Sekhulla: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Infobox language |image = Soc'ul'.png |imagesize = 185px |imagecaption = ''Jul soc'ul''', "Soc'ul' language" in the Wacag script |name = Soc'ul' |nativename = soc'ul' |pronunciation = so̞˧kʷʰu˩lˀ |pronunciation_key = IPA for Soc'ul' |state = Knrawi Isles |setting = [https://pollasena.fandom.com/wiki/Pollasena_Wiki Pollasena] |created = 2020 |fam1 = Wasc languages | Was...")
 
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==Etymology==
==Etymology==
''Soc'ul''', the language's autonym, is inherited from the [[Sekhulla]] autonym ''səkʰulːa'', from [[Wascotl]] ''*(cek)-cek-sole-la'' "our tongue".
''Soc'ul''', the language's autonym, is inherited from the [[Sekhulla]] autonym ''səkʰulːa'', from [[Wascotl]] ''*(cek)-cek-sole-la'' "our tongue".
==Orthography==
Soc'ul' is written with the [[Appendix:Wacag Characters|Wacag logography]]. Its romanization is as follows.
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Soc'ul' Romanization
|-
| A a || Á á || Ā ā || B b || B' b' || C c || C' c' || Cñ cñ || Cñ' cñ' || D d || D' d'
|-
| E e ||  É é ||  Ē ē || H h || I i || Í í || Ī ī || Ï ï || J j || L l || L' l'
|-
| M m || M' m' || N n || N' n' || Ñ ñ || Ñ' ñ' || O o || Ó ó || Ō ō || P p || Pf pf
|-
| Pm pm || Pm' pm' || R r || R' r' || S s || T t || Tn tn || Tn' tn' || Ts ts || Tx tx || T' t'
|-
| U u || Ú ú || Ū ū || Ü ü || V v || V' v' || X x || Y y || Ý ý || Z z || Z' z'
|}
This romanization matches IPA except
*⟨c⟩, ⟨e⟩, ⟨h⟩, ⟨j⟩, ⟨ñ⟩, ⟨x⟩, and ⟨y⟩ represent /k/, /ə/, /ʔ/, /x/, /ŋ/, /ʃ/, and /ɰ/
*⟨pm⟩, ⟨tn⟩, ⟨cñ⟩, ⟨pf⟩, ⟨ts⟩, and ⟨tx⟩ represent /ᵖm/, /ᵗn/, /ᵏŋ/, /p͡f/, /t͡s/, and /t͡ʃ/
*⟨ü⟩ and ⟨ï⟩ represent /u/ and /i/ when ⟨u⟩ and ⟨i⟩ would cause ambiguity
*⟨o⟩ represents /ə/ when realized as [o̞] except between a labialized consonant (except allophones of /u(ː)/) and a plain velar consonant (except /ɰˀ/)
*Apostrophes mark glottalization and aspiration.
*Acutes and macrons mark long and overlong vowels respectively, except in ⟨ý⟩ in which it marks glottalization.
*Labialization and palatalization are marked by surrounding vowel letters.


==Phonology==
==Phonology==

Revision as of 12:53, 27 November 2024

Soc'ul'
soc'ul'
Soc'ul'.png
Jul soc'ul', "Soc'ul' language" in the Wacag script
Pronunciation[so̞˧kʷʰu˩lˀ]
Created byDillon Hartwig
Date2020
SettingPollasena
Native toKnrawi Isles
EthnicityCuoñ'o
Era-1700 to -700 MT
Official status
Official language in
Knrawi Empire
Language codes
CLCRqsc
PollasenaMapGlowPNG2.png
Range map of Soc'ul' (green) and Knrawi (pink), c. -1200 MT
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Soc'ul' /ˈsoʊkʊl/ (Soc'ul': [so̞˧kʷʰu˩lˀ]) is a Sekhulla language spoken primarily by the Cuoñ'o people, with strong influence from Knrawi and other languages of the Knrawi Isles.

Etymology

Soc'ul', the language's autonym, is inherited from the Sekhulla autonym səkʰulːa, from Wascotl *(cek)-cek-sole-la "our tongue".

Phonology

Consonants

Consonants
Labial Alveolar palatal Velar Labialized velar Glottal
Nasal m n ŋ ŋʷ
Stop p b t d k kʷʰ
Fricative v s ɬ ɬʰ z ɮ ʃ ʃʰ ʒ ɣ ɣʷ h
Approximant r l j w
  • All voiced consonants can be geminated

Vowels

Vowels
Front Central Back
High i ɨ u
Mid ə əː
Low a
  • /ɨ/ only occurs postvocalically.

Stress

Stress is variably final, penultimate, or antipenultimate.

Phonotactics

Syllables are at most (C)V(C).

Morphology

Alignment

Sekhulla has nominative-accusative morphosyntactic alignment.

Nouns and pronouns

Nouns are marked for class, number, case, and possession by particles before the noun as follows.

Noun particles
ACC POSS PL LOC
1 a en ez' he
2 nej hej
CL1/CL2 nu
CL3 al nil ez'e hel
CL4 ax nux hex
CL5 ád nid' hed'
  • Nouns with suppletive plural forms do not use plural particles, and plural particles are not used on nouns modified by numerators.

Pronouns

Pronouns do not exist independently (except see Possession); the person and class of dropped nouns are instead only shown through verb agreement.

The demonstrative haːl can also be used as a pronoun.

Possession

Verbs

Aspect

Agreement

Verbs agree with the person and class of their agent and patient as follows.

Verb agreement prefixes
>1 >2 >CL1 >CL2 >CL3/CL4 >CL5
1 sec- soc- seic- seh- setn- cu-
2 cor- coz- cor- coh- cox-
CL1 íús- íúy- aí- íúh- íún- íū-
CL2 har- hau- z'ai- ∅- han- hu-
CL3 in- nau- ixú- nal'- iy- nu-
CL4 an'- ñ'o- ñ'ai- ñ'ih- añ'- u-
CL5 us- úu- úi- ba- úx-
  • Intransitive verbs are marked with patient agreement of the agent's class, and impersonal verbs are unmarked.

Copula

The copula pazən inflects as follows.

Copulae
>1 >2 >CL1 >CL2 >CL3/CL4 >CL5
1 syen suén syíún' sehan' setnayn sun'
2 coren cozen coríún' coban' coriyn cun'
CL1 íúsyen íúzen aíún' íúban' íúnen íún'
CL2 haryen huén hazíún' hazen harin' hun'
CL3 nasen nuén naíún' nahlan' nayn nun'
CL4 an'yen ñ'ón ñ'aíún' ñ'iban' ñ'in' un'
CL5 sén uén uaíún' ban' uinayn

Adjectives and adverbs

Adpositions

Numerals

Sekhulla uses base-12 numerals.

Numerals
1 2 3 4 5 6
haːl əh ta am kʷi kuː
7 8 9 10 11 12
əzaːl əːh əda əam əɣʷi ɬi
13 24 144 1,728 20,736 248,832
ɬi haːl əh ɬi əsʰi ɬiɣan əsʰiɣan ɬi əsʰiɣan

Nouns are not marked for number when using numerals.

Derivational morphology

Part-of-speech modifiers

-aʃ

The causative suffix -aʃ can be used productively on any verb, as well as being used nonproductively on some verbs deriving verbs of new meanings.

-suʃ

-suʃ can be used productively to derive adjectives.

Reduplication

Syntax

Constituent order

SVO or VSO order is most common, but word order is flexible.

Noun and verb phrases

All modifiers follow their head noun or verb, except aspect-mood particles precede verbs and the demonstrative haːl precedes nouns. Generally numerators follow adjectives and possessors follow all other modifiers, but otherwise modifier order is flexible.

Dependent clauses

Dependent clauses follow the head they modify after all other dependents, and are usually marked with a relativizer aːaːə-.

Example texts

Universal Declaration of Human Rights Article 1

Linguifex-hosted translations

Conlang Atlas of Language Structures-hosted translations

Other resources

CALS