Duozynis
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Duozynis is the oldest form of Shunfoh language recorded. Much of the pronunciations have be reconstructed by studying Ongo and it's various dialects, there is still much unknown about the people who spoke it.
Etymology
Origins
History
Sociolinguistics
Orthography
Phonology
Consonants
Consonant inventory: /b c d dz dʒ f g h j l m n p r s t ts tʃ v w z ɲ ʃ ʎ ʕ/
Bilabial | Labiodental | Alveolar | Palato-alveolar | Palatal | Velar | Labio-velar | Pharyngeal | Glottal | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Stop | p b | t d | c | g | ||||||
Nasal | m | n | ɲ | |||||||
Affricative | ts dz | tʃ dʒ | ||||||||
Fricative | f v | s z | ʃ | h | ||||||
Approximant | j | w | ʕ | |||||||
Trill | ɾ | |||||||||
Lateral approximant | l | ʎ |
- bilabial consonants turn into /p/ after /l/
- /f/ turns into /w/ before (vowel)
- /z/ turns into /ts/ after (vowel)/j/
- /w/ becomes null between two vowels or between (vowel) and (word boundary)
- /ɾ/ turns into /s/ before /s/
Vowels
Vowel inventory: /a e i o u ɒ ɛ ʉ/
Front | Central | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
Close | i | ʉ | u |
Close-mid | e | o | |
Open-mid | ɛ | ||
Open | a | ɒ |
Diphthongs: None
Phonotactics
Syllable structure for is, in most cases, (C)V(C). Stress pattern is normally penultimate, meaning stress is placed on the second to last syllable. Because of the extensive use of loan words, exceptions to this rule are relatively common.
- Word initial consonants: h, k, l, m, n, p, t, v, w, ŋ, ɾ
- Mid word consonants : h, k, l, m, n, p, t, v, w, ŋ, ɾ, ʔ
- Word final consonants : k, l, n, p, t, v, w, ɾ, ʔ
Grammar
Kukʉp uses Subject-Oblique-Object-Verb for word order, with adjectives placed before nouns and suffixes used when adpositions are necessary.
- "Mary opened the red door with a key" = Mary with a key the red door opened. (or "Marya kep evo nihue lil a'o inu kutet.")
Nouns
Kukʉp uses gender (Person, Land, Sea, Sky) to indicate the source of nouns. While nouns will be assumed to have a particular gender (ee means wood and is normally Land gendered), gender can be changed to show that a specific noun came from a different source (Sea gendered wood might indicate drift wood, while Person gendered wood would imply that someone shaped or carved the wood in question).
Noun Morphology
Kukʉp is an ergative-absolutive language, meaning the object of a transitive verb and the single core argument of an intransitive verb are treated the same (absolutive), while the agent of a transitive verb is treated differently (ergative). In English, this would read as follows:
- He (agent) found me (object).
- Him (argument) traveled.
Singular | Plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absolutive | Person | child | nevo /’nevɒ/ | children | Suffix: -(e)v /-(ɛ)v/ nevov /’nevɒv/ |
Land | tree | erku /’ɛɾku/ | trees | Suffix: -a /-a/ erkua /ɛɾ’kua/ | |
Sea | fish | kure /’kuɾɛ/ | fishes | Suffix: -i /-i/ kurei /’kuɾɛi/ | |
Sky | bird | roi /’ɾoi/ | birds | Suffix: -ʉ /-ʉ/ roiʉ /ɾo’iʉ/ | |
Ergative | Person | child | Suffix: -(o)t /-(ɒ)t/ nevot /'nevɒt/ |
children | Suffix: -(e)' /-(e)ʔ/ nevo' /'nevɒʔ/ |
Land | tree | Suffix: -(e)v /-(e)v/ erkuv /'ɛɾkuv/ |
trees | Suffix: -(u)wi /-(u)wi/ erkuwi /ɛɾ’kuwi/ | |
Sea | fish | Suffix: -(o)t /-(o)t/ kuret /’kuɾɛt/ |
fishes | Suffix: -(o)'o /-(o)ʔo/ kure’o /ku'ɾɛʔo/ | |
Sky | bird | Suffix: -(u)p /-(u)p/ roip /'ɾoip/ |
birds | Suffix: -(ɒ)v /-(ɒ)v/ roiv /’ɾoiv/ |
Definite Article
Singular | Plural | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Absolutive | Person | the [child] | kit /kit/ | the [children] | kit /kit/ |
Land | the [tree] | men /men/ | the [trees] | men /men/ | |
Sea | the [fish] | ket /kɛt/ | the [fishes] | ket /kɛt/ | |
Sky | the [bird] | ting /tiŋ/ | the [birds] | ting /tiŋ/ | |
Ergative | Person | the [child] | wit /wit/ | the [children] | vin /win/ |
Land | the [tree] | man /man/ | the [trees] | wen /wen/ | |
Sea | the [fish] | kow /kow/ | the [fishes] | 'ak /ʔat/ | |
Sky | the [bird] | tin /tin/ | the [birds] | no' /noʔ/ |
Uses of definite article that differ from English:
- Used to talk about countable nouns in general: English's ‘I like cats’ would translate to ‘I like the cats’
- Not used for mass (uncountable) nouns: English's ‘Walking in the mud’ would always translate to ‘Walking in mud’
- Used for languages: ‘The English’
- Used with place names: ‘The London’
Indefinite Article
The numeral for ‘one’, evo, is used as the indefinite article.
Personal Pronouns
Absolutive | Ergative | Genitive | Dative | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1st. Singular | I | lo /lɒ/ | me | le /lɛ/ | mine | li /li/ | to me | lo li /lɒ li/ |
2nd. Singular | you | po /po/ | you | pem /pem/ | yours | pep /pɛp/ | to you | po li /po li/ |
3rd. Singular | he/she/it | vit /wit/ | him/her/it | ven /wɛn/ | his/hers/its | vem /wem/ | to him/her/it | vit li /wit li/ |
1st. Plural | we | he /hɛ/ | us | hup /hup/ | ours | hu /hu/ | to us | he li /hɛ li/ |
2nd. Plural | you | rok /ɾot/ | you | rov /ɾov/ | yours | ro' /ɾoʔ/ | to you | rok li /ɾot li/ |
3rd. Plural | they | i /i/ | them | in /in/ | theirs | 'in /ʔin/ | to them | i li /i li/ |
Verbs
Kukʉp verbs don't use indicative mood (past, present, or future tense). Instead, those details are determined through context.
- Perfect aspect -- uses the word 'reletʉ' before the main verb -- "have studied" or reletʉ petʉp
- Progressive aspect -- uses the word 'tip' before the main verb -- "am studying" or tip petʉp
- Imperative -- uses the word ' ni' ' before the main verb -- "study!" (as a command) or ni' petʉp
- Negation -- adds the suffix -(ʉ)ho /-(ʉ)hɒ/ to the verb -- "do not study" or petʉpʉho
- Tense affixes come between the root verb and the progressive affix
Vocabulary
Useful phrases
English | Duozynis | IPA |
---|---|---|
Welcome | * | /’evɒ/ |
Hello (General greeting) | * | /’evɒ/ |
How are you? | * | /’evɒ/ |
Reply to "how are you?" | * ("Still alive") | /’evɒ/ |
What's your name? | * | /’evɒ/ |
My name is ... | * | /’evɒ/ |
Where are you from? | * | /’evɒ/ |
I'm from ... | * | /’evɒ/ |
Pleased to meet you | * | /’evɒ/ |
Good morning (Morning greeting) | * | /’evɒ/ |
Good afternoon (Afternoon greeting) | * | /’evɒ/ |
Good evening (Evening greeting) | * | /’evɒ/ |
Goodbye (Parting phrase | * | /’evɒ/ |
Good night | * | /’evɒ/ |
Good luck! | * | /’evɒ/ |
Cheers! Good health! (Toasts used when drinking) | * | /’evɒ/ |
Bon appetit/ Have a nice meal | * | /’evɒ/ |
I understand | * | /’evɒ/ |
I don't understand | * | /’evɒ/ |
Yes | * | /’evɒ/ |
No | * | /’evɒ/ |
Maybe | * | /’evɒ/ |
I don't know | * | /’evɒ/ |
Please speak more slowly | * | /’evɒ/ |
Please write it down | * | /’evɒ/ |
Do you speak English? | * | /’evɒ/ |
Do you speak Kukʉp? | * | /’evɒ/ |
Yes, a little (reply to "Do you speak...?") | * | /’evɒ/ |
Speak to me in *** | * | /’evɒ/ |
How do you say ... in ***? | * | /’evɒ/ |
Excuse me | * | /’evɒ/ |
How much is this? | * | /’evɒ/ |
Sorry | * | /’evɒ/ |
Please | * | /’evɒ/ |
Thank you | * | /’evɒ/ |
Reply to thank you | * | /’evɒ/ |
Where's the toilet? | * | /’evɒ/ |
I love you | * | /’evɒ/ |
Get well soon | * | /’evɒ/ |
Help! | * | /’evɒ/ |
Fire! | * | /’evɒ/ |
Stop! | * | /’evɒ/ |
Christmas and New Year greetings | * | /’evɒ/ |
Easter greetings | * | /’evɒ/ |
Birthday greetings | * | /’evɒ/ |
One language is never enough | * | /’evɒ/ |
My hovercraft is full of eels | * | /’evɒ/ |