Hwnic: Difference between revisions
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''Qs u kiniup rambor ust velo qanan qamif fisnur lui'' | ''Qs u kiniup rambor ust velo qanan qamif fisnur lui'' | ||
[-] ACC vegetables grow.3SG and ACC-and geese duck herd.3SG PRES.CONT | [-] ACC category-vegetables grow.3SG and ACC-and geese duck herd.3SG PRES.CONT | ||
''Andacikat rt u Telvisn mxar ust u mncibok bimir'' | ''Andacikat rt u Telvisn mxar ust u mncibok bimir'' | ||
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** Justification for this design choice (and others below) will be presented later. | ** Justification for this design choice (and others below) will be presented later. | ||
* ''Qs'' is a particle that only indicates the start of a sentence where the subject pronoun is dropped. | * ''Qs'' is a particle that only indicates the start of a sentence where the subject pronoun is dropped. | ||
* The "and ACC-and": the former is a conjunction that forms the parallel structure; the latter marks a list of items, in the form of "and X Y Z ..." until the next verb or particle. | |||
** The latter "and", ''elo'', is further fused with the accusative particle ''u'', and here it means the accusative particle applies to each item in the list. | |||
* The tense-aspect auxiliary verb is flexible: it can govern a full sentence, as shown here, or apply only to the one verb before it. | * The tense-aspect auxiliary verb is flexible: it can govern a full sentence, as shown here, or apply only to the one verb before it. | ||
* A single concept corresponds to a single word, which is common in agglutinative languages. | * A single concept corresponds to a single word, which is common in agglutinative languages. In this example, "chat with" corresponds to ''bimi'' and "spare time" corresponds to ''andacikat'', both single words. |
Latest revision as of 09:53, 27 December 2024
Todo: Structure the page appropriately, make an infobox and add categories. See Balkan as an example.
This article is a construction site. This project is currently undergoing significant construction and/or revamp. By all means, take a look around, thank you. |
Hwnic | |
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isloxvn | |
Created by | SN2rname |
Date | 2024 |
language isolate
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Hwnic is an a priori semi-naturalistic agglutinative language. It attempts to broadly delineate what natural languages might look like in the future, influenced by sources as diverse as Internet slang, mathematical notations, and programming languages.
Overview
The phonology of Hwnic is mostly unremarkable. Hwnic is a pitch-accent language, and it has 5 vowels, 3 nasals, 7 plosives, 6 fricatives, 1 phonemic affricate, and 3 liquids. The continuants may be syllabic. Syllable structure is (C)(C)V(C)(C), with most word roots taking the form of C(C)V. Connected speech is subject to a set of more complex rules involving use of non-modal phonation.
Hwnic is written with the Latin alphabet. For most consonants, there is a one-to-one correspondence of sound to spelling. For vowels, however, spelling rules are more varied. Some particles also have unexpected pronunciations. Therefore Hwnic orthography is not entirely phonetic. The first letter of the first word in a sentence is capitalized, but native Hwnic names of people and places are not capitalized. Unfamiliar loanwords and technical jargon are in title case. Acronyms and proper nouns retain their capitalization as in the source language. Hwnic can be written with no punctuations other than spaces, where particles and capitalization are employed to denote quotation, change of topic, intonation, and so on; however, an English-like pattern of punctuation is also possible.
The grammar of Hwnic is mostly simple and straightforward. Word order is SOV, but sentences may show up as OV due to pro-drop. Nouns are not declined, but may take affixes that denote number, negation, state, or property. Verbs are conjugated to person, number, and sometimes mood; an auxiliary verb can show tense, aspect, and animacy/volition.
The lexicon of Hwnic is based on concrete concepts. Simple concepts like body parts are covered in a single word, while complex concepts like types of animals may have a two-name system. The lexicon is currently incomplete.
Phonology
Phonemes
Stress and prosody
Phonotactics
Morphology
Nouns
Verbs
Adjectives and determiners
Adverbs
Syntax
Constituent order
Noun phrase
Verb phrase
Dependent clause
Example text
- Rpadpa eqo seiqomiis nr eudnox nr cnosulil ln Qs u kiniup rambor ust velo qanan qamif fisnur lui Andacikat rt u Telvisn mxar ust u mncibok bimir
- [My] grandfather has a farm in the countryside near a river. He grows vegetables and keeps geese and ducks. In [his] spare time, he watches the television and chats with [his] neighbors.
Glossing
Rpadpa eqo seiqomiis nr eudnox nr cnosulil ln grandfather DAT-PRON.3SG farm.SING LOC countryside LOC vicinity-river be.3N
Qs u kiniup rambor ust velo qanan qamif fisnur lui [-] ACC category-vegetables grow.3SG and ACC-and geese duck herd.3SG PRES.CONT
Andacikat rt u Telvisn mxar ust u mncibok bimir time-leisure TEM ACC television watch.3SG and ACC neighbors chat_with.3SG
Notes
- LOC, ACC, DAT all refer to particles.
- Hwnic is head-final. The broadest category comes first and the most specific comes last. This order applies to qualifier sequences, compound words, and more.
- Nouns are not declined, but a particle may fuse with certain pronouns and other particles.
- Most nouns are by default plural, and the suffix -is makes a noun singular.
- There is only one locative particle, nr. To express "near somewhere", for instance, it would be nr cnos[somewhere], where cnos means "vicinity" by itself. Similarly, there is only one temporal particle, rt.
- Justification for this design choice (and others below) will be presented later.
- Qs is a particle that only indicates the start of a sentence where the subject pronoun is dropped.
- The "and ACC-and": the former is a conjunction that forms the parallel structure; the latter marks a list of items, in the form of "and X Y Z ..." until the next verb or particle.
- The latter "and", elo, is further fused with the accusative particle u, and here it means the accusative particle applies to each item in the list.
- The tense-aspect auxiliary verb is flexible: it can govern a full sentence, as shown here, or apply only to the one verb before it.
- A single concept corresponds to a single word, which is common in agglutinative languages. In this example, "chat with" corresponds to bimi and "spare time" corresponds to andacikat, both single words.