Middle Sethite: Difference between revisions
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* ''Stepo bili'''an''' nichan me empang | * ''Stepo bili'''an''' nichan me empang sumaen nak me antaspan''<br />I am buying fish and bread '''at a store''' for my wife using money | ||
{{interlinear|indent=2|glossing = link| | {{interlinear|indent=2|glossing = link| | ||
|s-tepo bili-an n-ichan me em-pang suma-en nak me an-taspan | |s-tepo bili-an n-ichan me em-pang suma-en nak me an-taspan | ||
Revision as of 15:07, 26 June 2026
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. |
| Middle Sethite | |
|---|---|
| Sethgo 布語 | |
| Pronunciation | [seθgɤ] |
| Created by | IdaeChop |
| Setting | The Moon, but with oceans and life |
| Native to | I Seth Empire |
| Ethnicity | Sethite Sethjin |
Austronesian
| |
Early forms | |
| Official status | |
Official language in | I Seth Empire |
Hi, yeah. This is one of the conlangs in my (IdaeChop) world, Middle Sethite! This was originally a submission for the Cursed Conlang Circus 4, however I decided to modify a whole ton to make it what it is today! It is still lacking in worldbuilding and other necessities, however I am proud of what I am able to achieve now and I want to put it here so people can read about it, I guess? Well. Here's this article then!
Middle Sethite was a language spoken around the Gulf of Albategnius around 1000 ASC. The division between Middle Sethite and Old Sethite is the usage of the Latin Script as opposed to the older Japonic-based writing system, though usage of the Japonic-system still persisted until the 1400 ASC and people today still study and use Kanji.
Phonology
Consonants
| Bilabial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m | n | ɲ | n | |
| Plosive | Voiceless | p | t | tɕ | k |
| Voiced | b | d | dʑ | g | |
| Fricative | Voiceless | ɸ | s θ | ɕ | x |
| Voiced | β | ɹ̠˔ | ʑ | ||
| Approximant | l | j | ɰ | ||
Vowels
Middle Sethite has 5 vowels that can either be short or long.
| Front | Central | Back | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Close | i, iː | ɯ, ɯː | |
| Close-mid | e, eː | ɤ, ɤː | |
| Open | a aː |
Middle Sethite do not have diphthongs, but does have vowels that are in hiatus.
Phonotactics
Middle Sethite's phonotactics are CCVCC.
Orthography
Middle Sethite's orthography was not standardised, there are numerous ways words can be said. Some letters may be doubled but it does not change the pronunciation.
| Symbol | Sound | Note |
|---|---|---|
| a | /a/ | |
| aa, ah, ar | /aː/ | |
| ae, ay | /eː/ | |
| b | /b/ | |
| c | /k/ | except after i and e |
| c | /s/ | only after i and e |
| ch | /tɕ/ | only at the start of words |
| ch | /x/ | except at the start of words |
| d | /d/ | |
| dge | /dʑ/ | only at the end of words |
| e | /e/ | |
| ee, ei | /eː/ | |
| f | /ɸ/ | |
| g | /g/ | |
| gn | /ŋ/ | only at the start of words |
| h | /x/ | only at the start of words |
| i | /i/ | |
| ii, ie | /iː/ | |
| j | /dʑ/ | |
| k | /k/ | |
| l | /l/ | |
| m | /m/ | |
| n | /n/ | |
| ny | /ɲ/ | |
| ng | /ŋ/ | |
| o | /ɤ/ | |
| oa, oo | /ɤː/ | |
| oo | /ɯː/ | |
| p | /p/ | |
| qu | /kɰ/, /kɯ/ | really rare |
| r | /ɹ̠˔/ | |
| s | /s/ | |
| sh | /ɕ/ | |
| t | /t/ | |
| tch | /tɕ/ | |
| th | /θ/ | |
| u | /ɯ/ | |
| uu | /ɯː/ | |
| v | /β/ | |
| w | /ɰ/ | |
| x | /ks/ | rare |
| y | /j/ | |
| z, zh, zi | /ʑ/ |
Grammar
The grammar of Middle Sethite is typically predicate-final, with a topic-comment structure alongside Austronesian alignment, though exceptions may occur. The subject of the sentence is separate with the topic of the sentence.
Verbs
Every verb in Middle Sethite has a voice. The voice marks what every case in the sentence does. Verbs do not mark for tense nor mood.
| Pastlooking | Presentlooking | Futurelooking | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Agentive Voice | ⟨inum⟩ binumava |
⟨um⟩ bumava |
de- ⟨um⟩ debumava |
| Patientive Voice | ⟨in⟩ -(e)n binavan |
-n bavan |
de- -n debavan |
| Locative Voice | ⟨in⟩ -an binavaan |
-an bavaan |
de- -an debavaan |
| Benefactive Voice | ⟨in⟩ -nan binavanan |
-nan bavanan |
de- -nan debavanan |
| Instrumental Voice | ⟨in⟩ +second vowel fronting bineva |
first vowel fronting beva |
de- +second vowel fronting debeva |
Verbs may be duplicated to form the frequentative aspect. e.g. bumava becomes bava-bumava
Voice
There are five voices Middle Sethite uses. Changing the voice of a sentence does not reduce the valency, only rotating it.
| Agentive Voice | Patientive Voice | Locative Voice | Benefactive Voice | Instrumental Voice | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Subject | Agentive "Nominative" |
Patientive "Ergative" |
Locative | Benefactive | Instrumental |
| Object | Patientive "Accusative" |
Agentive "Absolutive" |
Patientive | Patientive | Patientive |
| Circumject | Locative | Locative | Dative | Locative | Locative |
| Conject | Comitative | Comitative | Agentive | Agentive | Agentive |
Every intransitive sentence must have a subject; every transitive sentence must have a subject and an object. However, if the subject or object happens to be the topic or it is obvious from context (like pronouns), it may be left unsaid.
Examples
The Agentive voice:
- Ach bumili nichan me empang tepoen tharka sumaen antaspan
I am buying fish and bread at a store for my wife using money
ach
1sg.AGT
b-um-ili
⟨AV⟩buy
n-ichan
PAT-fish
me
and
em-pang
PAT-bread
tepo-en
store-LOC
tharka
towards
suma-en
wife-LOC
an-taspan
COM-money
The Patientive voice:
- Shichan bilin ku me entaspan tepoen tharka sumaen ampang
I am buying fish and bread at a store for my wife using money
sh-ichan
PAT-fish
bili-n
buy-PV
ku
1sg.AGT
me
and
en-taspan
AGT-money
tepo-en
store-LOC
tharka
towards
suma-en
wife-LOC
am-pang
COM-bread
The Locative voice:
- Stepo bilian nichan me empang sumaen nak me antaspan
I am buying fish and bread at a store for my wife using money
s-tepo
LOC-store
bili-an
buy-lv
n-ichan
PAT-fish
me
and
em-pang
PAT-bread
suma-en
wife-DAT
nak
1sg.AGT
me
and
an-taspan
AGT-bread
The Benefactive voice:
- Suma bilinan nichan me empang tepoen nak me antaspan
I am buying fish and bread at a store for my wife using money
∅-suma
BEN-wife
bili-nan
buy-bv
n-ichan
PAT-fish
me
and
em-pang
PAT-money
tepo-en
store-LOC
nak
1sg.AGT
me
and
an-taspan
AGT-bread
The Instrumental voice:
- Staspan bili nichan me empang tepoen tharka sumaen nak
I am buying fish and bread at a store for my wife using money
s-taspan
INST-money
bili
iv\buy
n-ichan
PAT-fish
me
and
em-pang
PAT-money
tepo-en
store-LOC
tharka
towards
suma-en
wife-LOC
nak
1sg.AGT
Nouns
Middle Sethite had fused the case system of Old Sethite and made them declensions instead.
| Vowel-starting | Consonant-starting | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singular | Plural | Singular | Plural | |
| Subject | sh- | sh- -ad | (s)- | (s)- -ad |
| Object | n- | n- -ad | eN- | en- -ad |
| Circumject | k- | k- -ad | -en | -enad |
| Conject | gn- | gn- -ad | aN- | aN- -ad |
Word Direction
Middle Sethite reverses words whenever the word is not the head of the clause (i.e. adjectives or adverbs) or one wants to indicate aspects. This is done per phoneme, not per character as written by the orthography. The verb direction dictates the direction of the sentence and paragraphs.
- Shasu mera
The dog is red - Shasu arem
The red dog
Aspects
Middle Sethite has four main aspects. These aspects can be divided even further by adding the affixes -in- or di-. They are indicated by the direction of the nouns in relation to the verb direction. For words where it’s ambiguous what the direction is (because its a phonemic palindrome), they will be reduplicated (CV + word; e.g. apa → a’apa, masam → mamasam)
| Pastlooking | Presentlooking | Futurelooking | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Continuing | → ⟨in⟩⇒ → Ach binumot ta "I am still working" |
→ ⇒ → Ach bumot ta "I am working" |
→ de⇒ → Ach debumot ta "I am working for some time" |
| Ending | → ⟨in⟩⇒ ← Ach binumot at "I have stopped working" |
→ ⇒ ← Ach bumot at "I stop working" |
→ de⇒ ← Ach debumot at "I am about to stop working" |
| Starting | ← ⟨in⟩⇒ → Ha binumot ta "I have started working" |
← ⇒ → Ha bumot ta "I start working" |
← de⇒ → Ha bumot ta "I am about to start working" |
| Fulfilling | ← ⟨in⟩⇒ ← Ha binumot at "I have worked" |
← ⇒ ← Ha bumot at "I work" |
← de⇒ ← Ha debumot at "I am planning to work" |
Relative Clauses
Middle Sethite employs relative clauses to convey more meaning in a single sentence. Sethite has five relative clause markers, which follows the same logic as the case markers. There is sing, ning, king, and nang. Unlike other nonhead parts of the clause, relative clauses do not need to be reversed (though some complex clauses do need reversals still).
- Shasu sing kumanaor seka emat
- Sto ning tumubuk ach
- Bale king misi ach
- Sparuk nang bumengi nichan ach