Aoma
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Aoma (Bavom Bor Speaking of Ours) is a priori language created for the fantasy world of Grundet. Aoma and Rinap form the main languages of South-West-Herookuan family deriving from the ancestral Rinapri. Though Aoma is spoken in Eastern Sceptre it has not much to do with the languages of Western Sceptre.
Basics
Aoma is a Verb-Subject-Object, agglutinative-fusional language with strong head-initiality (right-branching). The language has two numbers, three persons, four genders and five cases with nominative-accusative alignment. Very important to the speakers and the society is the formal register with polite forms of second person pronouns, honorifics and anti-honorifics.
Phonology
Very similar to Rinapian ones
Consonants
| Bilabial | Labio-dental | Dental | Alveolar | Post-alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Uvular | Glottal | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nasal | m | n | ŋ | ||||||
| Plosive | p b | t d | k g | ʔ | |||||
| Fricative | f v | θ ð | z s | ʃ ʒ | x | h | |||
| Approximant | ɹ | j | |||||||
| Trill | r | ||||||||
| Lateral app. | l |
Consonants k, l, m, n, p, ɹ, r, s and t all have a geminated version which are mostly found in two-syllable verb infinite forms. The double-consonants have special marks in written Mihkanor so glottal stop is indicated by writing the consonants separately. Notice: pp [p:ʰ], tt [tθ]
Vowels
| Front | Back | |
|---|---|---|
| Close | i y | u |
| Near-Close | ɪ | ʊ |
| Close-Mid | e ø | o |
| Open-mid | ɛ œ | ʌ ɔ |
| Near-open | æ | |
| Open | a | ɑ |
Similarly to consonants, vowels have geminated forms marked with special graphemes so that glottal stop is indicated by writing the short graphemes separately. Since i, æ and œ are often written over preceding consonants, there is a special glottal stop grapheme for them. There are also graphemes for vowel combinations occurring at the end of words but their pronounciation varies: aee [aɛ:]/[æeˑ], oee [oe:]/[œɛˑ] and uee [wɛ:]/[ʊe:].
Orthography
Aoma uses quite phonemic script where graphemes correlate with phonemes. The system is more consistent with consonants since vowels can undergo various changes depending on the neighbouring vowels and consonants. Here are their graphemes:
- i: [i] [ɪ]
- y: [y]
- u: [u] [ʊ]
- e: [e] [ɛ]
- ö: [ø] [œ]
- ä: [æ] [ʌ]
- a: [a] [ɑ]
- o: [o] [ɔ]
Hand-written Mihkanor script was developed in Eastern Sceptre from the Eastern Temple Marks of third era. Shinesharers, spreaders of the religion of Light, took the original marks to north where they were developed into Northern script (our Latin). Highly decorational Jauhmø script originates to fifth era, but is still in use mainly for formal documentation.
Romanization of some symbols: š/sh [ʃ], ng [ŋ] and ' [ʔ]. Notice that in the beginning of words C is [kh] while in the middle c is [sk], and beginning Z is [ʒ] while z is [z].
Morphology
As and agglutinative language Aoma can have lots of morphemes per word and its inflections are quite regular.
Pronouns
Personal
| 1.SG | 2.SG | 3.SG.F | 3.SG.M | 3.SG.N | 1.PL | 2.PL | 3.PL | 2.POL.SG | 2.POL.PL | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NOM | waa | foo | zu | shy | xi | boo | vot | sot | Nite | Wyte |
| ACC | nas | fos | zus | sysh | sish | bos | vösh | sösh | Netes | Wetes |
| DAT | naee | foee | zuee | shye | see | boee | votei | sotei | Neteki | Weteki |
| GEN | när | for | zur | shyr | sor | bor | votyr | sotyr | Nityr | Wytyr |
Prepositional is ACC + e, except that Netyse and Wetyse.
Demonstrative
Interrogative
Nouns
Noun declension according to two numbers and five cases correlates with the four noun classes which are indicated by the last vowel of nominative singular:
- divine a
- masculine y
- feminine u
- neuter i
Declension
The declension is shown with suffixes added to the stem gotten by removing the nominative vowel ending. Prepositional case is formed by adding e to the accsative.
Example words in all classes: eharr|a god, tym|y man, hen|u woman, dok|i object
| Nominative | Accusative | Dative | Genitive | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Div SG | a | ax | aee | ar |
| Div PL | ol | ox | oee | or |
| M SG | y | ys | yee | yr |
| M PL | uvo | ösh | uhee | ör |
| F SG | u | us | uee | ur |
| F PL | ivo | osh | ihee | oir |
| N SG | i | ik | ee | ir |
| N PL | esh | ek | ei | er |
Special cases: divine time noun group with temporal cases; some locative forms
Adjectives
Many adjectives are formed from nouns simply by adding e to the genitive case. This is sometimes called the adjective case or adjective form of a noun.
Adjective Declension
Always the same.?
Prepositions
In Aoma, fusional prepositions also convey the word gender and definiteness through vowel change. Same prepositional stems have different ending consonants which give new meanings together with the case of the following word. k- a/u/y - /k/s + prep/gen/prep = at/into/from
Verbs
Verbs are conjugated according to person, number, tense, aspect, mood which are indicated by suffixes, prefixes and reduplication.
Conjugation Tables
There are three conjugation classes based on the infinite forms:
- vowel-ending
- consonant-ending
- irregular which do show characteristics of either first or second conjugation
The conjugation stem is received by removing the last syllable, and then endings are added to its place.
Ia) last vowel a/o: tol|la see
| 1st Singular | 2nd Singular | 3rd Singular | 1st Plural | 2nd Plural | 3rd Plural | 2nd SG Polite | 2nd PL Polite | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present simple | tolan | tolu | tola | tolom | tolus | tolos | toltu | toltus |
| Past simple | tolin | tolui | tolai | tolimo | toluis | tolosi | tolti | toltis |
| Future | tolaran | tolrau | tolas | tolramo | tolrus | tolaros | toltaru | toltarus |
Ib) last vowel e, often intransitive: rok|ke run
| 1st Singular | 2nd Singular | 3rd Singular | 1st Plural | 2nd Plural | 3rd Plural | 2nd SG Polite | 2nd PL Polite | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present simple | eng | e | em | es | ös | ite | ites | |
| Past simple | ing | ei | i | im | is | ösi | eti | etis |
| Future | eran | raa | ase | rom | res | rös | tare | tare |
IIa) last consonant m: sum speak
| 1st Singular | 2nd Singular | 3rd Singular | 1st Plural | 2nd Plural | 3rd Plural | 2nd SG Polite | 2nd PL Polite | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present simple | sun | s(a)mu | su | sumo(o) | s(a)mus | sus | sutu | s(a)mutu |
| Past simple | suin | s(a)mui | sui | suim | s(a)muis | suis | sutti | s(a)mutti |
| Future | suran | sura | suas | surom | surus | suros | surta | surasa |
IIb) last syllable tes/kes/hes (→ z, x, sh): ty|tes get
| 1st Singular | 2nd Singular | 3rd Singular | 1st Plural | 2nd Plural | 3rd Plural | 2nd SG Polite | 2nd PL Polite | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Present simple | ten | tse=ze | te | töm | zes | tös | zite | zites |
| Past simple | t(e)in | zei | tei | töim | zeis | töis | zeti | zetis |
| Future | teran | zera | tas | terom | zerus | teros | zare | zares |
Irregular
Class III has verbs with multiple irregular forms often deriving from use of other words or through phonemic changes during long history. This also includes a group of verbs whose infinite ends in u.
Aspects
Imperfective is formed by adding prefixes bo for Ia & IIa or be for Ib & IIb to the conjugated form and often also lengthening the last vowel: Pekin→Bopekiin, I gave → I was giving
Perfect prefixes: ju for Ia, ma for IIa and je for Ib & IIb: Roke → Jeroke, You run → You have run
Ancestral past in the third person is used when discussing ancient historical events and it is formed by adding the prefix ne to pluperfect (past perfect) form: Komai sish. → Jukomai sish. → Nejukomai sish., He did it. → He had done it. → He had done it a long time ago. (or: It was done eons ago.)
Moods
Indicative is shown in the tables above and other moods are derived from it:
- Plain imperative is formed simply by using the indicative present singular third person verb form together with a pronoun: Peko foo sish naee! You give it to me!
- Optative is used for requests and as a polite imperative. It is formed by joining imperative and conjugated komma meaning to do: Pekokomu sish naee. Could you give it to me.
- Permissive is used by those with higher social status for giving permissions to members of lower social classes. It is formed by using optative 3rd singular with personal pronoun datives: Rokkoma votei. You all are allowed to run.
- Conditional of conditional sentence apodoses is formed through final right-to-left reduplication and then conjugated normally: pekkokko, vomvom, tytestes so that Pekkokom means We would give
- Subjunctive, which is used in some dependent clauses, is formed through initial left-to-right reduplication, but always with CV of VC parts of the first syllable: pepekko, vovom, tytytes, ejejom
- Double reduplication gives a mood similar to eventive and it is used in conditional sentence protasis and speculatives: Pekkokaran tetellulun. I would give if I had. (notice also the future tense of apodosis)
Negation
Aoma has a conjugated negative verb söm which is otherwise conjugation II, but has special forms for future and polite 2nd person (present, past, future):
- Future: sörön, sörö, sör, söröm, sörys, sörös
- SG: suvannoo, suvennoi, suvannaa
- PL: suvummoo, suvimmoi, suvummaa
Notice how suva also means I'm sorry.
Söm is used as an auxiliary together with the infinite form of a verb: Soleran. I will come. and Sörön solle. I won't come.
Interrogative
Question form of a verb is created by adding interrogative prefix so: Vo. He speaks. → Sovo? Does he speak?
Stress remains on the verb and pitch rises towards the end.
Passive Voice
In Aoma, there are ways for creating passive voices:
- 1st (Impersonal) Passive: Passive infinite and derived forms: Rokke → Burokkem
- Present tense for general truths: Buefam ketixu. Cities are lived in.
- Imperfective aspect for current conditions: Buborokkem ogehixu bor. Some people are running outside our house.
- Perfect aspect for how things used to be: Bunakommam herre. Things used to be done well.
- Subjunctive mood for how things could be: Buefefam exu. Here could one live.
- 2nd (Personal) Passive: Conjugated construct (with accusative pronoun): Tolla → Butollam → Butollan. I am seen. and Sum → Busumum → Busumu musik. Food is eaten.
- Present passive participle with nouns: Gehish gollana herre Houses been built well.
Non-finite forms
- Gerund which describes the act of doing: ba + INF (+m)
- Present active participle as an attribute: INF + bo
- Past passive participle: INF + na or ma for IIa
Derivational Morphology
Aoma uses suffixes, gemination and apophony to create new words from existing ones. Same noun stems often occur in all four classes. Most important are the eight elemental nouns:
- (divine noun, verb, (secondary verb,) masculine, feminine, neuter, adjective form, colour form)
- gesha [gɛʃa] (life), gesse (live), geshy (brain), geshu (heart), geshi (nature), geshare (lively, active), geshari (yellow)
- tösha (death), tösse (die), töshy (soldier), töshu (disease), töshi (war), töshare (still, silent), töshari (purple)
Numerals
Numbers use nowadays decimal system, but were originally of base twelve also known as dozenal even though there was a special mark for twelve. Some numerologists have proposed that six was the ancient base just like in Rinap, while others say it was eight, the number of all elements when they separated light and darkness from life and death in favour of Lightlisteners' beliefs. To my mind, six is the true base of our universe and must have been the original. Use of eight came later from coastal peoples of Sceptre.
Syntax
Clauses
Independent
Simple sentences with Verb-Subject-Object order. Since the verbs are conjugated, pronoun dropping is common unless required by the verb structure.
Cases
NOM-ACC
NOM-DAT
Tense, Aspect, Mood
Dependent
Relative
Conditional
Registers
Polite
Honorific clitics: haa + verb-2nd.SG.POL and hää + verb-2nd.PL.POL