Balog: Difference between revisions
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Semantic particles and prefixes modify bases to give them new shades of meaning. For example, particles indicating tense and aspect optionally stand before a base and give temporal information about the base. These are not restricted to use with semantically verb-like bases, nor are they restricted to | Semantic particles and prefixes modify bases to give them new shades of meaning. For example, particles indicating tense and aspect optionally stand before a base and give temporal information about the base. These are not restricted to use with semantically verb-like bases, nor are they restricted to | ||
In the following example, the imperfective particle '''''hi''''' indicates that the action of dying is not spoken about as a completed whole, but, rather, an action seen from the middle, thus "is dying" (or according to context, "was dying" etc.). The past tense particle '''do''' appears before '''garag''' '(be) neighbour' to indicate 'one who was a neighbour', thus 'former neighbour'. | In the following example, the imperfective particle '''''hi''''' indicates that the action of dying is not spoken about as a completed whole, but, rather, an action seen from the middle, thus "is dying" (or according to context, "was dying" etc.). The past tense particle '''''do''''' appears before '''''garag''''' '(be) neighbour' to indicate 'one who was a neighbour', thus 'former neighbour'. | ||
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Revision as of 18:05, 30 May 2021
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Balog [ˈbɐɫɔɡ̚] is the main language of the Balog people of Ub as well as the most widely used lingua franca on that planet.
Phonology
Consonants
Manner | Phonation | Bilabial | Dentolabial Labiodental |
Dental/Alveolar | Postalveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | voiced | /m/ 1,2 ‹m› |
/n/ 2,3 ‹n› |
/ŋ/ 2 ‹ŋ / ng› |
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Plosive | voiced | /b/ 4 ‹b› |
/d/ 3,4 ‹d› |
/ɡ/ 4 ‹g› |
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voiceless | /p/ 5 ‹p› |
/t/ 3,5 ‹t› |
/k/ 5 ‹k› |
/ʔ/ ‹q› | |||||
ejective | /tʼ/ 3,6 ‹tt› |
/kʼ/ 6 ‹kk› |
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Affricate | voiced | /d͡z/ 7 ‹dz› |
/d͡ʒ/ 7 ‹dž / dzh› |
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voiceless | /t͡s/ 7 ‹ts› |
/t͡ʃ/ 7 ‹tš / tsh› |
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ejective | /t͡sʼ/ 6,7 ‹tts› |
/t͡ʃʼ/ 6,7 ‹ttš / ttsh› |
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Fricative | voiced | /v/ 8 ‹v› |
/z/ ‹z› |
/ʒ/ ‹ž / zh› |
/ɣ/ 9 ‹ğ / gh› |
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voiceless | /f/ 8 ‹f› |
/s/ ‹s› |
/ʃ/ ‹š / sh› |
/x/ 9 ‹x› |
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Trill / Flap | voiced | /r/ 10 ‹r› |
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Lateral | voiced | /l/ 3,11 ‹l› |
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Semivowel | voiced | /j/ ‹y› |
/w/ 12 ‹w› |
- /m/ assimilates to the articulation of a following /v/ or /f/, being pronounced bilabially [m] by speakers with bilabial pronunciations of /v/ and /f/ ([β] and [ɸ]), dentolabially [ɱ͆] by speakers with dentolabial pronunciations of /v/ and /f/ ([v͆] and [f͆]) and labiodentally by speakers with labiodental pronunciation of /v/ and /f/ ([v] and [f])
- Nasal consonants may be pronounced syllabically when not adjacent to a vowel. Their syllabic pronunciations are always short and unstressed.
- The alveolar/dental consonants /n d t tʼ l/ are pronounced with dental articulation by some speakers and alveolar articulation by others. This varies chiefly by region and/or native language.
- The voiced plosives /b d g/ are frequently pronounced as implosives post pausa: [ɓ ɗ~ɗ̪ ɠ]
- The voiceless plosives /p t k/ are generally unaspirated although aspirated pronunciations may be found, especially by L2 speakers: [pʰ tʰ~t̪ʰ kʰ]. The glottal plosive /ʔ/ is never aspirated.
- The ejective consonants /pʼ tʼ kʼ t͡sʼ t͡ʃʼ/ are frequently pronounced irregularly by L2 speakers who lack ejective consonants in their native languages. As there are many minimal pairs that can result in dangerous misunderstandings if the ejective consonants are not pronounced, many L2 speakers who are unable to pronounce the ejectives substitute them with sequences of a plain plosive or affricate, a weakly articulated schwa and then a glottal stop: [pə͉ʔ tə͉ʔ kə͉ʔ t͡sə͉ʔ t͡ʃə͉ʔ].
- The affricates are not distinguished phonetically from equivalent sequences of plosive and fricative that come together by compounding processes or even across word boundaries. They are ascribed phonemic status due to their phonotactic patterning.
- The majority of Balog pronounce the fricatives /v/ and /f/ dentolabially: [v͆] and [f͆]. Due to anatomical differences, the majority of non-Balog pronounce these labiodentally as [v] and [f]. Speakers of certain regions, both Balog and non-Balog, may pronounce them bilabially as [β] and [ɸ].
- The fricatives /ɣ/ and /x/ may be pronounced either at the velum as [ɣ] and [x], or at the uvula as [ʁ] and [χ]. Speakers with uvular pronunciations of /ɣ/ may frequently pronounce it as a trill [ʀ].
- The consonant /r/ is generally pronounced as a tap or flap [ɾ] with trilled pronunciations generally restricted to emphatic speech. When geminate, the pronunciation is always as a trill.
- The lateral /l/ may be, as discussed in point 3., either be dental or alveolar, however there is always a strong velar or pharyngeal coarticulation: [ɫ~ɫ̪]
- The semivowel /w/ is generally pronounced unrounded by Balog speakers due to anatomical differences. It is, however, pronounced with lip compression that results in a similar auditory effect: [w͍]. Non-Balog who speak it as an L2 may pronounce it with rounding: [w].
Vowels
Header text | Front | Back |
---|---|---|
High | /i/ [ɪ] ‹i› | /u/ [ʊ͍] ‹u› |
Mid | /e/ [ɛ] ‹e› | /o/ [ɔ͍] ‹o› |
Low | /æ/ [æ] ‹ä› | /a/ [ɐ] ‹a› |
Phonotactics
Morphophonology
Gemination
Prenasalisation
Vowel Frontness
Morphology
Bases
Bases are the equivalent of verb, nouns and pronouns in other languages. There is no lexical distinction into classes of nouns and verbs, with every base able to be used both in predicates and as subjects without change in meaning. This is distinguish from the type of extensive zero-derivation that English employs, whereby the verbal and nominal meanings relate to each other unpredictably und must therefore be regarded as lexical units in their own right (for example, a spy spies but a fish doesn't fish and a burger doesn't burger) The relationship between the verbal and nominal meanings of Balog bases is always that the verbal meaning is "be [noun]" and the nominal meaning is always "entity that [verb]s".
Base | Nominal Translation | Verbal Translation |
---|---|---|
balog | orc | be an orc |
dauz | tree | be a tree |
magaz | one that falls over | fall over |
dek | one that dies without obvious cause | die without obvious cause |
bad | large one | be large |
Semantic Particles and Prefixes
Semantic particles and prefixes modify bases to give them new shades of meaning. For example, particles indicating tense and aspect optionally stand before a base and give temporal information about the base. These are not restricted to use with semantically verb-like bases, nor are they restricted to
In the following example, the imperfective particle hi indicates that the action of dying is not spoken about as a completed whole, but, rather, an action seen from the middle, thus "is dying" (or according to context, "was dying" etc.). The past tense particle do appears before garag '(be) neighbour' to indicate 'one who was a neighbour', thus 'former neighbour'.
Hi zowak aqa-do garag we-ni-ž. [hɪ ˈzɔ͍w͍ɐk ɐʔɐdːɔ͍ ˈɡɐɾɐɡ̚ wɛnːiːʒ] hi zoak aqa- do garag we- ni- ž IPFV die.of.protracted.illness SPEC(B)- PST neighbour ESS- GEN- 1S "A former neighbour of mine is dying (of a protracted illness)."
Syntactic Clitics
Essive
Subject Markers
Status
Pronouns
Syntax
One of the most unusual features of Balog is its complete lack of grammatical objects. Every verb is monovalent (intransitive), meaning it can refer to only one noun at a time. For this reason, it is essentially impossible to describe the morphosyntactic