Aoma: Difference between revisions

41 bytes added ,  6 January 2014
A few minor corrections, feel free to revert them if you wish!
(A few minor corrections, feel free to revert them if you wish!)
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'''[[Aoma/Aoma|Auma]]''' sa vosir Aumari
'''[[Aoma/Aoma|Auma]]''' sa vosir Aumari


'''Aoma''' (''Auma'' or ''Bowombor'' Speaking of Ours) is a priori language created for the fantasy world Grundet by [[User:Juhhmi|juhhmi]].  
'''Aoma''' (''Auma'' or ''Bowombor'' Speaking of Ours) is an ''a priori'' language created for the fantasy world Grundet by [[User:Juhhmi|juhhmi]].  


==Dictionary==
==Dictionary==
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==History==
==History==


'''Lore''': Aoma and [[Rinap]] form the main languages of South-West-Herookuan family deriving from the ancestral [[Rinapri]]. Aoma is the official spoken and governmental language of Eastern Sceptre with around 15 million speakers, but it has not much to do with the languages of Western Sceptre. Word ''Aoma'' seems to come from the name of eastern area with coast temples, Kaomaago (''Kaa Omaike Hakoror'', At the Coast of Temples). The language presented here has been stitched together from various very different dialects to unify peoples of the empire so no "true Aoma" has ever existed.
'''Lore''': Aoma and [[Rinap]] form the main languages of South-West-Herookuan family deriving from the ancestral [[Rinapri]]. Aoma is the official spoken and governmental language of Eastern Sceptre with around 15 million speakers, but it has little to do with the languages of Western Sceptre. The word ''Aoma'' seems to come from the name of eastern area with coast<!--al--> temples, Kaomaago (''Kaa Omaike Hakoror'', At the Coast of Temples). The language presented here has been stitched together from various very different dialects to unify peoples of the empire so no "true Aoma" has ever existed.


'''Actual''': After Rinap I wanted something with less k-letters and difficult diphthongs, and I had already set my old script originally for Finnish as the script of this future language. This gave birth to a project randomly named Aoma - the story came later.  
'''Actual''': After Rinap I wanted something with fewer k-letters and difficult diphthongs, and I had already set my old script originally for Finnish as the script of this future language. This gave birth to a project randomly named Aoma - the story came later.  


'''Problems''': According to my lore history, Aoma and Rinap must have begun their separation at least 3500 years ago. Since I weren't thorough enough to create Rinapri, there is some inconsistency between the languages, especially with phonetic change and vocabulary - I was unable to achieve a realistic linguistic relationship (very similar to Romance languages deriving from Latin and slightly to the history of Finnish and Sami languages), and hence coined up the facts that both languages were mere compilations of different dialects (inspired by the birth of standard Finnish here as well). And Rinapri probably never would have been truly consistent as a spoken language as it was spread to a vast region.
'''Problems''': According to my lore history, Aoma and Rinap must have begun their separation at least 3500 years ago. Since I wasn't thorough enough to create Rinapri, there is some inconsistency between the languages, especially with phonetic change and vocabulary - I was unable to achieve a realistic linguistic relationship (very similar to Romance languages deriving from Latin and slightly to the history of Finnish and Sami languages), and hence invented the fact that both languages were mere compilations of different dialects (inspired by the birth of standard Finnish here as well). And Rinapri would probably never have been truly consistent as a spoken language as it was spread to a vast region.


==Basic Grammar==
==Basic Grammar==


Aoma is a Verb-Subject-Object, agglutinative-fusional language with strong head-initiality (right-branching). The language has two numbers, three persons, four genders and five (or seven) cases with nominative-accusative alignment. Very important to the speakers and the society is the formal register with polite forms of second person pronouns, honorifics and anti-honorifics.
Aoma is a Verb-Subject-Object, agglutinative-fusional language with strong head-initial tendencies (right-branching). The language has two numbers, three persons, four genders and five (or seven) cases with nominative-accusative alignment. The formal register, with polite forms of second person pronouns, honorifics and anti-honorifics, is very important to the speakers and the society.


==Phonology==
==Phonology==
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In spoken language, consonants (especially nasals) are somewhat liable to external sandhi between word boundaries so that they move towards the pronunciation of following consonant: ''Tolan kush'' [to'laŋ‿kʊʃ] (I see that). More formal registers require "clear sounds", which basically means adding stops in between words thus creating a special rhytm.
In spoken language, consonants (especially nasals) are somewhat liable to external sandhi between word boundaries so that they move towards the pronunciation of following consonant: ''Tolan kush'' [to'laŋ‿kʊʃ] (I see that). More formal registers require "clear sounds", which basically means adding stops in between words thus creating a special rhythm.


===Vowels===
===Vowels===
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Classical Aoma distinguishes following '''diphthongs''' which have their own graphemes:
Classical Aoma distinguishes following '''diphthongs''' which have their own graphemes:
* ''au'' /ɐʊ̯/
* ''au'' /ɐʊ̯/
* Occurring at the end of words (DAT case) with varying pronounciation:  
* Occurring at the end of words (DAT case) with varying pronunciation:  
**''aee'' /aɛ:/ or /æeˑ/  
**''aee'' /aɛ:/ or /æeˑ/  
**''oee'' /oe:/ or /œɛˑ/  
**''oee'' /oe:/ or /œɛˑ/  
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*o: /o/ /ɔ/
*o: /o/ /ɔ/


There is a glottal stop grapheme (') used for separating vowels. It is used especially with /i/, /æ/ and /œ/ which are written over preceding graphemes in some of the older writing systems (perhaps deriving from front vowel distinction diacritics over /e/). It should be noted that allophones of ''i'' are consired rather weak and may or may not be included in written language, often as mere diacritic grapheme.
There is a glottal stop grapheme (') used for separating vowels. It is used especially with /i/, /æ/ and /œ/ which are written over preceding graphemes in some of the older writing systems (perhaps deriving from front vowel distinction diacritics over /e/). It should be noted that allophones of ''i'' are considered rather weak and may or may not be included in written language, often as mere diacritic grapheme.


===Script===
===Script===
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==Morphology==
==Morphology==


As an agglutinative language Aoma can have many morphemes per word, and its inflections are quite regular.
As an agglutinative language Aoma can have many morphemes per word and its inflections are quite regular.


===Pronouns===
===Pronouns===
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If a noun stem ends with a vowel, dative endings for SG & PL are the following: ''näe'' & ''nöe'' (Div), ''wie'' & ''yhee'' (M), ''wee'' & ''uhee'' (F), ''jee'' & ''jei'' (N). ''Oma|i'' (coast), ''omajee'' (DAT to the coast)  to avoid confucion with other genders. Feminine plural genitive ending is ''wur''.
If a noun stem ends with a vowel, dative endings for SG & PL are the following: ''näe'' & ''nöe'' (Div), ''wie'' & ''yhee'' (M), ''wee'' & ''uhee'' (F), ''jee'' & ''jei'' (N). ''Oma|i'' (coast), ''omajee'' (DAT to the coast)  to avoid confucion with other genders. Feminine plural genitive ending is ''wur''.


On top of the five basic [[Aoma#Cases|cases]], Aoma has got two partial cases, locative and temporal, often considered as clitics since they are used with verb infinites as well.
On top of the five basic [[Aoma#Cases|cases]], Aoma has got two partial cases, locative and temporal, often considered as clitics since they are used with verb infinit<!--iv-->es as well.


=====Plural=====
=====Plural=====


Most nouns of any of the four gender have regular plural forms. If a noun happens to be plurale tantum, gender-agreeing ''josh*'' (many) can be used to indicate a larger amount: ''kevol'' (empire) → ''kevol joshol'' (many empires).
Most nouns of any of the four gender have regular plural forms. If a noun happens to be ''plurale tantum'', gender-agreeing ''josh*'' (many) can be used to indicate a larger amount: ''kevol'' (empire) → ''kevol joshol'' (many empires).


Many animal groups have additional plural forms in nominative (ending added to root):
Many animal groups have additional plural forms in nominative (ending added to root):
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=====Compound nouns=====
=====Compound nouns=====


Using genitive or dative cases is the most usual way of creating compound words, but they can be joined together as well. The strong right-branching of Aoma is visible in the compounds in such manner that, when words are joined together, the head noun stays on the left while modifiers and the origin-suffix ''s*'' with correct head gender succeed it.
Using genitive or dative cases is the most common way of creating compound words, but they can be joined together as well. The strong right-branching of Aoma is visible in the compounds in such manner that, when words are joined together, the head noun stays on the left while modifiers and the origin-suffix ''s*'' with correct head gender succeed it.
*Genitive: ''heshii geedyr'' "the top of a mountain"
*Genitive: ''heshii geedyr'' "the top of a mountain"
*Dative: ''heshii geedyee'' "the top for the mountain"
*Dative: ''heshii geedyee'' "the top for the mountain"