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Revision as of 15:06, 6 April 2017
Netagin (barīts Natāgīn) is a triconsonantal language inspired by Biblical Hebrew and Aramaic, spoken in Western Cuadhlabh. This page describes Ancient Netagin.
Todo
- final -ʔ to block initial seimhiu in descendants
- need more binyanim (~ 10 like Arabic)
- passive binyanim?
- yarifi = wheel
- bīlan = woman
- mufgōrin = castle
- qabatxōt = alligator
- Imperatives? Moods/seq of tenses?
Roots
- n-t-g: ???
- r-s-d: study
- z-ʔ-r: go
- k-d-d: fly
- w-r-š: love
- b-n-š: hide
Phonology
Ancient Netagin
Ancient Netagin had the following consonants (note no /l/!):
m n ŋ tʰ t kʰ k ʔ b d g f s ts ɬ tɬ ʃ ħ h z ʕ w r j
⟨m n ŋ t ṭ k q ʔ b d g f s ts x tx š ħ h z ȝ w r y⟩
The following vowels were used:
i iː u uː
a aː oː
aj aw
⟨i ī u ū a ā ō ay aw⟩
Stress is marked with an acute accent.
Old Netagin
Begadkefat: /t k b d g/ > /θ x v ð ɣ/ after a V
Vowels go through Tiberian Hebrew-ish changes
Modern Netagin
Morphology
Nouns and adjectives
Gender and number
Three numbers: sg, du/col, pl
Four genders: masculine, feminine, terrestrial, aquatic (inspired by Valyrian)
absolute, construct, possessed forms
Definite article: ha-(gemination)
Singulative | Dual-collective | Plurative | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
absolute | construct | absolute | construct | absolute | construct | |
Masculine | -i | -∅ | -ūʔ | -ū | -āʔ | -ā |
Feminine | -an | -ā | -ōnūʔ | -ōnū | -ōnāʔ | -ōnā |
Terrestrial | -in | -ay | -ayyūʔ | -ayyū | -ayyāʔ | -ayyā |
Aquatic | -ōti, -ti | -at | -(a)tūʔ | -(a)tū | -(a)tāʔ | -(a)tā |
For example, below are the declensions of yarifi (m.) = 'wheel'; bīlan (f.) = 'woman'; mufgōrin (t.) = 'castle'; qabatxōt (a.) = 'alligator':
Singulative | Dual-collective | Plurative | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
absolute | construct | absolute | construct | absolute | construct | |
Masculine | yarifi | yarif | yarifūʔ | yarifū | yarifāʔ | yarifā |
Feminine | bīlan | bīlā | bīlōnūʔ | bīlōnū | bīlōnāʔ | bīlōnā |
Terrestrial | mufgōrin | mufgōray | mufgōrayyūʔ | mufgōrayyū | mufgōrayyāʔ | mufgōrayyā |
Aquatic | qabatxōti | qabatxat | qabatxtūʔ | qabatxtū | qabatxtāʔ | qabatxtā |
Possessive suffixes
Pronouns
First person | Second person | Third person | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | Singular | Dual | Plural | |
Independent | ʔakti | ʔakkū | ʔakkā | ʔanni | ʔannū | ʔannā | hini (m) hinan (f) hinn (t) hitt (a) |
hinnū | hinnā |
Clitic | -ti | -kū | -kā | -ni | -nū | -nā | -hi | -hū | -hā |
Verbs
Netagin verbs, perhaps similarly to those of Biblical Hebrew, mark aspect and person, but not tense. Non-concatenative morphology figures prominently in conjugation for valence and TAM, much like in Semitic and Proto-Indo-European. However, verbs can also be derived via derivational "mishqalim" patterns (with considerable overlap with nominal patterns).
Primary stems
- Binyan 1 verbs are verbs denoting intransitive actions ("come"), as well as stative verbs ("be cold"). It is often considered the most basic form. The difference between adjectives and stative verbs is roughly equivalent to the ser-estar distinction.
- Binyan 2 contains most monotransitive verbs, ("eat") including causativizations of Binyan 1 verbs ("make happy"). Can also have a telic (desired outcome was reached) meaning.
- Binyan 3 consists of verbs denote reflexive/reciprocal action ("get dressed", "kiss each other"), or change of state ("thicken").
- Binyan 4 contains causatives of transitive verbs ("feed") (and of some Binyan 2 and Binyan 3 verbs). Causatives of statives in the imperfective aspect may denote active maintenance of a state (as opposed to changing a state in the perfective aspect).
Binyan | Imperfective | Perfective | Participle | Action noun |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1a2a3 | -i12a3 | 1ō2i3 | 1a2ī3i |
2 | 1u2u3 | -u1a2ːō3 | mu1a2ːī3 | 1a2ːī3āʔ |
3 | ʔa12ī13 | -uni12i3 | mi1ːū2ā3 | ʔa12u3ti |
4 | ʔa12a3 | -i1ːi2u3 | ma12a3 | ʔa12a3āʔ |
5 | ta12u3 | -uta12i3 | muta12i3 | ta12ō3āʔ |
6 | ʔiš1a2a3 | -uš1i2u3 | muš1i2u3 | ʔiš1a2u3t |
1 Shortens to i when a suffix is added.
The participle is an agent noun or an adjective. Adverbializing it yields manner of action "as if to X".
The action noun (axn) or gerund is used in action noun constructions, which are of the form SUBJECT-gen AXN OBJECT-acc. It is of importance in forming relative clauses, for Netagin does not have a relativizer.
Affixes
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Syntax
Ancient Netagin is almost completely head-initial; the unmarked word order is VSO.
- Waraštini.
- I love you.