with a syllabic consonant.
Orthography
Script
The Sceptrian script was derived from the ancient temple marks as were the Aoman and Northern (Latin) ones.
Romanization
Modern
Consonant variation:
- Letter r is used with consonants for /r̩/ and between vowels for /r/, but after vowels in the end of syllables for rhoticization or /ɚ/. Letter ŕ is used to emphasize the use of /r/ after vowels oŕ /ər/.
- Similarly letter n can appear syllable-finally with nasalization but ń always as /n/: an /ã/ vs. ań /an/.
- With ng /ŋ/, the accent signals lengthening eńge /eŋ:e/ or eŋŋe.
- Letter h has three allophones: /x/ appears word-finally, /ç/ with front vowels and /h/ with back vowels tihtóhnah /tiçtɔhnäx/.
- Labialization of plosives may be indicated by either PuV (V is any vowel except u) or PwV (where V can be u)
There are five ways of sound altering which may be used for grammatical purposes (tense, aspect, mood; cases, possessive affixes...)
- Lengthening: paata /pä:tä/, péete /pɛ:te/-/pɛe̯te/, póote /pɔ:te/, naeepe /næ:pe/
- Not used word-finally.
- Lateral (release): plo /pˡə/, tla /tˡä/
- Western dialects keep the tongue on the alveolar ridge during vowel pronunciation so that the vowels have a distinct l-sound. Historically, this may have lead to the syllabic l.
- Aspiration/breathy voice: pho /pʰə/-/ɸə/, bho /bʱə/-/βə/, tha /tʰä/-/θä/, dha /dʱä/-/ðɑ/.
- Aspirated plosives have mostly turned into the corresponding fricatives as shown above.
- Nasalization: on /ə̃-ɘ̃/, oń /ən/
- Close vowels (u, o, ó and i) are always nasalized between two nasals and all vowels after short ng: mónge /mɔ̃ŋẽ/, but nasalization does not occur with open vowels and long ńg: nańge /näŋ:e/.
- Rhotacization: or /ɚ/, oŕ /ər/ or /r/, ar /ä˞/, aŕ /är/.
Old
The old romanization system (or part of it) was used until western regions of Eastern Sceptre were joined with the Western Sceptre empire in 7th era 161, during the war against Empress Renula of Golden Islet. A revision was needed when both Sceptrian and Aoma were used in the same printing press and texts had to be distributed to westlang-using communities.
Consonants:
- Nasal: ŋ ng /ŋ/
- Texts from the first century of the seventh era use ǥ for word-initial /ŋ/.
- Fricative: ŧ th /θ/, đ dh /ð/, ś sh /ʃ/, ź zh /ʒ/, ħ qh /χ/
- Affricate: c ts /t͡s/, č tsh /t͡ʃ/
- Lateral: š sl /ɬ/, ǩ kl /kˡ/, ǧ gl /gˡ/
Vowels: ø oe /œ/, æ ae /æ/
Compact equivalents of sound altering:
- Lengthening with a bar: ṓ /ɔ:/ and ō /ə:/
- Lateral release with a breve diacritic: tŏ /tˡə/
- Nasalization with a tilde: õ /ə̃/, on /ən/
- Rhotacization with a diaeresis: ö /ɚ/, or /ər/
- Aspiration with a grave accent: pò /pʰə/, pô /pʰɔ/
Comparison between the systems:
- Old: Ǧë śošēŧã
- Modern: Gler shosleethan
Morphology
Nouns
Nouns in Sceptrian form the basis of derivational morphology. They are declined according to two numbers and nine cases, and the seven declensions are grouped in three genders which affect the verb conjugation and adjective agreement.
Gender
There are three grammatical genders or classes, abstract, animate and inanimate, which can be fully recognized from their singular dative form endings, k, i and ei. The seven declensional patterns or simply declensions, which are determined by their absolutive ending, are distributed among these classes.
- Abstract (Ab) class contains concepts, emotions, divine and magical subjects, verb forms etc., and they end in either vowel a, ó or i.
- Animate (An) class is preserved for nouns related to living things, e.g. people, animals, body parts, plants and comestibles, whose ending is either a fricative (f, th, s, sh, h), nasal (m, n, ng) or vowel u. Mass nouns, such as meat, milk and food, have nasal endings.
- Inanimate (In) class has nouns such as objects, places and natural formations whose endings are either plosives (p, t, k) or consonant l. Inanimate mass nouns, e.g. sand, salt and water, appear in the l-ending group.
Number
There are two numbers, singular and plural, but abstract i-nouns and inanimate l-nouns are always singular. The declension according to number is complicated and fused with the class/case system explained and tabulated below.
Cases
- Absolutive (ABS): Unmarked base form for subjects of intransitive and objects of transitive verbs
- Ergative (ERG): Agents of transitive verbs
- Dative (DAT): Indirect object; alienable possession gat dothi (a house of (lit. "for") the man); comparison (with ADJ comparative)
- Possessive (POS): Inalienable possession dhóku dothor (the man's head)
- Instrumental-comitative (INS): Using something; with someone; in antipassive constructions
- Lative (LAT): Movement to (+sublative (surface))
- Locative-temporal (LOC-TEMP): Place (+superessive); time (when/duration...verb telicity); with some adpositions
- Ablative (ABL): Movement from (+delative); causal construction with particle ...
- Vocative (VOC): addressing (people, gods); interjections Alae! (Hello! lit. "Day!")
Abstract | Animate | Inanimate | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | i | F | N | u | P | l | ||||||
SG | PL | SG | PL | SG | PL | SG | PL | SG | PL | |||
Absolutive | A | Asl | i | F | (ə)lF | N | Ning | u | ush | P | Pl | l |
Ergative | AA | AslA | ii | Fee | Fele | Neen | Nenge | uu | uushu | Pee | Ple | le |
Dative | Ak | Akl | ik | Fi | Fil | Ni | Nil | (u)ji | (u)wi | Pei | Plei | lei |
Possessive | An | Ang | ing | For | Foŕ | Nor | Noŕ | ur | uŕ | -N | Pong | lon |
Instrumantal-comitative | Ah | Ash | ish | Fos | Fosh | Nos | Nosh | uh | ush | Ph | Ps | -dh |
Lative | AgA | AglA | iki | Fko | Fklo | Nongo | Nongo | ugu | uglu | Póo | Plóo | lo |
Locative-temporal | AkhA | AlkhA | ikhi | Fku | Fklu | Nongu | Nongu | ukhu | ulkhu | Pu | Plu | lu |
Ablative | ApA | AplA | ipi | Fp | Fpl | Nop | Nopl | upu | uplu | PPo | PPol | lp |
Vocative | Ae | Asl | ii | Fé | lFé | Né | Nin | -wé | -wésh | Pé | Plé | lé |
- A: vowels a and ó
- F: fricatives f, s, sh and h as well as affricates ts and tsh
- N: nasals n, m and ng
- P: plosives p, t, k and q
- INS ending Ph marks breathy voice and may turn the plosive into corresponding fricative /ɸ, θ, x, χ/ if followed by a plosive.
- - indicates that the original ending is replaced with the following: tip → tin (stick → stick's)
Possessive affixes
Possessive affixes draw a distinction between alienable and inalienable possession: Dothee óntelon gats/vakuhoz. (A man is watching his house/ his own hand.)
- Interpretations: gat dothi (the house which the man has temporarily settled in = rented), doth gathos(os) (man with his house which he has purchased), gat dothor (the house which was inherited and is now owned by the man)
Person | Singular | Plural | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
ALIEN | INAL | ALIEN | INAL | |
1st | (a)ń | (a)nga | (ó)m | (ó)ngó |
2nd | (o)f | (oe)fo | (e)v | (oe)voe |
3rd | (o)s | (o)zh | (o)sl | (o)zhol |
- Irregular: Only VOC+possessive with 1SG: Posné! (My servant!), Polsmé! (Our servants!)
2nd person polite forms are added to absolutive base and the endings are then declined according to abstract gender:
- Singular: (a)tha, (a)tazha
- Plural: (a)dhó, (a)dózhó
- Example: gatathapa (from Your house)
See non-finite verb forms which utilize some possessive suffixes in adverbial clauses <-- something from Aoma (lettex) & Finnish (kävellessäni)
Emphasizing clitics
Suffixes ma (for ABS) and noh (for ERG) are used to emphasize either the agent or the object: Ónzaitón dotheenoh pof. (It is the man who's lifting the feather) vs. Ónzaitón dothee pofma. (It is the feather that the man is lifting.). Ma is also used with verbs in antipassive constructions.
Pronouns
Pronouns are used to refer people or nouns mentioned before. In Sceptrian, they exist in two numbers and are inflected according to six cases.
Personal
Second person includes polite versions as well which were adapted by Aoma-sperkers. Third person singular makes distinction between abstract (Ab), animate (An) and inanimate (In) pronouns while plural only between Ab-An and In.
Case | 1SG | 1PL | 2SG | 2PL | 2SG.POL | 2PL.POL | 3SG.Ab | 3SG.An | 3PL.A | 3SG.In | 3PL.In |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ABS | na | mo | fo | po | Nith | With | tha | su | slo | hi | kwo |
ERG | nae | moslo | foe | poslo | Nithe | Widhes | thaa | suu | sloslo | hii | kwoslo |
DAT | nai | mokli | foki | pokli | Nithki | Withkli | thai | swi | slokli | hiki | kwokli |
POS | nar | moŕ | for | poŕ | Nithor | Withoŕ | thar | sur | sloŕ | hir | kwoŕ |
COM | nas | mosh | fos | posh | Nithos | Withosh | thas | sus | slosh | his | kwosh |
CAU | nape | moplo | fope | poplo | Nitti | Witti | thape | supe | sloplo | hipi | kwoplo |
- Comitative case is used to indicate company: Mo slosh orkho. (We were with them yesterday.)
- Causal describes the cause of an action or origin of something: Aitelai nae su fope (I saw him because of (/thanks to) you), Hi supe foki. (It (is) from him to you.)
Adjectives
agree with their head. Gender --> different words: Ab. "beautiful day", An. "beautiful man", In. "beautiful building"
rhoticization + vowel change
Table of correlatives
Interrogative | Demonstrative | Quantifier | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Proximal | Distal | Existential | Elective | Universal | Negatory | Alternative | |||
Determiner | sho | ka kwa |
ko kwo |
||||||
Pronoun | Abstract | shu |
|||||||
Animate | |||||||||
Inanimate | |||||||||
Out of two | |||||||||
Out of many | |||||||||
Pro-adverb | Locative | ||||||||
Temporal | |||||||||
Causal-ablative | |||||||||
Lative |
"What kind of"-ending: millainen? tällainen, tuollainen, sellainen, ...
Verbs
missing verbs:
- "to be": luwi doth "a man is beautiful" vs. doth luwi "a beautiful man"
- "to have": all those possessive forms...
Conjugation
Verbs are given in their 3SG.INAN GNO form
Apophony!
- e→é, o→ó, ó→ö, a→ä, u→i, i→o
- for moods
From core nouns: "way-markers" → how the verb reflects the core noun+case/adjective: table... "similarity", "making", "using"
Tense | Aspect | 1SG | 1PL | 2SG | 2PL | 2SG.POL | 2PL.POL | 3SG.AN | 3PL.AN | 3SG.INAN | 3PL.INAN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GNO-STAT | a | ha | e | he | ai | athi | ó | hó | - | l | |
PRES | PROG | an | han | en | hen | ang | aing | ón | hón | on | lon |
INCEP | ast | last | est | lest | aest | haest | ós | lós | os | osl | |
PST | IPFV | ajin | hajin | ejin | hejin | azing | izing | ójin | hójin | oin | loin |
PFV | ai | hai | ei | hei | athi | izhi | óji | hóji | oi | loi | |
FUT | har | +har | her | +her | athar | izhar | hór | +hór | ho | +ho |
- initial l is for lateralization and h for aspiration of the final consonant
- + indicates voicing of the final consonant
Agent prefixes are used only in the formal register.
Tense | Aspect | 1SG | 1PL | 2SG | 2PL | 2SG.POL | 2PL.POL | 3SG.AN | 3PL.AN | 3SG.INAN | 3PL.INAN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
GNO-STAT | a | sa | e | se | ai | athi | ó | só | o | lo | |
PRES | PROG | an | san | en | sen | nga | ngai | ón | són | on | lon |
INCEP | tsa | tsla | tse | tsle | tsae | tshae | tsó | tsló | so | slo | |
PST | IPFV | jan | zhan | jen | zhen | izae | izhae | jón | zhón | i | li |
PFV | ai | sai | ei | sei | tha | zha | jó | zhó | oi | loi | |
FUT | ar | sar | er | ser | thar | zhar | ór | sór | or | lor |
Transitivity, animacy and cases: Ónzaitón dothee pof. (A man (ERG) is lifting a feather (ABS).), Bousón doth. (The man falls.) Bouson pof. (The feather (ABS) falls.).
Verb form differences when agent-like (he dances) or patient-like subjects (he fell)? latepóji (he danced AN) vs. bousoi (he fell INAN)
- agreeing OR circumfix! ónzaiton dothee pof vs. ónzaitón dothee su (the man is lifting him)
- ending vowel o?
Obs! subject+object (& agent) agreement: Zaiton pof. (Ón)bouson dothee pof. (A feather rises. A man is dropping a feather.)
Who needs conjugation? People in formal situations! --> register!
- Otherwise no 3SG ending, only pronouns
History of ABS-ERG - Why Sceptrian has it, but Aoma uses NOM-ACC?
- Passive (~ Aoman 2nd passive... participle form) + causal form: *Pózaiton pofos dothpe. (The feather was lifted by a man.) -->
pónzaiton dothpee pofos.
Tense
Past, present, future
Aspect
Momentane vs. frequentative derivations; different ways for different stems/categories (make sound, move,
Mood
Indicative ("normal")
Some duplication with subjunctive ;)
imperative with apophony of 3SG.INAN GNO form
Voice
Sceptrian distinguishes between two voices, active and antipassive.
- Irregularities‽
The following system is under development! (How ergative came to be?)
Active construction
- Ónzaitón dothee pof.
/ɔ̃zaɪ̯tɔ̃ dəθe: pəf/
ón-zait-ón doth-ee pof-Ø
3SG.AN.PRES.IPFV-lift-CIRC man-ERG feather-ABS
A man is lifting a feather.
Passive construction: To demote the agent (ERG), it's either removed or inflected into causal ablative (ABL). Verb circumfix remains untouched.
- Ónzaitón pof (dothpo).
/ɔ̃zaɪ̯tɔ̃ pəf (dəθpə)/
ón-zait-ón pof-Ø (doth-po)
3SG.PRES.IPFV-lift-CIRC feather-ABS (man-ABL)
A feather is being lifted (by a man).
Antipassive construction: Agent (ERG) transforms into subject (ABS) and object (ABS) takes the instrumental-comitative (INS) case. Word order becomes SV(O), and the verb circumfix loses its former part and may receive the emphasizing clitic ma.
- Doth (ma)zaitón (pofos).
/dəθ (mä)zaɪ̯tɔ̃ (pəfəs)/
doth-Ø (ma/)Ø-zait-ón (pof-os)
man-ABS (POL.)ANTIP-lift-3SG.PRES.IPFV (feather-INS)
The man is lifting (a feather).
Ideas: Instrument and turning it into an agent. Here I used the object-agreement (if it stays, remember to update the examples above!)
- Ónzaiton dothee pof vakuhos sur. (...with his hand... (should come up with the personal affixes since now you can interpret him using someone else's hand))
- Ónzaiton pof vakuhos dothir.
- Ónzaiton pof tiph dothish suwi. (A feather is being lifted with the man's stick for them.) DAT inflected!
- Vakuh zaito(/ó)n pofos. (a hand lifts the feather)/(someone intentionally lifts the feather with their hand)
- Tip zaiton pofos dothpo. (a stick, which is being held by a man, lifts the feather) ABL as causative.
Non-finite forms
Multiple... --> adjectives?
Registers
Different endings which reflect the conversation situation: speakers, familiarity, formality, location...
Can people with higher status be abstract or do they occupy a special animate category? (ae inside?)
One may use inanimate verb forms as anti-honorific? Ondakon nae ka Nithki. (I humbly offer this to You)
In formal register, it is preferred to use only animate nouns as agents while abstract and inanimate are as antipassive subjects: luwifo utelink nas ("beauty-of.yours un-eye-ful-makes me-with", your beauty makes me blind) vs. utelinken foe na (you are making me blind)
Adpositions
- "in" with lative, locative and ablative cases to form illative, inessive, elative
- "on" to emphasize the surface aspect
- "under" for, well, movement under something
Derivational Morphology
Verbs and adjectives easily from nouns...
Numerals
Decimal base was adopted due to commerce, but traces of the former octal base remain
Syntax
Word order
- VAO usually, SV(O) in antipassive
- adjectives precede nouns while possessives follow
Lexicon
- éla day
- iwa light
- pof feather
- doth man
- vakuh hand
- keslan blood
- dhóku
- su it/he?
- batop language
- tip stick
- mél water
- tel see
- bous go down
- zait go up