Br'ga: Difference between revisions
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| '''Lateral''' || || l || || || || | | '''Lateral''' || || l || || || || | ||
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| '''Nasals''' || m || n || ṇ || ñ || | | '''Nasals''' || m || n || ṇ || ñ || ṅ || | ||
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Revision as of 03:28, 18 April 2017
Location & Origin
Br'ga is spoken on an island about midway between Sri Lanka and Madagascar. The language has phonetic and grammatical features found in both African and Indic languages, though it appears to be an isolate. There are, however, very many loan words from various trade languages — some estimates place the portion of borrowed lexicon at between ⅓ and ½ of the attested roots. However, in everyday speech, this group of roots makes up well over ¾ of the common lexicon. Borrowings come from English, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, Sanskrit, Hindi, Pali, Arabic, and Swahili at the very least, with many "second generation" loans of words that were loaned into those languages from around the world.
Phonology
Consonants
Labial | Alveolar | Retroflex | Palatal | Velar | Glottal | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Voiced Stops | b | d | ḍ | j | g | |
Voiceless Stops | p | t | ṭ | c | k | |
Aspirated Stops | ph | th | ṭh | ch | kh | |
Implosive Stops | bh | dh | ḍh | jh | gh | |
Trills | br | dr | gr | |||
Plain Click | q | |||||
Nasalized Click | nq | |||||
Lateralized Click | lq | |||||
Plain Affricates | ts | ṭṣ | cç | kx | ||
Lateral Affricate | tlh | |||||
Voiced Fricative | ḥ | |||||
Plain Fricatives | s | ṣ | ç | x | h | |
Lateral Fricative | lh | |||||
Rhotics | r | ṛ | ||||
Liquids | w | y | ||||
Lateral | l | |||||
Nasals | m | n | ṇ | ñ | ṅ |
Vowels
Written | IPA |
---|---|
a | ɑ |
e | e |
ê | ɛ |
i | ɪ |
u | ʊ |
ü | ʏ |
' | ə |
Phonotactics
Syllable sequence in root words is strictly CV. Word structure is (V)?(CV)+(C)? Single-phoneme particles / glue-word proclitics may be any non-obstuent, or any click. For instance, the noun class for languages is q-, thus q-Br'ga or q-Inig'laṃ. The full set of adpositional and noun class proclitics will be covered below.
Final Nasalization
In words ending with a vowel, that vowel may be nasalized by placing the letter ṃ after it, and this nasalization (and its mark) persist in compound words.
The most common place that this marking is found is in heṃ and naheṃ the positive and negavite copulas.