Thulean: Difference between revisions
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| rowspan ="2"| mb || rowspan ="2"| nd || rowspan ="2"| | | rowspan ="2"| mb || rowspan ="2"| nd || rowspan ="2"| ɲʤ || rowspan ="2"| ŋg || rowspan ="2"| ŋgʷ || rowspan ="2"| rd || rowspan ="2"| ld || rowspan ="2"| lʤ || rowspan ="2"| mp || rowspan ="2"| nt || rowspan ="2"| ntɬ || rowspan ="2"| ɲʧ || rowspan ="2"| ŋk || rowspan ="2"| ŋkʷ || mʔ || rowspan ="2"| ns || rowspan ="2"| nθ || rowspan ="2"| ɲʃ || rowspan ="2"| ŋx || rowspan ="2"| ŋxʷ || rowspan ="2"| mv || rowspan ="2"| ɲ || rowspan ="2"| ŋh || rowspan ="2"| ŋʷ | ||
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Revision as of 15:02, 4 March 2017
Introduction
Description
The Thulean language (endonym: Migkatsi) has an agglutinative and polysynthetic morphology. Its morphosyntactic alignment is split intransitive with the fluid-S subtype. It is left-branching and double-marking. Thulean is a language isolate and has not been proven to belong to any established language family, although speculative suggestions of links between it and Uralic or Uralo-Siberian have been made in the past. It is spoken by the Selhat or Thuleans and has a total number of speakers exceeding 30 million.
The Thurse
Thurse is the collective name in English of the pygmy European phenotype. Thurse males and females are similar in stature and have an average height of between 135 to 140 cm. They are pale-skinned with dark stripes and have straight or wavy hair. Red hair is more common among the Thurse than any other phenotypical group. Androgeny and neoteny are also notable traits. The Thurse belong to several ethnic groups, the largest of which is the Selhat or Thuleans who occupy Thule (endonym: Telku) the northernmost of the British Isles. The Thurse phenotype is believed to have diverged from other Palaeolithic populations in Europe approximately 10,000 BP, originating in the Hercynian forest zone of central Europe.
Influences
The phonology is inspired by Finnish and Quenya phonaesthetics but twisted towards my sensibilities. I just love lateral obstruents, you know?. The morphology is heavily influenced by Yupik and Inuktitut.
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Phonology
Orthography
Thulean is written in the Latin script. It is phonemic but does show the effects of sandhi and consonant gradation. The current alphabet was adopted in 1898 and underwent its last revision in 1965. The orthography is listed in the table below:
[INSERT ORTHOGRAPHY TABLE HERE]
Consonants
Thulean has 35 consonant phonemes which according to WALS is a large inventory. These are listed in the table below:
[INSERT CONSONANT TABLE HERE]
Vowels
Thulean has 4 vowel phonemes which according to WALS is a small inventory. There are also 2 diphthongs. These are listed in the table below:
[INSERT VOWEL TABLE HERE]:
Allophony
1) Fortis obstruents are realised as their corresponding lenis obstruents in intervocalic position.
2) /p, t, tS, k, k_w, s, S, x, x_w/ are voiced in intervocalic position.
3) /tK/ is realised as [dð] in intervocalic position.
4) /ɬ/ is realised as [θ] in onset position following a coda consonant of /n, r/.
5) /ɬ/ is realised as [ð] in intervocalic position.
6) /x/ is realised as [ʃ] in coda position.
7) The geminate clusters /mm, nn, JJ, ŋŋ, NN_w, rr, ll, LL/ realised as [mb, nd, ndZ, ŋg, Ng_w, rd, ld, ldZ].
8) /A/ is realised as [O] before a liquid coda.
Prosody
Stress
Thulean has stress accent. Primary stress falls within the root. Open syllables without a diphthong are light; open syllables with a diphthong or closed syllables are heavy. Fortis obstruents close the syllable preceding them. If the first syllable of a root is heavy then the primary stress falls there otherwise it falls upon the second syllable of the root. In compound nouns, the primary stress falls within the second root.The stress placement within a root is fixed.
Intonation
Secondary stress falls upon every alternate syllable after the primary stress. This gives Thulean a broadly iambic rhythm. Thulean does not have phonemic tone.
Phonotactics
1) The syllable template in Thulean is CV(C).
2) Permitted syllable codas:
a) Morpheme-medial only: /N, r, l, p, s/
b) Morpheme-medial and morpheme-final: /m, n, t, k, x/
3) Fortis obstruents may not occur in word-initial position.
4) Fortis plosives may not occur in the onset of closed syllables.
5) Consonant clusters may have no more than two segments.
6) Consonant clusters may only occur across syllable boundaries.
7) But suffixes may begin with a consonant cluster.
8) Permitted consonant clusters:
a) Geminates: /mm, nn, JJ, NN, NN_w, rr, ll, LL/
b) /m/ + /p, ?, v/
c) /n/ + /t, tK, tS, ?, s, S/
d) /ŋ/ + /k, k_w, ?, x, x_w, h/
e) /r/ + /p, t, tK, tS, k, k_w, ?, s, K, S, x, x_w, v, j, h, w/
f) /l/ + /p, t, tS, k, k_w, ?, s, S, x, x_w, v, h, w/
g) /p, t, k/ + /s, x/
h) /s, x/ + /p, t, tK, tS, k, k_w/
[INSERT CLUSTER TABLE HERE]
9) High vowels may not occur before a liquid coda.
10) /i/ may not occur after an onset of /j/.
11) /u/ may not occur after an onset of /w/.
12) Diphthongs may not occur in a closed syllable.
13) Diphthongs may not precede a fortis obstruent.
14) Diphthongs may not precede /j, w/.
Morphophonology
Consonant Gradation
1) Consonant gradation is word-internal lenition that effects the following:
a) Fortis obstruents
b) Lenis plosives following a sonorant coda or a vowel
2) Consonant gradation is triggered by the closing of a syllable which begins with the above classes of obstruents.
3) The sequences of consonant gradation are as per the tables below:
a)Fortis obstruents, and lenis plosives following a liquid:
GRADE I | GRADE II | GRADE III |
---|---|---|
pp | p | v |
tt | t | r |
ttɬ | tɬ | l |
tʧ | ʧ | j |
kk | k | h |
kkʷ | kʷ | w |
ss | s | |
ɬɬ | ɬ | |
ʃʃ | ʃ | |
xx | x | |
xxʷ | xʷ |
b) Lenis obstruents following a nasal:
GRADE I | GRADE II |
---|---|
mp | mb |
nt | nd |
ntɬ | ld |
nʧ | nʤ |
ŋk | ŋg |
ŋkʷ | ŋgʷ |
4) Consonant gradation occurs after metathesis from sandhi but before sandhi proper.
Sandhi
1) Sandhi is the term given to interactions between consonants at morpheme boundaries.
2) If a triconsonantal cluster should result from suffixation then an epenthetic /E/ is inserted after the first segment of the triconsonantal cluster.
3) All other sandhi interactions are resolved as per the table below:
m | n | ɲ | ŋ | ŋʷ | r | l | ʎ | p | t | tɬ | ʧ | k | kʷ | ʔ | s | ɬ | ʃ | x | xʷ | v | j | h | w | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
m | mb | nd | ɲʤ | ŋg | ŋgʷ | rd | ld | lʤ | mp | nt | ntɬ | ɲʧ | ŋk | ŋkʷ | mʔ | ns | nθ | ɲʃ | ŋx | ŋxʷ | mv | ɲ | ŋh | ŋʷ |
n | nʔ | |||||||||||||||||||||||
t | nt | ɲʧ | nt | ŋkʷ | rt | tɬ | lʧ | pp | tt | ttɬ | tʧ | kk | kkʷ | tt | ts | tɬ | ʧ | tx | kkʷ | kʷ | ʧ | tx | kʷ | |
k | ŋk | ŋk | rk | lk | kk | ks | kx | kx | ||||||||||||||||
x | ŋx | nʃ | ŋx | ŋxʷ | rx | lx | lʃ | ʃp | ʃt | ʃtɬ | ʃʧ | ʃk | ʃkʷ | xʔ | ss | ɬɬ | ʃʃ | xx | xxʷ | ʃ | xx | xʷ |
4) If owing to suffixation a high vowel should precede a liquid coda then it is lowered to its corresponding low vowel.
Morphology
General Notes
Thulean morphology has the following constituents:
1) Roots: these are divided into nominal and verbal roots. The latter are divided into transitive and intransitive categories.
2) Postbases: these are derivational or adjunctival suffixes which directly follow the root. They are scope-ordered.
3) Inflectional affixes: these bear functions such as case, number, possession, agent, patient, tense amongst others. The usual bread and butter, nuts and bolts stuff that inflection does.
4) Particles: Conjunctions, interjections and other miscellany that do not fit into the above categories.
Nominal Morphology
Nominal Structure
1) Noun template:
case prefix + nominal or verbal root + postbase(s) + number suffix + possessive suffix or indefinite suffix + demonstrative suffix
2) A minimally inflected noun has a case prefix and a number suffix.
Cases
Case | Prefix | Function | Examples |
---|---|---|---|
Absolutive | Ø- |
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Ergative | a- |
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Instrumental | ki- |
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Locative | jet- |
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Allative | nu- |
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Ablative | pik- |
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Perlative | me- |
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Equative | sin- |
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Number
1) For the purposes of number, Thulean nouns are divided into count nouns and mass nouns.
2) For count nouns there are two systems of number:
a) singular-plural
b) collective-singulative
3) The singular-plural system works as it does in most European languages, the singular form of the noun is default and marks a single instance of that noun. The plural form marks multiple instances of that noun. Eg:
SG: kattu = cat
PL: katar = cats
4) With the collective-singulative system the collective form of the noun is default and marks multiple instances of that noun. The singulative form marks a single instance of that noun. Collective nouns usually indicate entities that are found in groups. Eg:
COL: makku = pigs
SGV: makan = pig
5) Mass nouns are considered to be pluralia tanta and thus use the collective-singulative system. The collective form indicates a lump or mass and the singulative form indicates a part of that lump or mass. Eg:
COL: ninta = water
SGV: ninnan = a drop or sip of water
6) Number suffixes:
a) After vowel:
PL: -r
SGV: -n
b) After consonant or before suffix:
PL: -ra
SGV: -ne
Possession
1) Pronominal Possession:
This is indicated by the following set of suffixes:
1SG: -nne
2SG: -gke
3SG ANIM: -nte
3SG INAN: -mme
4SG ANIM: -lle
4SG INAN: -ghe
1PL EXCL: -gka
1PL INCL: -ppa
2PL: -kka
3PL ANIM: -tta
3PL INAN: -mma
4PL ANIM: -tla
4PL INAN: -kha
2) Nominal Possession:
This is indicated by the following construction:
NOM + possessor possessum + pronominal possessive suffix eg:
akimex katunte = the woman's cat