Tarkandamonian
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Tarkandamonian | |
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Tarkandamon | |
Pronunciation | [/tar'kandamɔn/] |
Created by | Anyar |
Setting | Earth |
Native speakers | 436,232 (1980) |
Language Isolate
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Official status | |
Official language in | Ōran Kan (“Beautiful Land”) |
Introduction
Tarkandamonian, from the word Tarkandamon, meaning "Those who speak properly", is the official language spoken in Ōran Kan, a country situated between the border of the Pakistani-admininstered Gilgit-Baltistan region, and Indian-administered Kashmir. It is separated from Ladakh by a small strip of land approximately 25KM in length extending from Gilgit-Balikstan to Kashmir. It is estimated that roughly 100,000 speakers live outside of Ōran Kan, the vast majority having fled the country after a military coup led by Brigadier General Enor Gavilna overthrew President Gar Tindra in early July 1983. The majority of the expatriate community lives in various parts of the EU, with the largest number in Spain and Italy.
Knowledge of the language's history is unknown prior to the 1870's, when British explorers arrived after the First Anglo-Sikh War and began documenting the language. Although phylologists and linguists have attempted to the link the language to neighbouring Indo-Aryan and Sino-Tibetan languages, as well as the language isolate Burushaski also located in the same geographical region, Tarkandamonian shows no genetic relationship to any of its neighbors. More exotic relationships have been proposed, the most prominent of these being the Austronesian theory proposed by Samuel Burdock from the University of Kentucky. Proponents of the theory point to the preponderance of circumfixation in verb forms, even though none of these circumfixes show any similarity in form or function as those of the Austronesian languages.
Typologically, Tarkandamonian is a fusional language, with SOV syntax and Nominative-Accusative alignment. Nouns do not inflect for gender, number, or case (with the exception being the construct state case marker). Core case relations are expressed by strict word order of the core noun arguments, with the nominative argument preceding the patient argument; however, when the direct object is omitted, obligatory agreement markers surface in the verb forms. Postpositions mark oblique nominal arguments. The language lacks both definite and indefinite markers, although indefiniteness can be explicitly expressed by the cardinal number nom ("one"). The language does not display pro-drop; subjects are always expressed by an explicit noun, or a pronoun.
Pronouns display more inflectional complexity. Unlike nouns, they do mark for number. There are portmanteau forms that encode agent and patient core arguments. While the language does not mark for gender, it differentiates third person core arguments with two distinct forms, a proximal and obviative form.
Phonology
Grammar
Nouns
Pronouns
Tarkadamonian pronouns, in addition to indicating case relations, obligatorily encode tense, aspect, and mood (TAM). Pronouns also mark negation. Portmanteau forms are used in transitive clauses when the patient argument is omitted. TAM and polarity marking apparently arose from cliticization of pronominal forms to a copula, which itself encoded negation.
Positive Forms
Singular | Plural | ||||||||
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1 | 2 | 3 Prox | 3 Obv | 1 | 2 | 3 Prox | 3 Obv | ||
Declarative Present | va | ata | ahen | iria | na | ta | he | ria | |
Imperfective | |||||||||
Perfective | |||||||||
Future | |||||||||
Future Imperfective |
Negative Forms
Singular | Plural | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 Prox | 3 Obv | 1 | 2 | 3 Prox | 3 Obv | ||
Declarative Present | vala | atala | lan | lassi | nala | tala | hela | rila | |
Perfective | valak | atlak | lanak | landri | nalak | talak | lak | lāti | |
Imperfective | valan | atunla | lana | lasse | nalan | taluna | lan | lāse | |
Future | valak | atalla | lakan | lassar | nalak | tala | lakan | lāsar | |
Future Imperfective |