Kootayi

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Kootayi language
Iskóótayi
Pronunciation[/ɪs.ˈkǒː.ta.jɪ/]
Created byRaistas
Settingplanet Liifam
EthnicityKóótahin
Settameric languages
  • Western Plains languages
    • Kootayi language
Early form
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The Kootayi language (Iskóótayi) is a Plains Settameric language spoken by the people, who live in the northwestern plains of the Northern continent. It is the closest relative of Kalyah, another West Plains language. The name "Kootayi" comes from the Western Kalyah word for "tent", since these people live mostly in dwellings made out of sticks, wood, bark and animal skins, unlike the Kalyaheen, who usually live in wooden houses. Kootayi is believed to have begun as a Plains Settameric dialect spoken between 2,500 and 3,000 years ago in the original homeland, near the Kahaaler mountains and slowly spread east- and northwards. Among the Plains languages, Kootayi is relatively divergent in phonology and lexicon, yet its grammar is very similar to other neighbouring languages. Unlike Kalyah and its another relative Chiresh, Kootayi has a fairly small phoneme inventory; consisting of 11 basic consonants and three basic vowels that have contrastive length counterparts (border dialects to the east have four vowels and 12 consonants). It is a pitch accent language.

Like the other Plains languages, Kootayi is considered to be a polysynthetic language due to its large morpheme inventory and word internal complexity. A majority of morphemes have a one to one correspondence between form and meaning, a defining feature of agglutinative languages. However, it also has some fusional characteristics as there are morphemes that can fuse into one. Both noun and verb stems cannot be used bare but must be inflected.

Classification

Kootayi is a member of the Settameric languages belonging to the West Plains group along with Kalyah and Chiresh. All three share some features, though Kootayi and Kalyah are much closer to each other, than to Chiresh, which has some Mountains Settameric features and resembles its close neighbour Miirei more than languages of its group. Kootayi is spoken in mostly in the Northwestern steppe and tundra regions of the Plains, making it geographically one of the westernmost Plains languages.

Phonology

Consonants

Blackfoot has eleven distinct consonants, of which all but /ʔ/, /h/, /j/ and /w/ form pairs distinguished by length, which makes it eighteen consonant phonemes in total. There is a sight disagreement on how to count geminate consonants (as two consonants belonging to different syllables, or one, but lengthened). For simplicity geminate consonants will not be treated as different from the plain ones.

Bilabial Denti-alveolar Velar Glottal
Nasal m n
Stop p t k ʼ /ʔ/
Fricative s h
Affricate c /t͡s/
Approximant w y /j/
  • Far northern dialects and Eastern dialects that border the Möhkinis dialect of Kalyah also have /l/ as a phoneme, while in other dialects it disappeared.

Vowels

Kootayi has three moniphthongs, all can be both long and short. They differ in quality, not just in length. Eastern border dialects also have a fourth vowel /eː~ɵ/, which appears mostly in loanwords from Kalyah, but in other dialects it is represented with /i(ː)/

Vowels
Front Central Back
Close ii |[iː]
Near-Close i [ɪ] o [ʊ], oo [oː]
Open a [a] aa [ɑː]

There are three additional diphthongs. The first diphthong "ai" is pronounced [aɪ] or [ɛi]. The second diphthong "ao" is pronounced [aʊ], but before a consonant cluster it becomes [ɔ]. The third diphthong "oi" may be pronounced [yː~ɵː] before a consonant cluster and as [oɪ] elsewhere, but this diphthong is quite rare compared to the other two.

Pitch accent

Kootayi is a pitch accent language and it is a contrastive feature in the language. Every stressed syllable can have either rising (marked with an acute accent) or falling (usually unmarked) pitch. Note that rising pitch here is used relative to the contiguous syllables, so if a word contains accented vowels the first will be higher in pitch than the second but the second will be higher in pitch than the syllables directly surrounding it, and that syllable will receive stress, but when there is no accented vowels, the word will receive a primary stress and have a falling pitch, when the first syllable is the lowest in pitch. An example of a pitch contrast is íístok [ˈǐːs.tʊk] "silence", iistók [iːs.ˈtǒk] "friend" and iistok [ˈîːs.tʊk] "bush". If a word contains more than three syllables, the pattern will repeat every two syllables: iskóótayi is thus pronounced [ɪs.ˈkǒː.ta.jɪ̌] as if written "iskóótayí", however this is often ommited in a fast speech.