Thensarian
Thensarian (thēnsaraquhanquhus/-milacus, Thengkha: Thengsornkhwong) is a classical Ramanuric language and one of two superstrate languages of Thengkha. It is inspired by Latin, Sanskrit, and Ancient Greek, and it is a parody of fantasy languages inspired by Latin and Greek, such as High Valyrian.
Lots of reduplication, especially in verbs
Should sound whimsical or English magic spell-like
Lexicon
- Barthagangus (Phatthakhong) a name
- Utrēmi-phasůlā = a religious text/mantra
- ut-/ud-
- quā- 're-, over-'
- quē '2'
- quacumquasit = however
- Xanāx a unisex name
- Xanasvācā a name
- Xatrēpus a name
- Bandaeum (Theng. Phonthai) = the capital of the Thensarian empire
- haothispēllum = sorcery (from haothim 'ritual' + pēllum 'fruit; output, implementation, work')
- spůbiao = facetiously
- spůbispēllum = facetiousness (spůbis 'mirth' + pēllum)
- hůbispůbium = magic spell
- baxaphus (<- gweķsobhos): borrowing
- rhaxū 'love'
- asynsymůs 'hate'
- cambar 'room'
- Kambarys a nobility-only name, meaning 'room-ful; memorialized'
- gladys 'god'
- Chalguxus a city
- quēdratim 'hour'
Rhaxuvē/-xū hīn asynsymave/-mů ēlir quaquhanix 'We are speaking of love and hate'
-ao for adverbs
Phonology
Consonants
- qu quh /kʷ kʷʰ/
- g c/k ch /g k kʰ/
- d t th n /d̪ t̪ t̪ʰ n/
- b p ph m /b p pʰ m/
- j r rh l v s h /j r r̊ l w s̠ h/
- x = /ks̠/
Vowels
Like Sanskrit: a ā i y u ū ē ů ae ao ṛ ṝ
- Early Classical Thensarian: /ɐ aː i iː u uː eː oː ai au r̩ r̩ː/
- Late Classical Thensarian: /ɐ aː ɪ iː ʊ üː eː u̞ː ae ao r̩ r̩ː/
Morphology
IE clone; I'm not gonna work too hard on making Thensarian grammar original, as the purpose of Thensarian is just to be a loan source for Thengkha.
Todo: research PIE ablaut
Nouns
Usually, the nominative singular case markers are -s masc, -ā/-y/-ū fem, -m neuter, -r/-ů collective. -rys is a suffix deriving names from -r nouns, reserved for the Thensarian nobility.
Adjectives
-ao forms adverbs
Verbs
- Infinitive -lum: -alum, -ālum, -ylum, -ūlum, -ȳlum
- Personal endings: 1sg -r, 2sg -s, 3sg -m, 1pl.ex, -ivi, 1pl.in -x, 2pl -phus, 3pl -phiam
Verb stems mainly use reduplication and Sanskrit-style ablaut to mark tense.
Reduplication sandbox
(Grassmann's law operates on reduplicants.)
Inflectional
- Ca- reduplicant for the progressive aspect
- quhanix 'we speak'; quaquhanix 'we are speaking'
- CalaC- reduplicant for the past tense
- qualaquhanix 'we spoke'; quaqualaquhanix 'we were speaking'
- CabraC- reduplicant for the irrealis
- quabraquhanix 'we shall speak; let us speak'
Derivational
- quhan-alum = to speak -> quhan<quh>us = speech?