Thulean: Difference between revisions
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qusse = gemstone | qusse = gemstone | ||
rassu = eight | rassu = eight | ||
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þarka = be bad, be poor in quality (stative), be wicked (active) | þarka = be bad, be poor in quality (stative), be wicked (active) | ||
þarja = wheel | |||
þarjaqekwa = automobile | |||
þatan = wing | þatan = wing |
Revision as of 22:51, 26 March 2017
Introduction
Description
The Thulean language (endonym: Minigkaksi) has an agglutinative and polysynthetic morphology. Its morphosyntactic alignment is split intransitive with the fluid-S subtype. It is left-branching and double-marking. Thulean is a language isolate and has not been proven to belong to any established language family, although speculative suggestions of links between it and the Uralic or Uralo-Siberian families have been made in the past. Also, of course, not unexpectedly, there are the wild claims of a relationship between Thulean and the usual suspects of Sumerian, Etruscan or Basque. It is spoken by the Selhat or Thuleans and has a total number of speakers exceeding 30 million.
The Thurse
Thurse is the collective name in English for the European pygmy phenotype. Thurse males and females are similar in stature and have an average height of between 135 to 140 cm. They are pale-skinned with a distinctive pattern of dark stripes for which their clade is best known and have straight or wavy hair. Red hair is more common among the Thurse than any other phenotypical group. High androgyny among Thurse males and high neoteny among both sexes are also notable traits. The Thurse belong to several ethnic groups, the largest of which is the Selhat or Thuleans who occupy Thule (endonym: Telku) the westernmost of the British Isles. The Thurse phenotype is believed to have originated in the Hercynian forest zone of central Europe, diverging from other Palaeolithic populations in Europe approximately ten thousand years ago. The Thurse have no connection with the pygmy populations of the tropics.
Influences
The phonology is inspired by the phonaesthetics of Finnish and Quenya (the Vanyarin dialect specifically) but twisted towards my sensibilities. I just love lateral obstruents, you know? And I'm not excessively fond of /f/ Also, the Samic languages have left their mark on Thulean's system of consonant gradation. The morphology is heavily influenced by Yupik and Inuktitut.
Goals
My intention is to create a polysynthetic elflang that is relatively easy for me to pronounce and which won't have a grammar too complex for me to use. We'll see how it goes.
Phonology
Orthography
1) Thulean is written in the Latin script. The spelling is primarily phonemic but will change to indicate the effects of sandhi and consonant gradation. The current alphabet was adopted in 1898 and underwent its last revision in 1965. The orthography is listed in the tables below:
a) Consonants
Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Central | Lateral | Plain | Labialised | |||||||
Sonorant | Nasal | Fortis | mm | nn | nnj | gg | ggw | |||
Lenis | m | n | nj | g | gw | |||||
Liquid | Fortis | rr | ll | llj | ||||||
Lenis | r | l | lj | |||||||
Stop | Fortis | pp | tt | ttl | ttj | kk | kkw | |||
Lenis | p | t | tl | tj | k | kw | q | |||
Fricative | Fortis | þþ | ss | ssl | ssj | xx | xxw | |||
Lenis | þ | s | sl | sj | x | xw | ||||
Approximant | v | j | h | w |
b) Vowels
Front | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|
Monophthong | High | i | u |
Low | e | a | |
Diphthong | ai | au |
2) Thulean uses Arabic numerals to represent numbers.
Consonants
Thulean has 45 consonant phonemes which according to WALS is a large inventory. These are listed in the table below:
Labial | Dental | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Central | Lateral | Plain | Labialised | |||||||
Sonorant | Nasal | Fortis | /mb/ | /nd/ | /ɲʤ/ | /ŋg/ | /ŋgw/ | |||
Lenis | /m/ | /n/ | /ɲ/ | /ŋ/ | /ŋw/ | |||||
Liquid | Fortis | /rd/ | /ld/ | /ʎʤ/ | ||||||
Lenis | /r/ | /l/ | /ʎ/ | |||||||
Stop | Fortis | /pp/ | /tt/ | /ttɬ/ | /ttʃ/ | /kk/ | /kkw/ | |||
Lenis | /p/ | /t/ | /tɬ/ | /tʃ/ | /k/ | /kw/ | /ʔ/ | |||
Fricative | Fortis | /θθ/ | /ss/ | /ɬɬ/ | /ʃʃ/ | /xx/ | /xxw/ | |||
Lenis | /θ/ | /s/ | /ɬ/ | /ʃ/ | /x/ | /xw/ | ||||
Approximant | /v/ | /j/ | /h/ | /w/ |
Vowels
Thulean has 4 vowel phonemes which according to WALS is a small inventory. There are also 2 diphthongs. The consonant to vowel ratio is 11.25 which according to WALS is high. The vowels are listed in the table below:
Front | Back | ||
---|---|---|---|
Monophthong | High | /i/ | /u/ |
Low | /ɛ/ | /ɑ/ | |
Diphthong | /ai/ | /au/ |
Allophony
1) Nasals are realised as their corresponding voiced stop when following a liquid coda.
2) Fortis obstruents are realised as their corresponding lenis obstruents in intervocalic position.
3) All lenis stops, but not the glottal stop, are aspirated in word-initial position.
4) /p, t, tɬ, ʧ, k, kʷ, θ, s, ɬ, ʃ, x, xʷ/ are voiced in intervocalic position.
5) /x/ is realised as [ʃ] in coda position.
6) /ɑ/ is realised as [ɔ] before a fortis liquid onset or a liquid coda.
Prosody
Stress
Thulean has stress accent. Primary stress falls within the root. Open syllables without a diphthong are light; open syllables with a diphthong or closed syllables are heavy. Fortis consonants close the syllable preceding them. If the first syllable of a root is heavy then the primary stress falls there otherwise it falls upon the second syllable of the root.The stress placement within a root is fixed so is not affected by consonant gradation.
Intonation
Secondary stress falls upon every alternate syllable after the primary stress. This gives Thulean a broadly iambic rhythm. Thulean does not have phonemic tone.
Phonotactics
1) The syllable template in Thulean is CV(C).
2) Permitted syllable codas:
a) Morpheme-medial only: /ɲ, ŋ, r, l, ʎ, p, s/
b) Morpheme-medial and morpheme-final: /m, n, t, k, θ, x/
3) Fortis consonants may not occur in word-initial position.
4) Fortis consonants may not occur in the onset of closed syllables.
5) Consonant clusters may have no more than two segments.
6) Consonant clusters may only occur across syllable boundaries.
7) But suffixes may begin with a consonant cluster.
8) Permitted consonant clusters as per table below:
m | n | ɲ | ŋ | p | t | tɬ | ʧ | kʷ | ʔ | θ | s | ɬ | ʃ | x | xʷ | v | j | h | w | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
m | mp | mʔ | mv | |||||||||||||||||
n | nt | ntɬ | nʔ | nθ | ns | |||||||||||||||
ɲ | ɲʧ | ɲʃ | ||||||||||||||||||
ŋ | ŋkʷ | ŋʔ | ŋx | ŋxʷ | ŋh | |||||||||||||||
r | rm | rn | rɲ | rŋ | rp | rt | rtɬ | rʧ | rkʷ | rʔ | rθ | rs | rɬ | rʃ | rx | rxʷ | rv | rj | rh | rw |
l | lm | lŋ | lp | lt | lkʷ | lʔ | lθ | ls | lx | lxʷ | lv | lh | lw | |||||||
ʎ | ʎʧ | ʎʃ | ||||||||||||||||||
p | pθ | ps | px | |||||||||||||||||
t | tθ | ts | tx | |||||||||||||||||
k | kθ | ks | kx | |||||||||||||||||
θ | θp | θt | θtɬ | θʧ | θkʷ | θʔ | ||||||||||||||
s | sp | st | stɬ | sʧ | skʷ | sʔ | ||||||||||||||
x | xp | xt | xtɬ | xʧ | xkʷ | xʔ |
9) High vowels may not occur before a liquid coda.
10) /i/ may not occur after an onset of /j/.
11) /u/ may not occur after an onset of /w/.
12) Diphthongs may only occur in the first syllable of a root or in monosyllabic particles.
13) Diphthongs may not occur in a closed syllable.
14) Diphthongs may not precede a fortis consonant.
15) Diphthongs may not precede /j, w/.
Morphophonology
Consonant Gradation
1) Consonant gradation is word-internal lenition that effects the following:
a) Fortis consonants
b) Lenis stops following a sonorant coda or a vowel
2) Consonant gradation is triggered by the closing of a syllable which begins with the above classes of obstruents.
3) Consonant gradation proceeds as per the tables below:
a) Fortis consonants, and lenis stops following a liquid coda or a vowel:
GRADE I | GRADE II | GRADE III |
---|---|---|
mb | m | |
nd | n | |
ɲʤ | ɲ | |
ŋg | ŋ | |
ŋgʷ | ŋʷ | |
rd | r | |
ld | l | |
ʎʤ | ʎ | |
pp | p | v |
tt | t | r |
ttɬ | tɬ | l |
tʧ | ʧ | j |
kk | k | h |
kkʷ | kʷ | w |
θθ | θ | |
ss | s | |
ɬɬ | ɬ | |
ʃʃ | ʃ | |
xx | x | |
xxʷ | xʷ |
b) Lenis stops following a nasal:
GRADE I | GRADE II |
---|---|
mp | mb |
nt | nd |
ntɬ | ld |
ɲʧ | ɲʤ |
ŋk | ŋg |
ŋkʷ | ŋgʷ |
4) Consonant gradation occurs after /i/ epenthesis and metathesis from sandhi but before sandhi proper.
Sandhi
1) In Thulean, sandhi is the term given to interactions between consonants at morpheme boundaries.
2) An epenthetic /i/ is inserted after the first segment of the following types of epenthetic clusters:
a) morpheme coda + fortis consonant
b) morpheme coda + consonant cluster
3) If a prefix ends in a consonant then an epenthetic /i/ is inserted between the prefix and the following root.
4) All other sandhi interactions are resolved as per the table below:
m | n | ɲ | ŋ | ŋʷ | r | l | ʎ | p | t | tɬ | ʧ | k | kʷ | ʔ | s | ɬ | ʃ | x | xʷ | v | j | h | w | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
m | mb | nd | ɲʤ | ŋg | ŋgʷ | rm | lm | ʎJ | mp | nt | ntɬ | ɲʧ | ŋk | ŋkʷ | mʔ | ns | nθ | ɲʃ | ŋx | ŋxʷ | mv | ɲ | ŋh | ŋʷ |
n | nʔ | |||||||||||||||||||||||
t | nt | ɲʧ | nt | ŋkʷ | rt | tɬ | ʎʧ | pp | tt | ttɬ | tʧ | kk | kkʷ | tt | ts | tɬ | ʧ | tx | kkʷ | kʷ | ʧ | tx | kʷ | |
k | ŋk | ŋk | rk | lk | kk | ks | kx | kx | ||||||||||||||||
x | ŋx | nʃ | ŋx | ŋxʷ | rx | lx | ʎʃ | ʃp | ʃt | ʃtɬ | ʃʧ | ʃk | ʃkʷ | xʔ | ss | ɬɬ | ʃʃ | xx | xxʷ | ʃ | xx | xʷ |
4) If owing to suffixation a high vowel should precede a fortis liquid onset or a liquid coda then it is lowered to its corresponding low vowel.
Morphology
General Notes
Thulean morphology has the following constituents:
1) Roots: these are divided into nominal and verbal roots. The latter are divided into transitive and intransitive categories.
2) Postbases: these are derivational or adjunctival suffixes which directly follow the root. They are scope-ordered.
3) Inflectional affixes: these bear functions such as case, number, possession, agent, patient, tense amongst others. The usual bread and butter, nuts and bolts stuff that inflection does.
4) Particles: Conjunctions, interjections and other miscellany that do not fit into the above categories.
Nominal Morphology
Nominal Structure
1) Noun template:
case prefix + nominal or verbal root + postbase(s)+ number suffix + possessive suffix or indefinite suffix + demonstrative suffix
2) A minimally inflected noun has a case prefix and a number suffix.
3) Postbases will be covered in the own separate section after verbs.
Cases
Case | Prefix | Function | Examples |
---|---|---|---|
Absolutive | Ø- |
|
|
Ergative | qa- |
|
|
Instrumental | ki- |
|
|
Locative | jet- |
|
|
Allative | nu- |
|
|
Ablative | pik- |
|
|
Perlative | me- |
|
|
Equative | sin- |
|
Number
1) For the purposes of number, Thulean nouns are divided into count nouns and mass nouns.
2) For count nouns there are two systems of number:
a) singular-plural
b) collective-singulative
3) The singular-plural system works as it does in most European languages, the singular form of the noun is default and marks a single instance of that noun. The plural form marks multiple instances of that noun. EG:
SG: kattu = cat
PL: katut = cats
4) With the collective-singulative system the collective form of the noun is default and marks multiple instances of that noun. The singulative form marks a single instance of that noun. Collective nouns usually indicate entities that are found in groups. EG:
COL: makku = pigs
SGV: makux = pig
5) Mass nouns are considered to be pluralia tanta and thus use the collective-singulative system. The collective form indicates a lump or mass and the singulative form indicates a part of that lump or mass. EG:
COL: ninta = water
SGV: ninnax = a drop or sip of water
6) Number suffixes:
a) After vowel:
PL: -t
SGV: -x
b) After consonant or before suffix:
PL: -ta
SGV: -xe
Possession
1) Pronominal Possession:
This is indicated by the following set of suffixes:
1SG: -nne
2SG: -gke
3SG ANIM: -nte
3SG INAN: -mme
4SG ANIM: -lle
4SG INAN: -nse
1PL EXCL: -gka
1PL INCL: -ppa
2PL: -kka
3PL ANIM: -tta
3PL INAN: -mma
4PL ANIM: -lka
4PL INAN: -ksa
EG:
a)
tlannante
= her children
b)
tlannaxeppa
= our child
2) Nominal Possession:
This is indicated by the following construction:
NOM + possessor possessum + pronominal possessive suffix.
EG:
qakimex katunte = the woman's cat
qa-kimex kattu-nte
ERG-woman cat-3SG.ANIM.POS
The Indefinite
1) The indefinite suffix -li imparts the meaning of a, a certain, some, any.
EG:
jelelli = a valley
2) Used with the ablative case has the meaning any of, any one of.
EG:
a)
pikiselhat telli
= any one of the people
pik-selka-t tin-li
ABL-person-PL 3SG.ANIM.PRON-INDEF
b)
pikiselhat tatli
= any of the people
pik-selka-t tak-li
ABL-person-PL 3PL.ANIM.PL.INDEF
Demonstratives
1) Thulean has four demonstrative suffixes which encode the following distances:
a) The proximal citerior which marks a person or object near the speaker.
b) The distal citerior which marks a person or object near the addressee.
c) The proximal ulterior which marks a person or object away from both speaker and addressee but within line of sight.
d) The distal ulterior which marks a person or object away from both speaker and addressee but outside visual range.
2)The demonstrative suffixes are as follows:
PROX CIT: -ksi
DIST CIT: -psu
PROX ULT: -tje
DIST ULT: -nja
3) Examples:
a)
janahiksi = this man
b)
qavantje = yon apples that are in sight
Gender
1) Thulean has two genders, animate and inanimate.
2) The animate gender contains nouns referring to people, animals and dynamic physical phenomena such as fire or wind.
3) The inanimate gender contains the residuum.
4) Nouns are not overtly marked for gender but they govern the appropriate pronouns, possessive suffixes and verbal pronominal markers.
EG:
a)
paþanti kattu
= the pretty cat
paþþa-nti Ø-kattu
be.pretty-3SG.ANIM.ABS ABS-cat
b)
helhammu ninta
= the hot water
helka-mmu Ø-ninta
be.hot-3PL.INAN.ABS ABS-water
Pronouns
1) Pronouns are treated like any other nominals.
2) Personal Pronouns:
a) These are listed as follows:
1SG: nin
2SG: kin
3SG ANIM: tin
3SG INAN: min
4SG ANIM: lin
4SG INAN: sin
1PL EXCL: nuk
1PL INCL: puk
2PL: kuk
3PL ANIM: tuk
3PL INAN: muk
4PL ANIM: luk
4PL INAN: suk
b) Animate pronouns can also encode the meaning of person in the generic sense.
EG:
paþanti tin
= the pretty one
paþþa-nti tin
be.pretty.3SG.ANIM.ABS 3SG.ANIM.PRON
c) Inanimate pronouns can also encode the meaning of object in the generic sense.
EG:
mukxalla
= big things
muk-halla
3PL.INAN.PRON-big
d) 4th person pronouns come into play when there are two referents of the same gender and number that need to be distinguished. Thus, 4th person pronouns can be translated into English as "the latter".
e) Exclusive 1st person plural pronouns indicate that the addressee is not included within the referent.
IE: we but not you.
f) Inclusive 1st person plural pronouns indicate that the addresses is included with I the referent.
IE: we and you.
3) Indefinite Pronouns:
a) These encode the concepts of somebody, something, anybody, anything.
b) They are formed by affixing the indefinite suffix to the appropriate pronoun.
EG:
melli = anything
c) In conjuction with the ablative case express the concepts of anyone of, any of.
EG:
i)
pikijanat telli
= anyone of the men
pik-janak-t tin-li
ABL-man-PL 3SG.ANIM.PRON-INDEF
ii)
pikiqavan mutli
= any of the apples
pik-qavan muk-li
ABL-apples 3PL.INAN.PRON-INDEF
4) Reflexive Pronouns:
a) There are no dedicated reflexive pronouns.
b) Reflexivity is indicated by employing the absolutive, oblique or possessive form which refers to the ergative or sole argument of the verb.
EG:
i)
temmaiserittu
= he misleads himself
ten-maiset-ttu
3SG.ANIM.ERG-mislead-3SG.ANIM.ABS
VS
temmaiserelku
= he misleads him
ten-maiset-lku
3SG.ANIM.ERG-mislead-4SG.ANIM.ABS
ii)
tigki xinnunti
= he sees himself
tin-ki xintu-nti
3SG.ANIM.PRON-INST see-3SG.ANIM.ABS
VS
ligki xinnunti
= he sees him
lin-ki xintu-nti
4SG.ANIM.PRON-INST see-3SG.ANIM.ABS
iii)
qavagxente tenqarxansi
= she eats her own apple
Ø-qavan-xe-nte ten-qarxa-nsi
ABS-apples-SGV-3SG.ANIM.POS 3SG.ANIM.ERG-eat-4SG.INAN.ABS
VS
qavagxelli tenqarxansi
= she eats her apple
Ø-qavan-xe-lle ten-qarxa-nsi
ABS-apples-SGV-4SG.ANIM.POS 3SG.ANIM.ERG-eat-4SG.INAN.ABS
5) Reciprocal Pronouns:
There are no dedicated reflexive pronouns. Their functions are performed by a verbal suffix.
6) Negative Pronouns:
a)These encode the concepts of nobody and nothing.
b) The negative pronouns are listed as follows:
3SG ANIM: vannin
3SG INAN: vamin
4SG ANIM: valin
4SG INAN: vansin
3PL ANIM: vatuk
3PL INAN: vamuk
4PL ANIM: valuk
4PL INAN: vaksuk
c) Diachronically, the negative pronouns are derived from relative clauses of negative auxiliary plus pronoun.
EG:
vannin
< *qavanti tin
= the one who is not
qapa-nti tin
NEG-3SG.ANIM.ABS 3SG.ANIM.PRON
7) Demonstrative Pronouns:
a) These are derived from affixing the appropriate demonstrative suffix.
EG:
kiminiksi teghannalli
= she gives this to him
ki-min-ksi ten-hanta-lli
INST-3SG.INAN.PRON-PROX.CIT 3SG.ANIM.ERG-give-4SG.ANIM.ABS
b) Inanimate demonstrative pronouns can also encode the concepts of here and there.
EG:
numinipsu kimpalka
= you go there
nu-min-psu kin-palka
ALL-3SG.INAN.PRON-DIST.CIT 2SG.ERG.go
8) Relative Pronouns:
There are no reflexive pronouns. Thulean uses gap relativisation.
EG:
kimex qavan lenqarxammu kijanak xinnunti
= the woman sees the man who eats the apples
Ø-kimex Ø-qavan len-qarxa-mmu janak-ki qinnu-nti
ABS-woman ABS-apples 4SG.ANIM.ERG-eat-3PL.INAN INST-man see-3SG.ANIM.ABS
9) Interrogative Pronouns:
1) Interrogatives pronouns are formed by affixing -ka to the appropriate pronoun.
EG:
a)
migka keniqarxammi
= you're eating what?
Ø-min-ka ken-qarxa-mmi
ABS-3SG.INAN.PRON 2SG.ERG-eat-3SG.INAN.ABS
Numerals
1) Numerals are treated as nominals.
2) The numeral system is hybrid vigesimal-decimal
3) The thurse language families of Western Europe and Basque, while otherwise unrelated, share the same set of basic numerals: the Western.Palaeo-European Numerals (WPEN).
4) The cardinal numerals from 1-10 are as per the table below:
Numbers | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Num. | Name | WPEN | ||||||||||||
1 | vaþe | *bade | ||||||||||||
2 | miha | *miga | ||||||||||||
3 | kirun | *kirur | ||||||||||||
4 | lawan | *lawur | ||||||||||||
5 | marse | *martse | ||||||||||||
6 | xai | *xai | ||||||||||||
7 | saspi | *saspi | ||||||||||||
8 | rassu | *ratsu | ||||||||||||
9 | vaþerassu | *baderatsu | ||||||||||||
10 | tamvan | *tambar |
tamvaþe = 11
tammiha = 12
tagkirun = 13
tallawan = 14
tammarsa = 15
tagxai = 16
tansaspi = 17
tarrassi = 18
tamvaþerassu = 19
paje = 20 (WPEN: *pogai)
mihapaje = 40
kirumpaje = 60
lawampaje = 80
qekum = 100 (WPEN: *ekum)
mihakun = 200
kirugkun = 300
lawagkun = 400
marsekun = 500
xaikun = 600
saspikun = 700
rassukun = 800
vaþerassukun = 900
melja = 1,000
melljan = 1,000,000
melja vaþerassukun kirumpaje marse = 1965
5) Nouns counted by a cardinal numeral take the ablative case and precede the numeral.
EG:
pigkelhit vaþerassu
= nine lords
pik-melki-t vaþerassu
ABL-lord-PL nine
6) Ordinal numerals are indicated with the equative case:
EG:
simpaje vaþe kespet
= the twenty-first month
sin-paje vaþe kespe-t
EQU-twenty one month-PL
7) Fractions are encoded by a periphrastic construction involving kwerþi "piece, portion" and the ablative case.
EG:
pigkinta sigkirun kwerþi
= the third part of the water, a third of the water
pik-ninta sin-kirun kwerþi
ABL-water EQU-three portion
Verbal Morphology
Verbal Structure
Syntax
Constituent order
Noun phrase
Verb phrase
Sentence phrase
Dependent clauses
Example texts
Other resources
Thulean Lexicon
galen = to have faith in (stative), to trust (active)
gaxala = to heal, to doctor
hakin = to know (stative), to learn (active)
-halla = augmentative
hanex = willow trees
hanta = to give
-hanþe = too much, excessively
helka = to be hot (stative), to warm up (active)
jaipix = fishes
jakken = boat
jalla = trees, forest
janak = man
java = night
jelen = valley
jensa = pine tree
kai = but
kalin = dog
kallun = witch, sorcerer
kamma = be sick (stative), become ill (active)
kannarkaralla = counter-colonel (OF-5)
kannarkarvalla = counter-corporal (OR-2)
kannarkattanju = counter-captain (OF-3)
kannarkenalli = counter-general (OF-7)
kannallattenat = counter-lieutenant (OF-1)
kannarmaristlu = counter-marshal (OF-9)
karra = stone
karalla = colonel (OF-6)
karvalla = corporal (OR-3)
karvat = wagon, cart
Kastalpari = Constabulary. General term for Thulean armed forces.
kastalpi = constable (OR-1)
katen = chains
kategkarvat = railway train
kategwala = laser
katlik = castle, fort
katta = to be tired (stative), to exhaust oneself (active)
kattanju = captain (OF-4)
kattu = cat
kave = coffee
kelesja = church
kenalli = general (OF-8)
kentimetla = centimetre
kepeþ = shadow
keram = gram
kerri = land, country
kerta = skeleton, frame
kespe = moon, month
kiggat = to drink
kilakeram = kilogram
kilametla = kilometre
kimex = woman
kinje = to love (stative), to like (active)
kirun = three
kwena = a smile
-kwepsu = never
kwerþi = piece, portion
kwetsan = feathers
lakka = duck
-lanti = today
lattenat = lieutenant (OF-2)
latju = thug, bravo
lawan = four
-lbax = transitiviser
-limut = should, must, ought
lira = sea ocean
litla = litre
-lkwa = white, blonde
lukat = mice
mairi = major (OR-7)
mairihalla = master major (OR-8)
mairivinja = chief major (OR-9)
maiset = to mislead
-mak = can, able to
makku = pigs
makkusluse = pork
-mani = much, a lot
maristlu = marshal (OF-10)
marse = five
marþen = to desire (stative), to want (active)
maþen = bread
melja = thousand
melki = lord, lady
melljan = million
mesalka = blackbird
metla = metre
miha = two
-mmelet = black, brunette
merkukeram = microgram
merkumetla = micrometre, micron
mellikeram = milligram
mellilitla = millilitre, cubic centimetre
mellimetla = millimetre
nara = to be, to exist (stative), to become (active)
Narwerka = Norway
naska = ring (jewellery)
nasura = bones
nina = ash tree
ninta = water
njara = to purr
nugaxala vuta = hospital
numme = to be red
nutje = eels
paje = twenty
pakka! = fuck!
palka = to go
panana = banana
pantju = to buy
parma = to be ignorant (stative), to be unwilling to learn (active)
patata= potatoes
pattu = hare
pattuhalla = donkey
paþþa = be beautiful, be pretty
penelku = pencil
penta = to fill
pilun = lead
piriþ = to die (stative), to die of self-neglect, to pine away (active)
qahax = fire
qaira = trees, forest
qalman = woad
qalwa = lark
qana = fruits
qanja = copper
qapa = to be not, negative auxiliary
qarantja = orange (fruit)
qarhat = silver
qaru = kernel, core, vulva (euphemism)
qarxa = to eat
qasaþ = to bind, to imprison
qaspen = be under, be beneath (stative), go beneath (active)
qaþan = blood
qaurikat = apricot
qausla = police, militia
qauslax = cop
qavan = apples
qaxxa = to hate (stative), to dislike (active)
qekwa = horse
qekwali = to be of good quality (stative), to have good intentions (active)
qekum = hundred
qelet = bronze
qesak = salmon
qesen = leaves
qexpe = to taste (stative), to savour (active),to perform oral sex (active)
qexku = handsome
qisan = iron
qiskalva = bird of prey
qiskalvaþatan = aeroplane
Qislat = Iceland
qisparwa = crow
qissit = hair
qistilu = pen
qisjam = stars
qunnu = pillow
qunnujakken = hovercraft
quruk = enemies
qusse = gemstone
rassu = eight
rauna = to be silent (stative), to keep a secret (active)
reþþu = to have sang-froid (stative), to keep one's cool (active)
russla = spirit, soul
-rusta = red, ginger
saspi = seven
saxwa = sun, day
selka = person, human being
serventu = sergeant (OR-4)
serventuhalla = master sergeant (OR-5)
serventuvinja = chief sergeant (OR-6)
sinarva = gold
sinnak = fox
sjammi = sky
slaka = to be enslaved, to be in thrall (stative), to be indentured, to serve (active)
slahalmax = to rule, to command
slasu = to hear (stative), to listen (active)
-slempi = certain, sure
sluse = meat, flesh
sukkaru = sugar
-sun = detransitiviser
sunik = snow
suvi = strawberries
tagka = tin
taha = sword
taina = foot
-taina = allative applicative
takku = to bring, to fetch
tamate = tomato
tamman = ten
Tammarke = Denmark
tansa = owl
Telku = Thule
teninta = tea
tjakalat = chocolate
tjave = to feel (stative), to touch (active)
tjuni = nose
tlanta = children
tlanu = throne
Tlusslu = the Squid Mother, the Ten-Armed Lady, Mistress of all Sea-Creatures, Thulean Goddess.
þarka = be bad, be poor in quality (stative), be wicked (active)
þarja = wheel
þarjaqekwa = automobile
þatan = wing
Þistlat = Germany
þunna = fist
taikut = to name
vagwa = to find (stative), to seek (active)
vakkan = rain
valþa = wolves
vanna = raven
vanþa = peak, mountaintop, hilltop
varka = badger
vassli = wasp
vassliþatan = helicopter
vaþe = one
vaþerassu = eight
vau = and (conjoins two phrases)
Vellat = Finland
venestla = window
-verri = new, young, fresh
verru = be short (stative), to shrink (active)
vika = bee
-vinja = old, mature, wise
vussu = mouth
vuta = house
wala = light
wervu = amber
xai = six
xaste = world
xintu = to see (stative), to watch (active)
-xku = instrumental applicative
-xpak = diminutive suffix
xwestu = winds
Xwisjaþ = Sweden
Thulean Flags
The footed Othala rune as used in Thulean iconography represents the Squid Goddess Tlusslu. In the alternate universe where Thule exists, Neo-Nazi groups have been rigorously discouraged from making use of this symbol. However, the Thuleans do tolerate the use of the footed Othala rune by Odinists, Asatruar and other adherents of Pagan religions.