Alska: Difference between revisions

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*<i>jeg</i> - <i>mig</i>
*<i>jeg</i> - <i>mig</i>
*<i>du</i> - <i>digg</i>
*<i>du</i> - <i>dig</i>


====Dative====
====Dative====

Revision as of 15:23, 18 January 2013

Alska
Alska
Pronunciation[[Help:IPA|ɑls'-kɑ]]
Created by
Native toAlsland, Grøn-in-Norderøy, Jotunsøy, Dependencies of Jansstass & Ragnargråben
Native speakers50 million (2012)
Official status
Official language in
Sovereign Kingdom of Alsland (Soveireinkonngsdøm Alslands)
Language codes
ISO 639-1al
ISO 639-2als
ISO 639-3als

Background

Alska [ɑls'-kɑ] is a Germanic language originating from the nation of Alsland, a rather large (area-wise) island in the northern sea. Alska is supposed to be somewhat related to the Scandinavian languages, although it's really more of my own take on Scandinavian languages as a whole. It is very closely related to them, to the point of being mutually intelligible in some cases, although it is just as different from them as Swedish is from Danish, or as Norwegian is from Swedish.

Basically, it has turned out kind of like Esperanto for Scandinavia, even though that isn't its intent. Alska has a bit more structure when it comes to pronunciation and grammar, and sticks to them pretty well, if not for a few irregularities.

The speakers of Proto-Alska came from an unknown land, banished by their gods, according to legends. While Alsland itself has a survivable climate, the stories tell of a paradise. As Alslandic thinking progresses, it has been suggested that the Alslanders are not actually from anywhere, but made these tales up to give a basis for the harsh conditions of Alsland's weather.


Phonology

Letters Pronunciation Further information
a [ɑ:] has no short version
b [b] -
d [d] -
e [ɛ] / [e:] -
f [f] -
g [g] -
h [h] -
i [ɪ]/[i] short 'ɪ', long 'i'
j [j] corresponds to y in English you
k [k] -
l [l] -
m [m] -
n [n] -
o [o̞]/[o] -
p [p] -
r [r] can be rolled, tapped, trilled, or pronounced non-rhotically, as in most British English dialects. (depends on Alskan dialect)
s [s] -
t [t] -
u [ʉ] has no short version
v [f] -
w [v] rarely used, usually replaced with 'v'
y [y:] pronounced almost like German 'ü'
z [ts] rarely used
å [ɔ] pronounced somewhat like English 'aw' Can be pronounced 'ooh', or 'ow' depending on dialect
ø [ø] -
ä [ɛ]\[e:] short/long. depends on whether 'ä' is by itself, or near a consonant cluster
æ [aj] pronounced as in Latin and Icelandic





Consonants

This is a table of the consonantic phonemes in Alska

Phonemes Bilabial Labiodental Dental Alveolar Postalveolar Palatal Velar Glottal
Stop p b t d k g
Affricate
Nasal m n (ŋ)
Fricative f v s ʃ ç h
Approximant r j
Lateral approximant l

In most dialects, 'sj' is pronounced 'ʃ', with the exception of the word 'sjø', which is pronounced 'syø' The only dialect of Alska that does not follow this rule is the Grøn-in-Norderøy dialect, which pronouces it as it is spelled [sj]. Additionally, the phoneme [ç] corresponds to the 'ch' in German (ich=[iç]) in all dialects, and is spelled 'kj' in words.

Additionally, if any consonant directly precedes 'r', that consonant is silent. For example:

  • Vadr [fɑ:r] - Father

Not all dialects follow this rule; some would pronounce it as [fɑ:tr]

Vowels

This is a table of the vowel phonemes in Alska

Phonemes Short Long
Front Back Front Back
Closed i - u:/ü:
Mid-closed ø - e: o:
Mid-open ɛ ɔ - -
Open a - - -

Vowel Length

Almost every vowel has a short and a long version, which changes according to whether there is a double consonant cluster immediately following it or not. Any two of the same consonants following a vowel with make it short, with the exceptions of 'a' and 'u'. For example, 'ok' (and) = 'o:k. 'okk', while not a word, would be pronounced 'o̞k'. This does not occur when two different consonants follow a vowel, such as 'ng'.

Diphthongs

Alska has three diphthongs, and one digraph.


Diphthongs Pronunciation
ej [ei]
ie [i:e]
au [øy]
ai [e:]

'ej' is the most common diphthong, while 'ai' is the least common. There is no 'ow' sound in Standard Alska, unlike Standard German. Some dialects, mostly the eastern variants, associate this sound to the letter 'å'.

Stress

Stress usually falls on the first syllable of a noun. Stress falls on every root sylable of a compound word. Words that do not follow this pattern are usually loanwords, which follow their original pronunciation rules when adopted, although the spelling is often changed to help integrate them into Alska.

Grammar

Nouns

Nouns have two genders in Alska, Common and Neuter. These nouns must always agree with their adjectives gender-wise.

Nouns can come in two numbers, singular and plural. To make a vowel plural, either the suffix '-er', '-e' or '-ene' is added to the end. Very few nouns that have a natural fminine gender get the '-e' suffix for their indefinite plural form. This can cause confusion, since '-er' is also how verbs conjugate for all persons in the present tense. When a noun is definite, the plural is '-ene'. When it is not, the plural is '-er'.

Definite vs. Indefinite

Nouns can be definite or indefinite, and this is decided by the use of an enclitic article. The common gender has the suffix '-en' to make it definite, the neuter gender has '-et'. These articles can be separated from their noun. This transforms them into indefinite articles.

For example:

  • Flyge - Woman + '-en' = Flygen - The Woman. (The extra 'e' is combined)

Here is a chart showing a selection of nouns in their indefinite and definite forms, as well as the plurals for each.

Singular Plural Gender Meaning Definite Definite Plural Gender Meaning
mann manner common man foten fotene common foot
land lander neuter land hemmellen hemmellene common sky, heaven
sju sjuer common shoe ligtet ligtene neuter light
live liver common life sprokken sprokkene common language
tir tirer neuter animal boket bokene neuter book
elske elsker common love vulfen vulfene common wolf
lørdin lørdine common lady lørd lørdene common lord

Note how all definite plural suffixes are the same, no matter the gender of the word itself.

Articles

With definite and indefinite nouns come definite (demonstrative) and indefinite articles. Gender applies to these articles in both the definite and indefinite form.

Definite article Common Neuter Plural Indefinite Article Common Neuter Plural
Nom. / Acc. den det denne/dette Nom./Acc. en et -
Dat. dan dat danne/datte Dat. an at -

There are no plural forms for indefinite articles, as the are only ever used to refer to singular things. Denne and dette can also be used for 'this'.

Demonstrative articles are used when

a) referring directly to something or someone.

  • For example: Den mann - That man

b) referring back to the subject of the sentence of something previously mentioned.

  • For example: Tirer er alltid duf. Det er ikke bestimmer - Animals are always stupid. This is not true. Here 'det' is referring to the previous mentioned concept of animals being stupid.

c) an adjective precedes the noun it stems from.

  • For example: en mann -> den strungen mann

Often the demonstrative article is used instead of the enclitic article in speech because saying 'den strungen mann' is also the same as saying 'strungen mannen'

Personal Pronouns

Personal pronouns change depending on the case they are used in. (Nominative, Accusative, Dative, or Genitive) Possessive Pronouns change depending on the gender of the noun they possess.

Case 1st person
Singular Plural
Nominative jeg vi
Accusative mig oss
Dative mig oss
Genitive minn osser
Case 2nd person
Singular Plural
Nominative du i
Accusative dig ig
Dative dig ig
Genitive - -
Case 3rd person
Masculine Feminine Neuter Plural
Nominative han hun den / det disse / disse
Accusative hans huns dens / dets disse / disse
Dative ham hum dan / dat dasse / dasse
Genitive - - - -

This is one of the only times that defined masculine and feminine category appears in Alska, as it is a can of natural gender.

There are no genitive forms for 'du', and 'han/hun/det'. Their corresponding possessives are used instead.

Person Singular Plural
jeg minn minnene
du dinn dinnene
den / det sinn sinnene
hun sinn sinnene
we osser osser
i ier ierne

Possessives can have '-et' suffixed on to them, if the noun they possess is neuter in gender. There is no suffix for common:

  • Minnet hus - My house
  • Minn hund - My dog

Adjectives

Adjectives come in their root form, and are inflected for gender and number, with the same two endings used for making nouns definite, '-en', and '-et'. The plural ending is '-ene' An adjective does not, however, have to be inflected if it comes after the noun it describes.

Here are some examples:

  • En strungen mann - A strong man
  • Et lillet hus - A little house (Can also be formed through the diminutive)
  • Den er en smuken flyge - That is a pretty girl
  • Den flyge er smuk - That girl is pretty
  • Disse lillene huser - These little houses

Comparative

The comparative form of adjectives is formed by adding '-ere' to the adjective itself. The word 'ennd' precedes the noun being compared.

For example:

  • Den mann er strungere ennd den flyge - The man is stronger than that girl.

If something is being compared on the same level, 'somm' is used before and after the adjective.

  • Den mann er somm strung somm den flyge - The man is as strong as the girl.

If something is being compared as less than something, 'minntre' is used before the adjective, and 'somm' is used before the other noun.

  • Den mann er minntre strung somm den flyge - The man is weaker than the woman. (This can also be formed with the adjective weak, or by using 'ikke' before 'minntre', making 'not as strong')

Irregular Adjectives

Irregular adjectives are normal until they reach the comparative stage. Instead of adding the suffix 'ere', these irregular adjectives are usually put into the comparative by changing the entire word (compare to English 'good', 'better', 'best')

Here is an example of an irregular adjective being used comparatively.

  • Det hus er godt - The house is good
  • Det hus er bettre - The house is better
  • Dette hus er betre ennd det hus - This house is better than that house

Superlative

The superlative form of an adjective is used when saying something is the 'best'. For regular adjectives, the superlative ending is '-est'. Irregular verbs usually end in '-est', but it is part of the stem, or root. In other words, the adjective changes twice, once for comparative, again for superlative, and the superlative version ends in '-est'.

Here is a table showing regular and irregular adjectives in their three forms:

Regular Adjective Comparative Superlative Meaning Irregular Adjective Comparative Superlative Meaning
strung strungere strungest strong godt betre best good
lille lillere lillest little, small hog højer højest high
ung ungere ungest young gamell elt eltest old

Numbers

Number Cardinal Ordinal Number Cardinal Ordinal
0 null - 1 ein vørste
2 sekunde 3 tre trede
4 fjyr fjyrede 5 fimm fimmede
6 sex sexede 7 sjø sjøede
8 atte attede 9 nan nanede
10 tan tanede 11 ellfu ellfede
12 tolfu tolfede 13 tretan tretanede
14 fjyrtan fjyrtanede 15 fimmtan fimmtanede
16 sextan sextanede 17 sjøtan sjøtanede
18 attjan attjanede 19 nantan nantanede
20 Tjoi Tjoede 21 Tjoen Tejoenede
22 Tjoitø Tjoitøede 30 treti tretede
31 treen (tre-en) treenede 40 fjyrti fjyrtide
50 fimmti fimmtide 60 sexti sextide
70 sjøti sjøtide 80 jåtti jåttit
90 nanti nantide 100 hundre hundrede

Note that in some numbers, certain letters are omitted, such as the 'i' in 'tjoen'.

Ordinal numbers are created by adding '-ede' onto the end. In some cases, just'-de' is added.

Counting is relatively simple in Alska. To make two digit numbers, one simply puts two numbers together. Numbers after one hundred work in the same way:

  • tjoi + en = tjoen - twenty-one
  • hundre + fimmti - one hundred-fifty

The word for thousand is 'tusennd; it's ordinal form is 'tusennede'. Million is 'milliard'/'milliarde'

Interrogatives

Interrogatives
Who hvemm
What hvad
Where hver
Why hvørfer
How hvorden
When nør

Adverbs

Adverbs are never declined or inflected, can be placed before or after the verb.

  • Jeg vil lufe i dag - I want to run today

Here, today is being used adverbially because it shows when I want to run. The reason 'vil' is not conjugated is because it is a modal verb, which do not receive the '-r' suffix. 'lufe' is still in the infinitive because any verb after a modal verb must stay that way.

Verbs

Verbs in the infinitive form are accompanied by 'ett', and 'e' on the end. For example: Kyk - Cook, ett Kyke - to cook. There are almost no irregular verbs, and conjugation of most verbs is done by adding the suffix '-r' to the infinitive.

'-r' is used for all pronouns

  • Jeg kyker i dag - I cook today/I'm cooking today
  • Du kyker i dag - You cook today/You're cooking today

Er is used only in the context of 'to be', not as an auxiliary verb, as in English 'I am writing'. In Alska this would be Jeg skriver, NOT Jeg er ett skrive.

Verbs appear in their full infinitive form in a sentence when another primary verb is being used, often preceded by for, but not always. The verb+e version of the infinitive can appear after a modal verb.

Here is an example of all three forms:

  • Jeg skriver - I write
  • Jeg vil skrive - I want to write
  • Jeg skriver over for ett kyke - I write about cooking

Past Tense

Past tense of verbs is usually done through suffixing, although a small portion of them go through stem vowel changes.

The suffixes for most words are '-dde', or '-te'.

Verb Present Past Meaning
Ett Skrive skriver skrivte to write
Ett Kyke kyker kykte to cook
Ett Lufe lufer lufte to run
Ett Finne finner finnedde to find
Ett Spise spiser spisedde to eat
Ett Gå går gir to go

Irregular Past Tense

There is a very short list of verbs that undergo a stem-vowel change for their past tense form, although there is order to this and if one learns what each vowel changes to, they must simply remember the specific word it occurs in.

Vowel Changes To
a e
e/ä a
i u
o/å/ø i
u o

'Æ' does not go through a vowel change.


Here is a table showing the stem vowel changes for certain verbs:

Verb Present Past Tense Meaning
Ett gå går gir (gikk in some dialects) to go
Ett väre er var to be
Ett hive hiver huver to heave, lift

Note how the '-r' is not changed, even when the verb is in the past tense.

Past Participle

The past participle form of a verb always comes with the verb ha - to have. Ha is always conjugated in the present tense, but the verb main verb is always in the past tense. Past participle forms retain the same suffixes they had in their regular past tense form.

For example:

  • Jeg har gir till Alsland - I have gone to Alsland (before)

The main verb, or the verb in the past tense, does not have to be in any specific place in the sentence as long as it is after ha; It is just as acceptable to say Jeg har till Alsland gir

Syntax

Syntax in Alska has a rather straightfoward, SVO pattern, like most Germanic langauages. Also like most Germanic languages is the switch to VSO for interrogative statements.

  • Jeg vil lufe - I want to run
  • Vil jeg lufe? - (Do) I want to run?

Notice how there is no auxiliary verb in the second example. Translated literally, it means 'Want I run?'.

Cases

Alska has 4 grammatical cases: Nominative, Accusative, Dative, and Genitive.

Nominative

Nominative Case is used to show the subject of a sentence, although there is no case marking for this case in Alska.

Accusative

Accusative Case shows the direct object of a sentence, and once again there are no case markings for it.

While there is no direct marking on the noun, pronouns do change to conform to Accusative case.

  • jeg - mig
  • du - dig

Dative

Dative Case shows the indirect object of a sentence, and is the one case where case marking occurs. The indefinite and definite articles undergo a vowel shift, from 'e' to 'a'.

  • en/et - an/at
  • *den/det - dan/dat

Genitive

Genitive Case shows possession of a noun by another entity, and is the only case that has in-depth rules.

Possession can be shown in two ways: with a possessive pronoun or in an 'of the' phrase. Using a possessive pronoun is more common in speech, although there are situations where an 'of the' phrase would be more accurate.

When showing possession with a pronoun, one simply puts the pronoun in front of the noun being possessed. For example:

  • minn skole - my school
  • ditt hus - your hus

Notice how the syntax here is exactly like English. This is by far the easiest way to use Genitive case. Also notice how 'dinn' changes to 'ditt'. This is because 'hus' is neuter in gender. This change applies to most possessive pronouns when they own a neuter word.

There is no actual 'of the' phrase in Alska, instead the noun being possessed is made definite and put in front of a possessive pronoun:

  • skolen minn - the school (of) me
  • huset hans - the house (of) his/his house

'Hans' and 'huns' are the only two pronouns that do not undergo the 'tt' change when possessing a neuter noun. They are also used instead of 'sinn', and 'hanner/hunner'.

Examples

Here is the Lord's prayer translated from English into Alska:


   Our Father in heaven,                             Osser vadr i hemmell,
   hallowed be your name.                            helighet er din Nafn. 
   Your kingdom come,                                din konngdøm kommer,
   your will be done,                                din will gør,
   on earth as it is in heaven.                      på jorden hvorden det er i hemmell.
   Give us this day our daily bread,                 giver oss disse dagligen brød,
   and forgive us our debts,                         ok tillgive oss osser skulder,
   as we also have forgiven our debtors.             hvorden vi har tilgivedde osser skuldmanner.
   And lead us not into temptation,                  ok leder oss ikke i på frissthellse,
   but deliver us from evil.                         men tillever oss fra ande.